A childhood rite of passage was learning to ride a bike. I only remember a very small snippet of my experience. My mom was teaching me to ride in our backyard but pushing me from the house to the back fence. The yard was on a slight downhill slope. I would pedal downhill. My mom would steady me and help me stop.
I remember one time going downhill and getting close to the back fence. I yelled, "Stop!" My mom yelled from a distance, " Use your brakes!" I didn't remember if I did or if I crashed. Either way, it wasn't fatal because I'm still her.
This summer, I decided to teach our six year old daughter how to ride a bike without training wheels. Like my mom, I tried to have her ride on the slope in our yard. Although she didn't crash, it didn't work. Then I read a bike riding lesson on the Internet which recommended separating the two parts: balancing and pedaling.
So I took our daughter out on the street which had a slight slope. She worked on coasting and balancing without pedaling. That took about a week for her to master. Once she mastered balancing, the pedaling part was very easy. In fact, our daughter surprised herself (and everyone else) by pedaling uphill for a picture my spouse was taking.
It took about a week to learn riding a bike using the balance first then pedal method. I highly recommend using this method for teach a child to ride a bike.
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Copyright © 2011 Achievement Catalyst, LLC
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