Believe me, I'm not anti-novice. It's just the opposite, honest.
Quote:
This notion to drop Novice is plain silly. We should be looking for way to increase novice retition. Dropping a newbie into open class and having them go home 5-10 seconds behind the winner will not help keeping them around. The Novice class has served and continues to service a valuable function in the club.
I recognize that I will never have the wisdom that Jim has,

but here is some rationale for the dropping NOV.
The best way to retain novices is for them to have a mentor, whether that's through a formal or an informal process. Every long term member I know of has a story of how someone helped them in their early events and got them to stick it out through the discouraging phase of this sport. We have discussed this one before too over the years, and never really made a serious attempt to formalize it.
The theory behind eliminating NOV is to get them to interact more with experienced people in their class. We would also need to encourage the experienced folks to help out, which I think they would. I think it would help most of the novices a lot to be rubbing elbows with the experienced folks. When people are new to the sport, they tend to associate more quickly with other folks in their class. I see little benefit for novices to be hanging around each other all day. It's the blind leading the blind. Where this theory falls down is in classes where the NOV is the only competitor.
If we would do a better job as a club of help the NOVs, I would be ok with keeping NOV class. Regardless of that, I would like to see us require the NOVs to take an instructor on their first two runs at least. I would rather see us do that than allow extra runs for NOVs. We gave them five runs yesterday. If they would just take an instructor on those runs, they would do fine.
If we eliminate NOV, we could go gack to labeling cars the way we used to several years ago- with the class letters followed by N. This would simply be a way for the rest of us to identify the novices so we can help them.
I don't think Novices on their first few events get that discouraged just because of their times. They get discouraged if they don't improve. The best way for times to improve is to provide a little instruction.
Miles
P.S. In case you are wondering, Jim and I meet regularly to come up with a list of topics to disagree on.
