How do you teach an adult to ride a bike?
I've signed up to be an cycling instructor on a project designed to encourage women from minority backgrounds to bike. I've never been an instructor before, so this will be just as much about me learning to teach as about them learning to bike :-)
I would love any feedback any of you have on how to teach adults to ride bikes, whether you've been an instructor yourself, know of any online information, or remember what is was like to learn to ride.
A little background info: the course will be 6 sessions of an hour and a half each. Each course will have 3 female instructors, and hopefully about 10 participants. It's aimed at women who have never ridden a bike before, or maybe a little many years ago. The goal is to be able to ride on bike paths, not in traffic.
Considering where the recruiting has been it's most likely that the participants are inactive and unathletic, probably do not work outside the home, may speak little Norwegian or English, and many will wear long dresses or similar clothing. But the course is open to all minority women, so we can equally get women who are highly educated and fit. The bikes are 3-speed Trek Cocoas, upright and low step-throughs to accomodate long dresses and skirts.
I don't think the language barrier should be a problem, because it's pretty easy to demonstrate on a bike what you want them to do. And I'm fairly confident of my ability to explain an exercise, either verbally or by demonstrating. But the actual learning happens when you do it yourself. I don't know much about how to handle this part well, how much to interfere, how much to just stand back and let people practice.
Personally I learn best from a LOT of practice with nobody talking to me, so that I can hear my own body telling me what I'm doing... But I'm extremely non-audio, and get very distracted by somebody urging me on.
Anyway. All tips welcome!
Re: How do you teach an adult to ride a bike?
I find it helps when kids are around their peers who can already ride bikes. It certainly worked for me - and not just that, but it was my cousin who taught me how to ride a bike. I was 4, he was 5, go figure! It took maybe an hour of riding around his backyard to learn. The setup probably made me feel more at ease than when the adults were around.