Coaches have many tasks, including as 'judges'. In The Last Lecture, Randy Pausch, dying of cancer, explains some of his methods. In group projects, peer feedback explicitly told students where they stood.
Here are the three questions they graded each other on:
1) Did his peers think he was working hard? Exactly how many hours did his peers think he had devoted to a project?
2) How creative was his contribution?
3) Did his peers find it easy or hard to work with him? Was he a team player?
Pausch hoped the feedback would make students more accountable to the projects. He wrote, "Wow, I've got to take it up a notch."
Part of being great teammates is modeling excellence and holding each other accountable to hard work.
If your players don’t have a stride stop with an inside hand fake “in their bag,” I’d suggest adding it asap. A great solution for a small advantage against aggressive defenders. pic.twitter.com/U9eB216cQg
— Coach Tony Miller (@tonywmiller) September 30, 2024
Lagniappe 2. Less dribbling demands player and ball movement.
Bob Knight no dribble drill
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) October 1, 2024
Nobody taught the game like the general
(Via @BBCoachDotCom 🎥)
pic.twitter.com/eGoIotWopC
Lagniappe 3. What are good shots for your program?
Hunt 4 ⭐ and 5 ⭐ shots. pic.twitter.com/lVuoGZMsHj
— Coach Matt Dennis (@CoachMattDennis) September 26, 2024