onoway, on Nov 28 2009, 06:56 AM, said:
I agree with Helene_t that most newbies retreat into Iamgoingtopretend youdidntevenbidbecauseIdontunderstandwhatanyofitmeansorwhatIamsupposedtodoaboutit mode. That doesn't solve the problem though.
My point was that they are always in that mode, even if we play exactly the same system as they are supposed to.
Say we pre-alert 1
♣ as 2+. In UK this is uncommon in many clubs so it may not be immediately obvious to opps what it means and how they should defend against it. The following reactions are typical (yes, the field is extremely mixed as this is the only club in town):
Noobs: Don't listen to prealerts. Since a 2
♣ overcall would show 10-15 points and 5+ clubs even if we were playing Acol or Precision, they don't care, and they are right in not caring, since it has no impact on their bidding.
Intermediates: Try to listen but give up. May make a 2
♣ overcall which is either Michaels or natural depending on what they have in their hand. Don't realize that they need to discuss this with p, not even in the postmortem.
Advanced: "Thanks, we will treat it as natural"
Experts: Ask for clarification as they have different defense against it depending on how likely it is to be a doubleton.
So some of the intermediates, rather than the noobs, may need some protection. I estimate that in the UK (where most club players are pretty vanilla), far less than 1% of intermediate player's bidding misunderstandings are related to complexity, artificiality or weirdness of opps' methods. In NL, where stuff like short club and multi are standard and t-walsh and raptor etc. occurs occasionally, it may be as high as 2%. I could be underestimating this, or it could be a problem because it is perceived as a bigger problem than it is. I just don't think it's much of a problem.
Quote
Even in BIL, which is as supportive and nurturing a place as you can get, I have met people who are afraid to play with other people for months. People dont like to feel stupid or overwhelmed and certainly are unlikely to pursue an activity for pleasure for very long which makes them feel inadequate
Yes, but I think this is more related to the idea that beginners have to learn to use all kind of crazy gadgets like transfers, capp, cuebids and negative doubles before they are ready to play at the club. I don't think it has anything to do with what opponents play. It's what their teacher, textbook and partner forces them to play.
Maybe beginners should not learn a system at all, just "bid what you think you can make".
It is similar to the way foreign languages are taught in Denmark (at least the way I learned it, it may be different now). In English lessons, teachers just start speaking English to the students, if they don't understand it the teacher will augment with finger language. Students are encourages to try to say something in English, they will start by using the few words they know, mixed up with Danish words which they try to pronounce in an English-like way. In German lessons, we were taught a bunch of grammar tables before we started talking and most students would after a few years still never try to say anything for fear that they might use a wrong infliction or a wrong article.
Personally I picked up German much quicker than English but most students found English more fun and learned it quicker.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket