Strategies explained in plain English for parents learning Golf.
Choose a safe target
Beginner golfers improve faster when they aim at a wide, clear target instead of a tiny perfect landing spot.
When used: On tee shots, fairway shots, approaches, and recovery shots.
Parent view: A safe target may be the middle of the fairway or green, not the flag. Parents can praise smart aim even when the shot is not perfect.
Difficulty: Beginner
Pick the club for the job
Club choice should match distance, lie, obstacles, confidence, and the goal of keeping the ball in play.
When used: Before shots from the tee, fairway, rough, bunker edge, and around the green.
Parent view: The longest club is not always the smartest club. A shorter club that advances the ball safely may lower stress and protect pace.
Difficulty: Beginner
Build the short game
Chipping, pitching, and putting help players finish holes without needing long power shots.
When used: Around the green, after missed approaches, and during practice sessions.
Parent view: Many youth strokes happen near the green. Short game practice can make golf feel less overwhelming for beginners.
Difficulty: Beginner
Use simple course management
Course management means choosing the next best playable shot instead of always trying the hardest shot.
When used: After a ball lands in rough, behind trees, near water, near bunkers, or far from the green.
Parent view: Parents can ask what is the safe next place to put the ball, then let the player decide.
Difficulty: Beginner
Take the recovery shot
A recovery shot gets the ball back to a playable area after trouble.
When used: After shots into rough, trees, bunkers, or awkward lies.
Parent view: Sideways or short can be smart. Young players learn that one careful recovery prevents several rushed mistakes.
Difficulty: Beginner
Use a simple putting routine
A repeatable routine helps players look at the target, control distance, and stay calm on the green.
When used: Before short putts, long lag putts, and pressure putts.
Parent view: A calm routine matters more than a parent whispering technical advice over every putt.
Difficulty: Beginner
Plan for pace of play
Players support pace by being ready, bringing likely clubs, limiting searches, and accepting pickup rules when used.
When used: During all rounds, especially busy clinics, scrambles, and tournament days.
Parent view: Good pace is a strategy because it keeps the group relaxed and avoids rushed decisions later.
Difficulty: Beginner
Reset after mistakes
Golf includes missed shots, lost balls, three-putts, and confusing rules moments, so players need a way to breathe and move on.
When used: After bad shots, penalties, out-of-bounds balls, bunker trouble, and missed short putts.
Parent view: Emotional regulation is a golf skill. One poor shot does not need to become a poor hole or a poor round.
Difficulty: Beginner