These pages set out the policies, procedures and quality standards for the provision of Mountain Training UK & Ireland’s Coaching Scheme training and assessment courses. It forms an integral part of the MTUK&I Coaching Provider Agreement.
The Coaching Provider Quality Manual comprises three sections: policies, procedures and quality standards. Providers are required to operate according to these jointly agreed components and should therefore be familiar with the entire content of the manual. Additional information is contained within the Coaching Scheme Handbook, and on Mountain Training’s website. Providers should refer to these resources regularly.
Note: In this document we refer to ‘dual providers’ – these are providers that are approved by more than one national Mountain Training organisation to deliver multiple schemes.
Dual providers should comply with the safeguarding policy of their associated national Mountain Training organisation.
Coaching Scheme only providers should comply with the policy of either, MTE (for operating predominantly in England and Wales), MTS (for operating in Scotland), or MTBI (for operating on the island of Ireland).
1. Course Admin
Coaching Scheme providers and course directors are ambassadors for Mountain Training, and as such should keep up to date with news and changes. To support providers in this role, regular dialogue with Mountain Training is encouraged.
All communication with the public should follow the
Branding and Marketing guidelines.
Pre-course communication with candidates will outline the scope of the qualification within the Mountain Training pathway, registration process, prerequisites, joining instructions and course program.
Providers should review their promotional material regularly to ensure it reflects current syllabi and guidance. Mountain Training’s website is a definitive resource for all scheme information.
To avoid candidates booking onto a course for which they are either not registered or is inappropriate for their needs, providers must ensure potential candidates receive relevant scheme information before accepting their booking. This information should remind candidates of the registration process and minimum requirements for course attendance.
Once the booking is confirmed, providers must add candidates to their course on CMS in advance of the course beginning. Joining instructions and a course programme should also be sent to candidates. Mountain Training has model templates for providers to use.
Providers should follow the guidelines outlined in
CMS and Course Reporting.
These are generic guidelines that cover all Mountain Training qualifications, however there is one notable exception for Coaching Scheme assessment course reporting only – there is no use of the FAIL result.
2. Why we don’t use FAIL
Coaching Scheme assessments include an evaluation of the candidate’s coaching experience (DLOG review) and review of a number of written tasks that may include some or all of the following; lesson plans, structured session planning and written paper. These elements of the assessment must be satisfactorily completed and approved by the provider before candidates may attend the practical assessment session. This should be made clear to candidates at the time of booking and providers are not able to take last minute assessment bookings for this reason.
Given the above, a candidate who performs below the required standard during the practical assessment can be deferred on this element only.
However, the advice to a candidate before returning for a reassessment may include gaining further or different coaching experience, as it is likely that the quality of the experience gained thus far has been poor. A candidate returning for reassessment may also need to complete additional lesson/session plans that relate to the new assessment and so the same process outlined above applies. In other words a Coaching Scheme reassessment is normally identical to the first assessment.
3. Quality Standards
Base Facilities
Most Coaching Scheme courses will be non-residential, taking place at a public climbing wall. Climbing walls should ideally have a variety of surfaces; enough room to facilitate observation and group feedback and a suitable range of routes and problems to structure a progression. There should also be proper lecture facilities for theory sessions and adequate ‘comfort’ facilities.
If a course needs to be run at a climbing wall that only has public areas available for lectures, briefings/debriefings it is the provider’s responsibility to manage this appropriately. It is vital this does not compromise the quality of the course.
Providers who choose to operate from a different residential base or climbing wall to those in their application for approval must ensure the new venue meets the same high standards.
Coaching Scheme courses may also be residential, based at a suitable venue, which must have adequate accommodation, amenities, lecture facilities as well as meeting the climbing wall requirements above.
Outdoor Venues
Most Coaching Scheme courses will take place at indoor walls, but the scope of the scheme extends to any outdoor environment that the coach is suitably experienced and/or qualified to operate in. Outdoor venues may therefore be used for all or part of the course and these should be well known to the provider to ensure they meet the needs of the course, with enough suitable routes and problems to structure a progression. Nearby access to a climbing wall as a wet weather alternative is essential. Providers need to remember that they are responsible for the safety of all candidates at all times, regardless of the candidates’ previous experience or qualifications.
