NAVIGATION
SOCIAL
ADDRESS
I88 Route de
Villaroland
73210 AIME
SAVOIE
FRANCE
CONTACT
info@valdisereskischool.com
+33 (0) 608627940
Meta-Ski System
British American Val d’Isère
Ski School
Philippe Clement
Off Piste Specialist
Phillipe
is
a
French
national,
fluent
in
English,
who
holds
the
top
French
ski
instruction,
coaching,
and
guiding
qualification
(
Diplome
National
Brevet
d’Etat
Ski
Alpin
).
He
grew
up
racing
slalom
and
after
a
few
years
of
competing
on
the
French
Cup
Circuit
(French
championships)
he
followed
his
deep
passion
of
free
skiing,
especially
off-trail,
excursions
and
back
country
touring.
With
30
years
of
guiding
in
the
Tarentaise
there
are
few
who
know
the
wilds
of the region as he does.
Philippe
also
teaches
all
levels
with
the
highly
effective
MetaSki
System.
We
are
very
careful
about
this
so
that
people
are
not
exposed
to
the
contradictions
and
errors
inherent
in
standard
teaching methods.
'En
Plus'
Philippe
offers
remodeled
antique
chalet
accommodation:
locationalpes.net
Ian Beveridge
Personal Coaching
Ian
is
a
Scottish
engineer
who
came
to
skiing
as
a
young
adult,
speaks
fluent
French
and
has
earned
both
the
highest
British
qualification
(BASI
ISTD)
and
French
equivalence
(
Diplome
National
Brevet
d’Etat Ski Alpin
).
After
trainin
g
and
teaching
in
several
countries
and
seeing
ski
teaching
through
the
experienced
eyes
of
an
engineer,
Ian
realised
that
all
"national"
teaching
systems
were
uniformly
fundamentally
flawed.
Initially
developed
to
handle
a
commercial
mass
market
consisting
of
large
groups
of
12
beginners
those
systems
remain
permanently
based
upon
seriously
dysfunctional
mechanics.
Stand
12
people
dead
still
in
a
snowplough
and
they
can
be
handled
-
but
they
will
be
forever
defensive.
Tell
them
to
“balance”
and
they
will
not
dare
move
correctly
-
ever!
Teach
this
way
and
you
generate
only
problems
that
can
never
be
untangled
-
entrapped
by
defensive
emotions,
reinforced
by
defensive, inappropriate movements.
Seeing
people
being
significantly
frightened,
discouraged
and
injured
by
standard
teaching
Ian
(at
great
personal
cost)
refused
to
use
those
methods
any
longer
and
started
again
from
scratch
to
work
out
a
genuine
solution.
This
was
the
birth
of
the
MetaSki
System
(1995)
-
a
scientific
approach
to
skiing
that
truly
compliments
body
mechanics:
It
uses
dynamics
(opposite
of
balance)
and
skating
(opposite
of
snowplough)
as
a
base.
Freedom
of
movement
also
frees
the
mind
from
the
tyranny
of
emotions
and
builds
skill
safely
and
amazingly
rapidly
-
with
no
artificial
limit
to
the
level
or
potential
application.
The
door
spontaneously
opens
to
skiing
being
a
major
Personal
Development
platform
-
in
a
stunning
natural
environment
that
no martial art can come close to.
Ian
also
guides
and
coaches
off-piste
-
at
all
levels.
(Twitter name: @skicoach)
Link
for
technical
details:
skiinstruction.blogspot.com
Val d’isère
Coaching - Off Piste
Guiding - Race Training
Personal Development In Skiing
A unique team of English speaking
professionals based in Val d’Isère, providing
the highest standard of teaching and guiding,
while always placing your safety, success and
satisfaction foremost.
STORY
ELIMINATE ALL MAJOR CAUSES OF
FATIGUE, INJURY AND FEAR
PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT
All teaching is using the MetaSki System and is
oriented towards ongoing personal
development.
BEGINNERS
We control the learning environment for rapid
and fun learning.
You already know how to ski if you know how to
walk!
