12/01/2021
Riding teachers come in many varieties. So do students.
Getting the right fit can mean the difference between productive learning and failure---So what do you look for? Some thoughts----
How far along are you in your riding, total beginner, somewhere in between, or expert? The teacher for one may not be good for the other. A university professor of astrophysics might not do well teaching second graders, and the second grade teacher might not have a clue teaching high level material.
What kind of teaching meshes with your learning style? Can you thrive under a more disciplined approach, or do you need a softer style to bring out your best work?
Are you primarily a visual learner, a kinesthetic learner, or an auditory learner? Find the teacher that fits your strengths.
Are you more comfortable with one instructor, or do you learn better by having different teachers for different aspects of your riding, as an event rider might have one dressage coach, another for jumping?
Do you prefer being pushed over being allowed to progress at your own pace?
Do you find that you thrive under lots of praise and cheer leading, or are you better served by someone who tells it like it is?
Can you have meaningful discussions after lessons, questions and answers, or are you finished once the lesson has concluded?
I don't think that any of these have right or wrong answers, because they are aimed at individual learning styles, with a couple of possible exceptions.
Some teachers are not knowledgeable enough to provide valid information, and some teachers are OK with using methods that are tough on horses, and neither of these are productive. This leads to the obvious question, though, of "How do I know the difference if I am a green rider?"
Probably the honest answer is "You can't." But maybe a friend can, or some other more experienced person.
Some of this---possibly the key to this---is whether or not it feels right. If you eagerly look forward to your lessons, that's far different from being apathetic, or, worse, almost dreading them.
But don't be in too much of a hurry to decide, because things take time to assimilate.