4. Equipment
Any equipment provided to candidates must be fit for purpose. Where candidates provide their own safety critical equipment, course staff should ensure this too is fit for purpose. Candidates must be made aware of good practice regarding the retirement of safety critical equipment. As such, course staff should themselves be role models with respect to their own equipment used on courses.
5. Course Staffing, Duration & Ratios
Training and assessment courses must be separately identifiable and not 'hidden' within a longer scheme of training and assessment such as a twelve month college course.
Larger courses improve exchange of information and ensure a wide range of views and experiences.
Course providers are encouraged to recruit assistance from specialist experts or the support of a second member of staff. Team teaching is valuable for the development of providers and future providers alike. The course director must still attend the whole course and cannot deputise to an assistant to cover their absence unless it is an approved, named Coaching Scheme course director.
Mountain Training requires all Coaching Scheme courses to be staffed and delivered following the guidance set out below.
6. Foundation Coach training
Foundation Coach training courses consist of a minimum of eight hours contact time with course staff and may be delivered in a variety of formats. Training courses may be delivered over a number of evenings/sessions to fit with climbing clubs and coaching academies.
Maximum provider to candidate ratio is 1:12.
Minimum group size for Foundation Coach training is 4 candidates.
In exceptional circumstances smaller courses may run, but providers must contact Mountain Training to discuss this in advance of the course running, and must ensure that this does not adversely affect the quality of the course.
It is the responsibility of the provider to ensure that all supporting staff have appropriate levels of skill and experience.
7. Foundation Coach assessment
Foundation Coach assessment courses consist of a thorough review of the candidate’s logged coaching experience and an evaluation of a number of prepared lesson plans (see additional information below), followed by an assessment of a practical coaching session that focuses on one of the FUNdamental climbing techniques.
Candidates must share their digital logbook with the assessor prior to booking onto a course.
Candidates who do not demonstrate appropriate coaching experience and/or do not have lesson plans that meet the required standard, will not be able to proceed to the practical assessment. For this reason providers are not in a position to take last minute assessment bookings.
The practical assessment requires a minimum of
two hours contact time. A typical practical assessment with approximate timings will include:
- Assessor-candidate briefing (15mins)
- Candidate meet with climbers to be coached (15mins)
- Candidate run warm-up, coaching session, cool-down and wrap-up/review (60mins)
- Assessor-candidate debrief and delivery of result (30mins)
Maximum assessor to candidate ratio is 1:1.
The provider will arrange for a small group of climbers (min. 3, max. 6) to be coached during the practical assessment or may ask the candidate to arrange this. This may be a group that the candidate is currently coaching or one they have brought together for the assessment. Either way, a coaching session based on a FUNdamental climbing technique (see additional information below) will be required, which is why novice climbers will be more appropriate than advanced climbers.
It is the responsibility of the provider or course director to ensure the safety and welfare of all candidates and climbers during the practical elements of a Foundation Coach assessment course.
8. Additional Information for Foundation Coaches
What to coach at Foundation Coach assessment
The content of the FUNdamentals of Climbing 1 movement workshop provides the basis of ‘what to coach’ at Foundation Coach level. The core topics are:
- Weight transfer
- Handholds
- Footholds
As a minimum, Foundation Coach candidates should be confident in running effective and engaging coaching sessions on all of the topics above. Candidates who wish to select a different topic or technique to coach should discuss this with the provider in advance of the practical assessment.
DLOG entries for Foundation Coaches
Candidates should record a variety of coaching sessions in DLOG remembering that quality is as important as quantity. For example, entering a regular NICAS session using the ‘weekly’ frequency option will reflect volume, but there is limited value in identical entries, so some of them should be edited to add specific details from the session.
A
minimum of 15 logged coaching sessions since completing Foundation Coach training is expected, and may include roped climbing as well as bouldering both indoors and outdoors. These sessions should focus on delivery of the FUNdamental climbing techniques.
Reflective comments must be added for
at least 5 entries in the ‘description’ tab. These comments should go beyond simply what was done to include an evaluation of the success of a session measured against the aims, as well as ideas about progressions for the climbers, improvements in delivery, and what was learned as a coach.