The dreaded Snowplough is over, we replaced it
with skating based natural movements. Easy is
fun! RIGHT?
INTERMEDIATES
No more learning plateaux. Easy, stress free and
natural progress to entry level off-piste.
Experience skiing that won't change due to
changing conditions, permitting you to excel.
Learn to look after your joints both on and off
the snow!
ADVANCED
Master bumps, racing, and challenging off-piste
with mystery-free and rapid progress.
Understood correctly, skiing becomes
therapeutic for the body - essential for longevity
in sport.
Develop physical endurance and mental
confidence through genuine technical
competence.
OFF PISTE GUIDING
Only the most responsible, safe and experienced
guiding.
Skier ability level is respected and determines
where we lead you.
Some instruction or feedback is given when
necessary but this is a ski period not a lesson.
(Taking a few lessons makes it easier for you to
respond to a 'tip' from us while guiding
because you will already have done the
homework and just need prompting.)
RACE TRAINING
Race training available all seasons - Autumn
(Glacier), Winter (Private training piste), Summer
(Glacier)
Preparation for Ski Instructor Eurotest
COACHING
We
advise
a
maximum
of
4
people
in
any
session
and
for
adults
and
children
to
be
apart
if
possible.
Best
results
are
normally
obtained
with
one-on-
one coaching.
Personal Development
During
on-piste
coaching
the
student’s
limits
are
constantly
expanded
as
perceptions
are
challenged and altered.
Counter-intuitive,
conscious
and
mindful
movements
are
encouraged
to
take
the
place
of
emotionally
driven
defensive
instincts.
Whereas
standard
teaching
only
reinforces
destructive
defensive
instincts,
Meta-Ski
principles
develop
a
completely
new
set
of
natural
skills
that
work
to
protect and develop both the body and mind.
RACE TRAINING
Tignes
glacier
is
open
in
summer
and
autumn
for
race training.
Race
training
can
be
very
cost
effective
when
people
club
together
and
share
the
sessions.
There
is
no
better
way
to
seriously
boost
your
level
than
by
skiing
gates.
The
need
to
respond
to
challenging
physical
constraints
provided
by
correctly
set
race
courses
allows
new
awareness
to
develop.
The
clock
never
lies
so
self-delusion
stops here.
Professional
standards
for
ski
instructors
today
require
a
certain
racing
level
(100
FIS
poins).
We
organise
and
run
training
camps
and
programs
for individuals all year.
OFF PISTE GUIDING
Maximum of 6 people
for security.
Avalanche transceivers supplied
Full security packs and Air Bags can be rented.
Skier level and fitness is respected
Technical
Off
Piste
sessions
are
available
for
all
levels from initiate to highly experienced.
British American
Val d’Isère Ski
School
Personal Development in Skiing
-
ABOUT
FACTS
BOOKING
Arrangements
can
be
made
for
family
and
group
bookings
by
contacting
us
by
email
or
by
telephone.
Family
or
group
bookings
can
be
extremely
cost
effective and give you great flexibility.
The
instructor
is
paid
for
his/her
time,
so
you
can
organise your group or family to suit everyone.
Rates change throughout the season.
People
who
return
to
our
instructors
do
so
because
they
are
enjoying
success
and
can
see
the
way
to
continued
rapid
development.
(We
eliminate
the
endless
cycle
of
“problem
solving”
and
correction.)
We
are
often
fully
booked
well
in
advance
with
returning
clients
and
their
friends
or
families
so
please
think
to
contact
us
well
in
advance of your holiday.
Day
rates
are
not
lower
than
average
but
by
virtue
of
exceptional
results
this
is
by
far
the
most
cost
effective solution that you can find!
HOURS / RATES
Full days: 09:00 to 1700
Morning: 09:00 to 12:45
Afternoon: 13:15 to 1700
Rates vary during the season: contact for details
info@valdisereskischool.com
tel: +33 (0) 6 08 62 79 40
Chris Harrop
Off Piste Specialist
Chris
has
skied
since
childhood
and
is
trained
to
the
highest
level
of
British
qualification:
BASI
ISTD
(&
Diplome
National
Brevet
d’Etat
Ski
Alpin)
and
has full legality in France.
