The most subtle and essential element in Spolin Games
is sidecoaching. The sidecoach is at once a fellow player, a grounded teacher
and a canny director.
Sidecoaching is as much a skill as it is an art. It
therefore requires the same intuitive ability evoked by playing. In addition,
the sidecoach has to also be familiar with the advanced levels of playing. This
means a good sidecoach must have a substantial amount of experience playing
most of the Games in Spolin's canon, hopefully with a good sidecoach to help
you make the most of them. I was lucky. I had Viola Spolin herself as a coach
and mentor.
Where can a teacher gain this experience?
This only comes through lots of play with the
support of a good sidecoach.
Through playing and coaching the sidecoach
becomes familiar with what works and what doesn’t. Without someone like Viola
to guide you, (except by her book) one needs to accumulate enough experience
through play and trial and error mindful of the traps; of showing how instead
of allowing the players to grapple with the problem (with support from you). By
being a detached observer rather than being a fellow player. Acknowledging what
works and what doesn’t while playing and coaching the game. “Hmmm. That one
worked… Oh, that didn’t do it.” Knowing what you are shooting for is that
spontaneous release of energy true play sparks.
It is also important to use words and phrases
that will assist the player at the moment of playing to heighten the
involvement in the game and focus.
Viola was very careful to use words of
empowerment rather than authoritarian laden words. Phrases like ‘Do it this
way’ or ‘It’s like this’ or ‘Don’t do it like that’ all come from an Authority
with a capital A.
Action words like ‘use your where’, ‘heighten
what’s going on!’ ‘Let the space support you’, ‘keep the space between you!’
are prompts to action rather than directions on what to do. A lot of it comes
with experience and a desire to let the game do the teaching.
Observation of the student/players’
participation in a game requires a moment-to-moment diagnosis of several
things:
- The resistance exhibited by one or more of the
players during play.
- The interaction (or lack thereof) between the
players.
- An understanding of what the game is capable of producing.
(hard to do if you’ve not seen it work before)
- A familiarity with the variety of coaching phrases
that might produce either more energy, less urgency, more connection, or
more detachment depending on what might be called for. This is often an
intuitive and reflexive response by the sidecoach.
- A familiarity and empathy with the problems faced by
the student inside the game based upon the teacher’s own experience playing
and/or coaching the game.
The side coach must always be aware and involved
with the players as a fellow player! - Encouraging them to become fully
involved with the focus, careful not to dictate, nag, or barrage them with
unnecessary words.
There are a lot of obstacles and traps for a
side coach:
·
Ego
·
Urgency
·
Not understanding the problem posed by the game
or its potential
·
No rapport with the players’ experience inside
the game
·
Not enough understanding or familiarity with the
variety of sidecoaches
It is valuable to know the game from the
player’s perspective. Playing a variety Spolin games will educate you to the
problems faced by your students and expand your personal experience. Playing
will give you a deeper understanding of yourself, the philosophy, and heighten
your own self awareness while at the same time, reducing your reliance on
intellectually understanding the games and their purpose. Instead you will get
a direct experience of the games for you will be transformed by the playing.
This is extremely valuable for you as a teacher/director/workshop
leader on many levels. Once you have gained this level of playing and
understanding, you stand ready to begin your career as a sidecoach.
The book and the writings of Viola Spolin
will continue to be a source for you. The wisdom is there to be mined
continually. It is not a book to read through once. It’s because she wrote her
prose with a profound knowledge of the players experience and resistances as
well as guiding the teacher from her vast experience as a teacher/director. She
addresses both the enlightened teacher and the resistant (but open minded)
teacher.
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