Ski Instructor Experiences

RousedWits

Member
I worked 2 years as a part time ski instructor for Crystal Mt Washington a couple of years back, and I have got to say it was one of the best experiences, and by far the best job I have ever had. The community of ski instructors as well as the culture there was absolutely fantastic. A good handful of us would all stay the weekend at this lodge and we did huge potlucks where everyone cooked a different meal. We would sit by the fire drink, talk, dance. The next morning everyone woke up, got ready and clocked into work.

I taught a multi-week program of “never ever” kids. It certainly was a pain in the ass skiing on the bunny hill, but it was also amazing and rewarding. My manager had a great philosophy for teaching kids: If the lesson is safe and fun, the lesson will essentially teach itself. If your lesson is lame, kids aint learnin a god damn thing. Parents want you to focus only skills but in my opinion… screw that! I realize they pay big bucks for their kids to learn how to ski but really??? I know what I am doing! I even got yelled at by some parents. One parent even secretly watched my lesson from afar and later told me that my lesson wasn’t “technical enough” (they were 5!). I figure if I am bored listening to the cut and paste “garbage” PSIA lesson… I guarantee you that kids aren’t having fun either. I don’t want kids going skiing only to feel like they are back in school. I feel like that first day is crucial! If the kids have an absolute blast, they might develop a passion for the sport and want to come back. Otherwise I doubt they will be super excited to come back next week. by no means am I saying that I just let my students dick around in the snow all day. I went through a pretty basic, loose progression and it worked. I mixed in some of the drills I learned in clinics with stuff I thought would actually be fun. I tried making it seem less like a lesson, and more like a rad day of skiing. We would Chinese downhill it to the bottom of the hill (got me in trouble with my boss but who cares), go on some crazy side of the run jumps, ski under legs, fly down the bunny hill while holding hands so it looks like a giant eagle, throw snowballs, sing songs on the chairlifts, and generally just goof around. Basically if they weren’t smiling while skiing I knew I was doing something wrong. One week I brought them into the ski patrol shack so they knew where it was, the ski patrollers gave each of my student these little cards with an avalanche dog, and the alpine responsibility code on it. At the end of 6 weeks we had a Hawaiian ski day where everyone wore Hawaiian shirts and leis. Taking my group of little kids to the very top of the mountain on a blue bird day to see the beautiful view of Mt Rainier, and then proceed to shred down for a T to B run was one of the best days on the mountain I have had.

Now I have got to say it wasn’t the easiest job (for me at least). Occasionally when I decided the group could move up to the next chairlift someone would freeze up at the top of the run. Coaching a scared kid down the hill is hard… very hard. The kids usually ended up hugging me with their hidden strength death grip. I never thought a 6-year-old girl would have the arm strength of the incredible hulk.

I didn’t really care for the PSIA aspect of it. I got level 1 certified and bought some nice ass gear for like 75% off, but the clinics were hell. I don’t know or care what it means to “flex your quads and angulate your upper ankle and hip to keep a quiet upper body”. Half the time I wouldn’t change my skiing at all when the clinician was watching and he would say “Perfect” … like what? I didn’t change a thing!

I just thought I would post my experience instructing. I’ve definitely heard some horror stories, so I am pretty glad my mountain was overall pretty sweet. Feel free to post your experience teaching the new generation!

Hang Loose

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If I went back to teaching again I'm gonna have a bad time.

That said I had some great times. Have done some coaching on the side a couple seasons since and that's nice. It's pretty cool getting people way beyond their expectations or at least where they could have gone on their own. Pushing people to try new stuff that you know they can do, but they don't believe. Then they get it and are fucking stoked.

I couldn't do that full time either but I still love it. Generally I stick to just helping people for free when I see somebody struggling with a trick and have a second.

I'm amazed at the people that can teach their whole lives. I made it 3 years. Def a good experience though.
 
My brother is doing it for his second year at the pass, he likes it. 8 Friday nights a year and you get a free pass, not too bad of a deal. My dad taught for a few years but apparently the management was horrible to deal with so he stopped. I guess it just depends on who you work for.
 