Nobody
knows
the
wilds
of
the
Tarentaise
mountains
better
than
Chris
(Though
Philippe
might
argue
that
point!)
with
at
least
35
years
of
accumulated off-piste experience.
If
you
want
to
invest
in
your
own
dream
chalet
constructed
by
Chris
then
visit
the
following
link:
frenchmountainproperty.com
Associates
All Categories
We
work
in
cooperation
with
a
small
number
of
respected
independent
instructors
who
are
capable
of
operating
at
our
standards.
All
instructors are fully qualified and legal.
PRESS REVIEW The Sunday
Telegraph by Mark Law
Subject: Ian Beveridge: BASI ISTD & Diplome
National Brevet d’Etat Ski Alpin
Mark
Law
(Telegraph
Economics
Journalist)
took
up
skiing
10
years
ago
in
his
forties
and
soon
hit
the
plateau.
But
then
he
met
an
inspirational
teacher
and
his technique improved dramatically.
You
are
an
intermediate
skier
with
a
modest
ambition.
Obviously
you’d
prefer
to
ski
like
a
dream,
but
for
now
you’d
settle
for
substantial
improvement.
Last
season
I
achieved
just
that
becoming
more
controlled
and
faster
than
I’d
ever
been.
In
addition,
I
could
ski
for
longer
with
much
less
effort
and
I
knew
I
was
doing
it
better
because my boots didn’t hurt any more.
I
can
only
claim
a
modest
part
in
this
transformation:
the
credit
must
go
to
an
impassioned,
maverick
Scots
ski
instructor
called
Ian
Beveridge.
I
first
met
Ian
at
the
foot
of
the
slopes
at
Val
d’Isère,
though
his
MetaSki
leaflet
had
already
caught
my
eye
in
the
tourist
office.
He
spoke
about
the
teaching
of
skiing
with
the
fervour
of
a
revolutionary,
which
is,
indeed,
very
much
how
he
sees himself.
HIS METHOD USES A DAZZLING MIX OF SCIENCE,
PHILOSOPHY AND PERSONAL ODYSSEY
“There
is
practically
nothing
that’s
right
in
conventional
teaching,”
Ian
proclaimed,
seemingly
oblivious
of
the
fact
that
the
bar
was
crowded
with
instructors
...(edited).
Beveridge
railed
against
what
he
described
as
the
“teaching
establishment”.
“Even
instructors
at
top
national
level
don’t
understand
basic
ski
mechanics,”
he
complained
before
going
on
to
explain
his
new
teaching
method
using
a
dazzling
mix
of
science
and
personal
odyssey.
As
it
happens,
I
am
a
bit
of
a
sucker
for
“revolutionary
methods”
because
I
came
to
skiing
late
and
was
shocked
by
the
laziness
of
conventional
teaching.
To
sign
up
with
the
...(edited)...
ski
schools
had
proved
a
lottery
and
I
always
seemed
to
get
the
dud
instructors.
They
were
idle
or
uninterested,
and
their
English
was
usually woeful.
I
had
also
tried
independent
companies
and
individual
instructors;
they
were
better
but
often
quite
wacky.
One
chap
made
me
ski
with
my
eyes
shut
and
another
one
had
me
skiing
with
my
boot
clips
open.
I
fell
over
a
lot,
which
was
fine,
but
my
skiing
didn’t
seem
to
get
much
better....
Then
I
encountered
Ian.
At
our
meeting
I
realised
he
could
certainly
do
the
talk,
but
could
he
make
me
ski
better?
When
we
arranged
to
meet
the
following
afternoon,
he
asked
me
to
bring
Snowblades.
I’d
never
been
on
the
things
before,
and
I
was
reluctant.
He
reassured
me
that
I’d
have
no
trouble
and
it
would
speed up the learning.
I
was
hooked
from
the
start.
The
blades
were
a
delight
(I
implore
anyone
who
hasn’t
tried
them
to
have
a
go).
