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On 6/23/2024 9:17 PM, Frank Krygowski wrote:On 6/23/2024 9:11 PM, Joy Beeson wrote:>On Sun, 23 Jun 2024 04:48:01 -0400, Catrike Ryder
<Soloman@old.bikers.org> wrote:
>The only thing one can do to "teach" a kid to ride a>
bicycle is to
hold the bike upright until the kid learns to counter the
lean by
steering into it. In my opinion, that proceedure most
always comes via
trial and error. The parent holding the bike upright is
insignificant
in the process.
No insignificant at all. A parent holding the bike
significantly
delays the acqusition of skill.
Exactly. Ditto for training wheels.
But you are talking about learning how to balance, and I'm
talking
about learning how to ride.
One introductory slide I've seen used in a cycling class
said "Balancing ain't biking." But as we see here, some seem
to think that's all there is to learn.
If I might inject a technical aside here, 'training wheels'
( formerly known as 'balancers') are now poorly understood.
>
Today's parents often see them as a substitute for
instruction and prematurely buy miniature two wheelers with
the balancers roughly level to the rear wheel for 3 year
olds who would be better off with a tricycle.
>
Children around five years have sufficient brain to ride a
bicycle whereas 3 year olds generally cannot. Balancers are
designed to allow a significant tip such that the child can
'feel' the balance without falling over. That process
should take a few days or maybe a week, not several years.
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