Used in this way DLOG can become a diary of coaching development, and a valuable mechanism through which providers and other experienced coaches can give feedback. Encourage candidates to tick the ‘flagged’ box to draw attention to the most relevant entries.
Lesson Plans for Foundation Coaches
There are many coaching session lesson plan templates available and candidates should experiment with various formats to develop their own preferred style. As a minimum it should include; topic/technique, aims/learning outcomes, lesson structure with timings, venue and climber information, and reflective observations (see above). For Foundation Coach assessment lesson plan topics should focus on FUNdamental climbing techniques. The provider will make it clear how many are required and they should be uploaded as files in DLOG.
9. Development Coach training
Development Coach training courses consist of a minimum of sixteen hours contact time with course staff and are usually run over two days, with evening sessions if required.
Maximum provider to candidate ratio is 1:10. Minimum group size for Development Coach training is 4 candidates.
In exceptional circumstances smaller courses may run, but providers must contact Mountain Training to discuss this in advance of the course running and must ensure that this does not adversely affect the quality of the course.
It is the responsibility of the provider to ensure that all supporting staff have appropriate levels of skill and experience.
10. Development Coach assessment
Development Coach assessment consists of a thorough review of the candidate’s logged coaching experience, an evaluation of session planning with structured progression over a number of sessions (see additional information below) and a written paper, followed by a final practical assessment. The supporting evidence must be made available to the assessor at least four weeks before the practical assessment date – this can be achieved by booking the candidate onto a course on CMS or asking them to share their DLOG with you.
The practical assessment requires a minimum of
four hours contact time and will include two coaching sessions; one with the candidates’ own long term climbers and one with unknown climbers.
The coaching group will normally consist of two experienced climbers who may be at different levels but make a typical improver coaching group. The content of the coaching session should be appropriate to the individual climbers and could incorporate any aspect of climbing technique (see Additional Information for Development Coaches below).
A typical practical assessment with
approximate timings would include:
- Assessor-candidate briefing (30mins)
- Candidate runs coaching session with own climbers (60mins)
- Session review (20mins)
- Break (30mins)
- Candidate meet with unknown climbers to be coached (30mins)
- Candidate runs coaching session with unknown climbers (60mins)
- Session review (20mins)
- Assessor-candidate debrief and delivery of result (30mins)
The exact format and timings for the assessment will be outlined by the provider.
Maximum assessor to candidate ratio is 1:1
It is common for two candidates to be invited for assessment on the same day. This way the candidates can coach their own clients and then swap clients to fulfil the two practical coaching sessions. Depending on how the provider manages the schedule, the assessment may take up a full day.
When assessing one candidate, a second pair of climbers should be made available by the provider for the coaching session with unknown climbers.
It is the responsibility of the provider or course director to ensure the safety and welfare of all candidates and students during the practical elements of the Development Coach assessment.
11. Additional Information for Development Coaches
What to coach at Development Coach assessment
There is not a prescriptive list of topics/techniques to be assessed at Development Coach level, rather, candidates should be confident in the delivery of progressive coaching sessions to intermediate or improver climbers that could include technical, tactical, physiological or psychological topics.
DLOG entries for Development Coaches
Candidates preparing for Development Coach assessment should have extensive experience of delivering progressive coaching sessions to improving climbers.
A minimum of 40 logged coaching sessions since completing Development Coach training is expected and may include roped climbing as well as bouldering both indoors and outdoors. These sessions should demonstrate progression and development over a number of weeks.
Reflective comments must be added for at least 10 entries in the ‘description’ tab. These comments should include an evaluation of the session and demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of the coaching process.
Used in this way DLOG can demonstrate progress in a candidate’s coaching development, and be a valuable mechanism through which providers and other experienced coaches can give feedback. Encourage candidates to tick the ‘flagged’ box to draw attention to the most relevant entries.
Session Planning for Development Coaches
In addition to recording coaching sessions in DLOG, written session plans allow candidates to evidence development in the quality of their coaching. These may take a similar form to the lesson plans used by Foundation Coaches, but would demonstrate progression over a number of sessions, as well as in-depth reflective observations that demonstrate coaching development. This information should be uploaded as files in DLOG, along with other supporting evidence such as examples of written training programmes.
