SSA Patrol Rifle Instructor
Backtracking to last weeks class. The first day was a little rough as I'm not used to rapid fire and other students seem to be experienced and not very friendly as they are LE(swat, special teams, etc) & military. On Day 2 things became a bit brighter as all of the students opened up. They admitted that they had trouble keeping up with the class on the first day and a lot of it was new to them, just as it was for me. The instructor also commented that as an instructor it's difficult to teach LE/Military students because they don't show any emotions and don't give feedback if they are learning from the class, due to how they have to behave for their line of work. They may be learning and enjoying the class, but just won't communicate it. The lesson was to know your audience and be able to adjust. Everyone was friends by the end of day 2.
We did another teachback exercise where I taught grip & the 4 points of contact, and malfunction drills. I was a little unprepared and should've done rehearsals with my rifle the night prior. My rapid fire was improving along with my speed to get on target. I normally keep my support hand close in on the handguard, but now I'm sold with the forward grip as it helped to control the recoil and getting on target. After shooting a 30 round burst the previous day, I learned to keep my weight shifted forward too. Normally at the range, and LE/Military training it's frowned upon to shoot rapid fire for more than 2 rounds. I think firing off a 30 round magazine is an excellent tool to teach the importance of recoil management.
Other topics we covered on Day 2 tdifferent positions, kneeling, prone, sitting. The stretch kneeling position was a new one for me, where you lunge forward with your support side leg, and keep your firing side leg stretched out and calf/foot flat on the ground. It was quick to get into and out of, fairly stable, and really helped to control the recoil. Also did a malfunction with a bolt override, where a case gets stuck in the charging handle. I haven't seen this being taught at any school, but basically you can't rack the charging handle so you collapse the but stock, hold the bolt catch down, and whack the buttstock on the ground several times while pulling the charging handle back until the bolt catch catches. Then you whack the charging handle forward and the case gets ejected.
Someone did an interesting vision drill where you extend your arms outward to find the edges of your peripheral vision. Then you compare it by looking down, like looking at a cell phone, and repeating the exercise. It shows how your peripheral vision to the sides are compromised when you look down. So when sighting down a rifle you should keep your head up instead of tilting your head down and looking up with your eyes.