Good read, seems like a rewarding experience. I had a similar instructor my first few times who just wanted to have a good time rather than worrying about the technicality
 
Enjoyed reading this. I coach the younger kids for my mountain's freestyle team. I definitely agree that the toughest/most annoying part is dealing with the parents. 90% of them just simply don't get it. They complain that their kid can't do X, Y, or Z trick, and blame me or the other coaches. They don't take a step back to remember that it is about the kids. If they are having fun, I don't really care if they are putting down 1st place competition runs.
 
This is my third season instructing at big sky and its Rad! All the other instructors think I'm weird because I wear 3xl clothing while out of uniform and ski park all the time. Still super chill job though.
 
Ski instructing is the best, everyone sees at as teaching little kids to snowplough for low pay, but I hardly ever teach little kids and work for myself most of the time.
 
i got offered to be a instructor last year basically told them to screw off that i didn't want to do it ,some people enjoy it but i thought it would suck to teach kids and id rather ski
 
I do the freestyle program at my hill, and it's the best thing ever. Yeah sometimes we have to do stupid regular skiing drills, but hiking up the closed side of the mountain on a pow day and building booters when the park's barely open with the nicest coaches in the world is the best. I know a lot of people don't think freeskiing should be coached, and it depends who you are. I really like the loose structure of it, and I've met some of my best friends through it. Also you seem like dope teacher.
 
Thanks for sharing, I used to ski instruct too and made a blog with some short stories about my experience. The little kids are the cutest, with their big bobble head helmets. I just remember there being a lot of picking kids up off the ground. I would definitely do it again.
https://skibumblog.com
 
ive been instructing for the last 7 years - snowboarding and skiing - its definitely a love hate relationship..

kids can be assholes and not give a shit - and other times they can be the best kid ever and i just want to shred with them all day.

I switched to teaching adults this year - not sure how its gonna work out but hopefully I wont have to deal with crying children. But then again I may get some pretty incompetent adults so im scared for that.

I think my favorite part is when the kids just idolize you and are so excited to learn and keep progressing. You can always tell which kids were dropped off for lessons as a "day care" so their parents could ski alone and which kids were there actually because they wanted to learn.

idk - maybe my favorite part is just being able to get a season pass - I would not be able to ski as much as I do for being a college kid if I didnt work at a mountain haha
 
I have been instructing for 7 years as well (split between 2 different resorts) and I got my PSIA cert in 2010 and it has been one of the most rewarding experiences I've had.

This past weekend was the first weekend that I instructed for the season and I forgot how god damn fun it was. I love doing this job. The kids and coworkers make all the difference. Even though I work for Vail and I think their system is flawed and incomparable to other resorts, I have a blast doing what I do. I think every skier should try teaching skiing sometime. PSIA seems kinda lame (trust me, I'm not into all the technical talk either) but it has improved my skiing so much. Especially now that this is my first season skiing after my knee surgery in March- I'm able to use my skills and body awareness to ski at almost the same level I was at last season because I know how to teach myself.

Instructing and teaching to all levels of skill is honestly one of the cooler things about this sport and this job. Ski instructing has so many advantages. From learning customer service to the immense amount of responsibility and liability that you retain, it welcomes you to such a fun, relaxed environment and community of rad people.
 
I learned that there are a lot of little kids out there that can rip, and will be better skiers than I am by the time they are 12... I've also had to teach crying three year olds that only speak Spanish... I do not speak Spanish.
 
A little background: I've been working at the same resort for the last four years and it was my first "official" job. I took a year off of instructing and worked in the marketing department last year and I'm back teaching this year when I'm on breaks from school.

I fucking LOVE teaching skiing. My first year I didn't really know what I was doing. My second year I got more into the groove and got more hooked on it. My third year I asked for a job in the marketing department and they gave it to me (a senior in high school with no real experience being allowed to work in the marketing department for a multi-million dollar resort was dope). I realized that marketing wasn't what I liked and now I'm going to school for elementary education.

Tldr; ski instructing changed my life and I wanna do it for the rest of my life if I can.

P.S. I'm certified PSIA Level 1 and it was a decent course and added a couple nice tricks to my bag but for kids the most important part is fun.
 
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