12. Performance Coach
The Performance Coach qualification is currently under development; a pilot cohort has completed the training with plans to complete pilot assessments in 2019. Registration requirements are to be developed in 2019 with plans to open up the first round of courses to candidates in 2020.
All Performance Coach providers must have obtained approval from Mountain Training UK & Ireland.
All Performance Coach providers must have attended a specific Mountain Training UK & Ireland induction event prior to running any elements of the Performance Coach scheme.
13. Reassessments
In the Coaching Scheme, the first part of the assessment consists of a thorough review of the candidate’s logged coaching experience as well as an evaluation of a lesson plan (Foundation Coach) or session planning with structured progression (Development Coach). A candidate who has not successfully completed these elements to the required standard can not proceed to the practical assessment.
During the practical assessment, where a candidate does not meet the required standard, they may be deferred to a later assessment date, in order to complete the practical assessment again. There are no part-deferrals of the practical coaching sessions. In the case of a deferral, candidates are encouraged to return to the original assessment provider but can be reassessed by any Coaching Scheme provider approved by Mountain Training UK & Ireland. To record the result in the Candidate Management System (CMS) please refer to
CMS and Course Reporting.
14. Moderation Visits
REQUIREMENT:- Providers must allow moderation visits unconditionally at anytime.
Moderation visits are one important part of Mountain Training’s quality assurance system, providing an opportunity for one-to-one dialogue between Mountain Training moderators and candidates, providers, directors and course staff.
Providers will be visited at least once within a three-year period. More frequent visits may occur, especially if providers deliver multiple schemes or have multiple directors working for them. Providers may be contacted at any time during the year to arrange a moderation visit. Moderation visits will be between four hours and a full day in duration.
The moderator will observe part of a course and support providers, directors and course staff in maintaining national standards for the award schemes they deliver. It is the moderator’s role to observe, carefully consider and positively influence course delivery by meaningfully communicating with delivery staff, during and after the course.
Mountain Training also uses moderation visits as an opportunity to engage with candidates, verifying that award schemes meet candidate needs and identifying areas where Mountain Training can improve the service provided to them.
The moderation process will examine all aspects of a course. These include communication with candidates, the course programme, course delivery, choice of venues, experience of candidates and delivery staff currency.
A written moderation report will be uploaded to CMS for the course provider, director and staff to read. Any action points raised within the report must be completed within the given time scale.
15. Continuing Professional Development
Further continuing professional development may be achieved by attending workshops and training events. Many are offered by the four associations, MTA, AMI, BAIML and BMG, as well as by other organisations. Providers, directors and staff are expected to continue their professional development and maintain technical competence through this medium.
16. Annual Audit
An audit of provider and director award scheme provision is undertaken annually. Providers and directors who do not meet the minimum requirements outlined within this manual and accompanying policies are at risk of having their provider and director status removed.
In the case of a provider wishing to withdraw their provider status they should contact the relevant national training organisation. Please be aware Mountain Training is not responsible for any financial losses incurred as a result of a provider choosing to withdraw.
17. Support for providers, directors, staff and candidates
Mountain Training recognises the vital contribution made by providers, directors and course staff to maintain the high regard in which Mountain Training's schemes are held.
Mountain Training provides a range of services to support providers, directors, course staff and candidates, including:- Sharing of updates and good practice through a variety of mediums.
- Provider and director resources on Mountain Training’s website.
- Maintenance and development of the Candidate Management System.
- Opportunity to talk face-to-face with technical staff at Siabod Cottage.
- Telephone and email support.
- Immediate online candidate registration process for entry level award schemes.
- Promotion of award schemes on Mountain Training's website, at events and via stakeholders.
- Dealing with appeals and complaints in a sensitive and timely manner.
18. Equality
Mountain Training is committed to promoting the principles of equality with its award schemes open to all. Mountain Training works with the Mountaineering Councils and other key partners to remove barriers to participation.
Providers, directors and course staff should be aware of obligations in respect of compliance with gender, race and disability discrimination legislation and undertake the delivery of awards in accordance with the Equality Act 2010.
Providers, directors and course staff have the discretion to adjust training and assessment methodology to enable candidates to perform to the best of their ability. Mountain Training encourages discussion of such adjustments in advance.