In another thread someone mentioned learning to shoot while moving. As a 30+ year instructor, I've long had doubts about how much of this training is conducted. I'm going to generalize a bit here.
The usual thing is to introduce the students to the process at a very slow pace-almost a shuffle. In some cases, a longer pace is used, but the pace is still suitable for pall bearers. This is understandable, no one wants to see anyone get hurt and themselves get sued. Many of the folks who design competition stages fall prey to the same issue, and ROs frequently note that "you don't want to jar your sights off target."
The problem is, this doesn't reflect what one may NEED to do to avoid becoming a statistic. Very few practice at any reasonable response to a situation.
Example: you go looking for the source of the noise in the house in the wee hours of the night. You discover someone in the kitchen. They grab a knife and rush you in your very own real world Tueller Drill/21 foot rule test. Barring a stupendous demonstration of markspersonship that hits the CNS, if you do the octagenarian shuffle to the side, you'll be rooming in the morgue.
The MEU-SOQ qual course is available on the internet. They show movement while shooting (at close ranges) of 1 meter/second with good shot placement. This is a reasonable goal-though in the situation above you might want to try for more. When we did the test in training we had a 41 year old white guy do the 21 feet in 0.87 seconds.
Can't do this at the range? Put a big, cheap mirror on the garage wall or basement wall and dryfire it. At least practice keeping the front sight in the upper chest.
The usual thing is to introduce the students to the process at a very slow pace-almost a shuffle. In some cases, a longer pace is used, but the pace is still suitable for pall bearers. This is understandable, no one wants to see anyone get hurt and themselves get sued. Many of the folks who design competition stages fall prey to the same issue, and ROs frequently note that "you don't want to jar your sights off target."
The problem is, this doesn't reflect what one may NEED to do to avoid becoming a statistic. Very few practice at any reasonable response to a situation.
Example: you go looking for the source of the noise in the house in the wee hours of the night. You discover someone in the kitchen. They grab a knife and rush you in your very own real world Tueller Drill/21 foot rule test. Barring a stupendous demonstration of markspersonship that hits the CNS, if you do the octagenarian shuffle to the side, you'll be rooming in the morgue.
The MEU-SOQ qual course is available on the internet. They show movement while shooting (at close ranges) of 1 meter/second with good shot placement. This is a reasonable goal-though in the situation above you might want to try for more. When we did the test in training we had a 41 year old white guy do the 21 feet in 0.87 seconds.
Can't do this at the range? Put a big, cheap mirror on the garage wall or basement wall and dryfire it. At least practice keeping the front sight in the upper chest.