Sport Skill Acquisition Guide

Guides structured sport skill learning by breaking down techniques, providing drills, self-assessment, and mental rehearsal while recommending safe, supervis...

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Sport Skill Acquisition Guide

⚠️ Educational only. This skill does not replace a certified sport coach or instructor. It does not guarantee skill acquisition or performance outcomes. Technique descriptions are educational and cannot verify user execution. This skill recommends in-person coaching for complex or high-risk skills. The user assumes responsibility for safe practice conditions. If an activity carries risk of serious injury, seek qualified in-person instruction before attempting.

Description

Helps the user learn a new sport skill using deliberate practice, progressive drills, and mental rehearsal techniques. Breaks complex skills into learnable components and provides a structured pathway from beginner to competent execution.

When to Use

This skill applies when the user wants to:

  • Learn a specific sport skill from scratch (e.g., tennis serve, basketball jump shot, Olympic lift)
  • Improve a skill they can already perform but execute inconsistently
  • Break through a skill plateau where practice alone isn't producing improvement
  • Add deliberate structure to unstructured practice sessions
  • Use mental rehearsal to accelerate learning when physical practice time is limited

Required Inputs

To design an effective skill acquisition plan, the skill needs:

  • Specific skill to learn — named precisely (e.g., "freestyle flip turn" not "swimming better")
  • Current proficiency level — can the user do it at all? How consistently? Under what conditions?
  • Available practice time and frequency — how often and how long they can practice
  • Equipment or space constraints — what they have access to
  • Preferred learning style — visual (watching demos), analytical (understanding mechanics), kinesthetic (learning by feel), or a mix

If any of these are missing or vague, ask clarifying questions.

Prompt Flow

  1. Clarify the exact skill the user wants to learn and current level.

    • Narrow "I want to get better at basketball" to a specific skill: shooting form, dribbling with off-hand, defensive footwork.
    • Assess current level: never tried, can do it sometimes, can do it consistently but want refinement.
    • Confirm equipment, space, and constraints.
  2. Break the skill into component sub-skills for progressive learning.

    • Deconstruct the full skill into 3-6 learnable components.
    • Order them from foundational to advanced.
    • Explain how each sub-skill contributes to the whole movement.
  3. Design a drill sequence from isolated practice to integrated execution.

    • Start with isolated drills that remove complexity and focus on one sub-skill.
    • Progress to combination drills that link two or more sub-skills.
    • Finish with full-skill practice under game-like or realistic conditions.
    • For each drill: describe the setup, execution, reps/time, and what to focus on.
  4. Create a self-assessment checklist for feedback.

    • Provide 5-10 observable checkpoints the user can self-monitor.
    • Use simple yes/no or 1-5 scale items.
    • Include both technical markers (body position, timing) and outcome markers (did the ball go where intended?).
    • Recommend video recording for self-review when possible.
  5. Provide a mental rehearsal script for visualization practice.

    • Write a brief guided visualization of the skill executed correctly.
    • Include sensory details: what they see, feel, hear.
    • Suggest mental practice times: before bed, before practice, during rest periods.
    • Emphasize that mental rehearsal complements — never replaces — physical practice.

Output Structure

  1. Skill breakdown into sub-skills — 3-6 component parts ordered from foundational to advanced
  2. Progressive drill sequence — isolated drills → combination drills → full-skill execution
  3. Practice session template — how to structure a typical practice session including warm-up, drill work, and review
  4. Self-assessment checklist — 5-10 observable checkpoints for the user to monitor their own progress
  5. Mental rehearsal script — a brief guided visualization for mental practice sessions

Safety Boundaries

  • Does not replace a certified sport coach or instructor.
  • Does not guarantee skill acquisition or performance outcomes.
  • Technique descriptions are educational and cannot verify user execution.
  • Recommends in-person coaching for complex or high-risk skills (e.g., Olympic lifts, gymnastics, combat sports, diving).
  • The user assumes responsibility for safe practice conditions, including adequate space, appropriate equipment, and knowing personal limits.
  • If the skill carries inherent risk (heavy weights, speed, height, water), explicitly recommend qualified supervision.