The golf and tennis program at the Scottsdale, Ariz. club is being offered to members’ children and grandchildren ages 4 to 17, with a new Non-Equity Golf Junior Sports Academy Membership being made available to those referred by member families. The golf program will feature Richard Franklin’s “DiscoverGolf” system that builds childhood development and behavioral psychology principals into a board game-style curriculum, with titles that include “Croctology,” “King Putt” and “Nutcluster.”
Desert Mountain in Scottsdale, Ariz. is opening a Junior Sports Academy (JSA) that will focus on young golf and tennis enthusiasts. The JSA will offer children ages 4 to 17 a different kind of instruction, with an emphasis on providing experiences that inspire curiosity, immersive play, and self-guided exploration into golf and/or tennis.
The golf curriculum, launching in March, will include JSA golf programming held during after school off-peak hours at the club’s Outlaw golf course, one of seven signature courses on the property.
Richard Franklin, an international leader in junior golf instruction, has been brought in to lead the program. Franklin was recruited from Deerpath Golf Course in Lake Forest, Ill. where he spent 12 years leading the youth golf program.
Striving to “bring out the best in young learners,” Franklin studied childhood development and behavioral psychology to determine that fun and interactive games on the course are the best way to both teach and excite children. Franklin’s game system, called “DiscoverGolf,” will serve as the learning platform for the golf component of JSA.
The DiscoverGolf game system and methodology has reached more than 7,000 young golfers worldwide and is now in use at more than 250 golf facilities on five continents. All games, complete with characters and functionality, have been developed by Franklin.
Franklin’s system combines childhood development, behavioral psychology, professional golf and graphic design in a board game-style golf curriculum with titles that include “Croctology,” “King Putt” and “Nutcluster.” Croctology requires the student to putt through a series of very menacing cardboard crocodile teeth to reveal a ramp, which leads to the next step, where precisely placed puts will win the game.
“Richard is an original thinker who is bringing a level of ingenuity and fun to our Desert Mountain families,” explained Paxton O’Connor, PGA, the club’s Director of Performance & Instruction. “We’re starting something very special and new, with lessons that guide our youth to think differently on the golf course, while deliberately training curiosity, immersive play, and self-guided exploration.”
At Desert Mountain, the golf portion of the Academy will offer 90-minute sessions up to 6 days a week, timed to begin after kids are done with the day’s schooling, plus one or two sessions on weekend days. A 4-to-1 (or better) student-coach ratio will be maintained, and learning will be sequenced as a series of games that lead up to a big end-of-day event.
The JSA programs are open to children and grandchildren of members and available upon referral as part of a new Non-Equity Golf Junior Sports Academy Membership, through which young families at Desert Mountain may refer the Academy to friends and teammates.
Training sessions included in the JSA will encompass team-based challenges with high levels of player interaction, goal quests, games and activities that bring out each child’s creativity, problem-solving skills, engineering capabilities, communication/team management, and skill development.
As an alternative or goal-focused step, a second offering speaks to students that have potential tournament aspirations, through a program that offers a more technique-driven roadmap. Juniors in this group can expect more intensive instruction, more drills than games, and specialized on-course.
“Golf is usually taught in a linear way: grip, stance, tempo,” said Franklin. “I believe in an approach that honors the non-uniform nature of childhood development. Leading young people requires us to adapt with culturally relevant programming that honors a child’s kaleidoscope of prior experiences, unique perspectives, emotions, and personality that is brought to bear on our lesson tee.”
The JSA Tennis Developmental Pathway program will be run by Ryan Johnson, Desert Mountain’s Director of Racquet Sports, who possesses an extensive background in youth tennis programming. Since joining Desert Mountain in August 2020, Johnson has developed a series of graduated tennis skills programs and clinics for young tennis enthusiasts.
The full JSA tennis experience is ideal for the developmental player and will provide comprehensive training opportunities and a pathway for players with competitive aspirations. The JSA Tennis Performance program will launch later in 2021, emphasizing strength training, nutrition, on-court drills, and match play.
“The Junior Sports Academy aligns perfectly with the club’s vision to provide outstanding experiences for members and be the finest private club and community for golf and recreational lifestyle activities in North America,” said Damon DiOrio, CEO of Desert Mountain Club. “With dozens of younger families investing in Desert Mountain and what we offer, along with more children and grandchildren spending more time here as they participate in remote learning, enhancing their experience became very timely and very exciting.”
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