by dtc » Thu Apr 30, 2015 2:05 am
As DBB highlighted, the balance between fun and breaking bad habits is hard (I have two kids about that age).
I will say that instructors can sometimes fall into the trap of wanting people to stand, rather than wanting people to be technically correct. So the two stage pop up is often taught so people can say they have stood up by the end of the lesson; 80% of the people at the lesson may never surf again so don't really care. The fact is that a kid can do a knee pop up in white water no problems because they are so light; so it seems to her like a successful method.
However, as you know, once you get to unbroken waves if you take too long to pop up then you, well, do the opposite of pop up. Slow pop ups are probably the second biggest problem learners have (slow paddling/nose diving is probably the greatest)
Riding white water is the time to perfect the pop up - you don't have to pop up straight as the water hits you (in fact, it can be hard because you bounce around etc), but the technique can be refined.
So it is worth, I think, pointing out to her that what she is doing will make it harder when she goes onto unbroken waves. I know my kids will take the path of least resistance at (almost all) times - if its too hard, they wont do it; if there is an easier (if 'wrong') way then they will take the easy route. But continual nagging (ok, mentioning it one or two times every surf) and they might come around. One day the kids surprise you and go 'ok, I'm going to do it properly'.
One thought is to make it a game at home - set up a fake surfboard or stringer (eg a piece of string on the carpet) and challenge her to pop up and land properly. Jellybean for every success. Rewards work well! Popping up is inherently a muscle memory activity; if she does it at home for jellybeans then it becomes what she does in the surf without even thinking.
Another suggestion I have is that there is a really good series of beginner surfing tutorials put out by surf camp 'surf simply'. Your daughter (and you) might get some benefit from watching these, at this stage in particular the one called 'Catching Unbroken Waves' (youtube 'Surf Simply Tutorials: Catching Unbroken Waves'). All of them are worth watching in due course.
Good luck - teaching kids is really hard, as I have discovered!