Focus: Balanced, low-impact stance and joint-friendly alignment

Module 1 : Goal Setting & Baseline Assessment

Welcome Video

Objective:
Students will learn how to establish a stable, low-impact skiing stance that protects joints, improves balance, and prepares the body for controlled, efficient skiing on all terrain.

Duration: 60–75 minutes

Materials Needed:

  • Skis or ski simulators (dryland preferred for initial stance work)
  • Yoga mat or padded surface
  • Resistance bands (optional for feedback)
  • Mirror or video recording device (optional)

1. Introduction & Goal Setting (5–10 min)

  • Welcome students and explain the importance of a low-impact, joint-friendly stance for longevity and confidence in skiing.
  • Key points:
    • Proper alignment reduces knee, hip, and ankle stress.
    • Balanced stance allows quicker reactions on varied terrain.
    • Engaging core and postural muscles improves stability.
  • Quick “self-assessment” check: Stand naturally, bend knees slightly, and note body tension or misalignment.

2. Dryland Alignment Drills (15 min)

A. Hip-to-Ankle Alignment Drill

  • Stand with feet hip-width apart.
  • Softly bend knees (micro-bend, ~15–20°).
  • Ensure knees track over toes; hips stacked over ankles.
  • Hands on hips, gently shift weight side-to-side, feeling even load distribution.
  • 3 sets × 30 seconds.

B. Core Engagement Drill

  • Engage transverse abdominis: imagine drawing belly button toward spine.
  • Maintain neutral spine (avoid arching or rounding back).
  • Hold for 15–20 seconds, repeat 5 times.

C. Ankle Mobility & Shock Absorption Drill

  • Stand on one leg, flex and extend ankle slowly.
  • Feel how ankle flexion absorbs weight.
  • Repeat 8–10 reps per leg.

3. On-Snow / Simulator Stance Practice (20 min)

A. “Float on Feet” Drill

  • Skiers flex knees slightly and imagine “floating” above snow.
  • Weight distributed evenly across forefoot and heel.
  • Slight rocking forward/backward to feel balance point.

B. Gentle Turn Prep

  • Practice micro-turns, emphasizing:
    • Knees over toes
    • Hips over feet
    • Upper body relaxed
  • Focus on feeling joints supported, not locked.

C. Video Feedback (Optional)

  • Record student stance; review alignment points: ankle flexion, hip stack, knee tracking, shoulder over hips.

4. Strength & Stability Integration (15 min)

A. Mini-Squats with Resistance Band

  • Band around knees to encourage outward pressure, maintaining knee alignment.
  • 2 sets × 12 reps, slow and controlled.

B. Single-Leg Balance with Arm Movement

  • Lift one leg, move arms in controlled patterns to challenge balance.
  • Hold 15–20 seconds per leg, repeat 3 times.

C. Side-to-Side Weight Shifts

  • Emulate skiing weight transfer gently, staying in low-impact stance.
  • 2 sets × 10 reps each side.

5. Cool Down & Reflection (5–10 min)

  • Gentle hamstring, calf, hip flexor stretches.
  • Encourage deep diaphragmatic breathing to relax joints.
  • Reflection prompts:
    • “Where do I feel tension or instability?”
    • “Which muscles are working to support my stance?”
  • Set micro-goal: Practice balanced stance 5–10 min daily off-snow to reinforce motor memory.

Key Takeaways

  1. Low-impact stance = knees slightly bent, hips stacked over ankles, core engaged.
  2. Proper alignment reduces joint stress and fatigue.
  3. Balance comes from evenly distributing weight and using small adjustments, not stiffening.
  4. Daily practice off-snow strengthens muscles and builds awareness.