Ian’s
teaching
made
sense
even
though
it
contradicted
much
of
what
I’d
been
taught:
do
not
face
downhill
constantly
because
it
blocks
the
flow
of
movement
-
always
follow
the
skis
around
to
an
appropriate
degree;
do
not
sink
down
to
plant
the
pole
to
complete
the
turn
and
rise
to
turn
around
it
-
instead,
rise
to
complete
the
turn,
touching
the
pole
in
the
snow
between
turns
when
upright
for
stability
as
you
prepare
to
incline
into
the
next
turn;
do
not
stand
on
the
front
of
the
foot
or
over
the
arch
-
work
mainly
from
the
heel
and
drive
the
ski forwards.
Reducing
his
teaching
to
a
few
points
in
cold
print
does
not
do
it
justice,
but
it
gives
a
sense
of
how
it
contradicts
so
much
of
the
prevailing
thinking.
I
spent
the
next
day
practising
what
I’d
learnt,
and
then
had
three
further
hours
of
teaching,
this
time
on
short
carving
skis.
Personal
despair
drove
Ian
Beveridge
to
devise
his
method.
He
had
spent
two
years
studying
and
training
to
get
his
French
instructor’s
qualifications.
“I
did
my
theory,”
he
says,
“I
knew
it
better
than
anyone
else
but
I
could
not
get
the
Capacité”
-
the
notorious
speed
test
which
so
many
would-be
instructors
not
born
on
the
mountain
fail.
“I’d
spent
a
lot
of
money
and
time,
I
had
top
race
coaching,
but
I
just
couldn’t
do
it.
Then
one
day,
in
despair,
I
rethought
the
problem
and
started
thinking
about
ice-skating
technique.
On
my
next
test
I
abandoned
everything
I’d
been
taught:
I
went
down the hill like a rocket and passed the slalom.”
Ian
Beveridge
is
helping
others
to
master
the
Capacité.
He
has
had
a
success
already
with
Phil
Harrison,
a
25
year
old
from
Manchester,
who
now
has
professional
status
in
France.
“Ian
is
a
remarkable
teacher,”
he
says.
“He
teaches
you
how
to
use
your
body
and
harness
natural
movements
to
get
fantastic
results.
So
Harrison,
who
a
short
time
ago
as
a
two-week-a-year
skier,
is
fully
qualified
and
working
in
the
most
competitive
environment.
Not
a
bad
testimonial,
but
that’s
nothing
compared
to
what Ian Beveridge did for me.
SKI & BOARD Magazine by
Minty Clinch
Subject: Chris Harrop: BASI ISTD & Diplome
National Brevet d’Etat Ski Alpin
...
especially
welcome
are
powderhounds
who
want
to
ski
until
they
drop.
Chris
is
a
rugged
individualist
of
a
guide,
who
takes
no
prisoners
in
his
quest
to
get
down
the
mountain,
no
matter
what
obstacles
stand
in
his
way.
In
the
course
of
a
week,
you
can
expect
to
ski
the
best
slopes
in
l'Espace
Killy
and
Les
Arcs
as
well
as
Sainte-Foy,
bushwhacking
your
way
to
the
bottom
wherever
snow
is
sparse.
Follow
him
if
you
dare,
because
his
brand
of
high-adrenalin
adventure
skiing
is
a
huge
confidence
booster,
provided
you
make
the
grade.
If
you
don't
you
may
miss
an
unforgettable
lunch
at
one
of
several
mountain
restaurants
you
might
not
be
able
to
find
without
his
guidance.
And
that
would
be
unfortunate
British American Val d’Isère
Ski School
Our Philosophy
Skiing
for
some
is
a
real
passion,
but
for
the
majority
it
is
often
great
source
of
frustration,
fear
and
dissatisfaction.
How
many
people
do
you
know
who
tried
skiing
but
never
really
got
going
(Only
around
10%
of
people
try
more
than
once)
or
soon
ceased
to
progress
on
reaching
a
stubborn
learning
"plateau"?
There
are
the
endless
accounts
of
injuries,
fatigue
(not
just
from
late
night
partying)
and
useless
”Follow
Me”
instructors
who
either
can't
or
won't
communicate.
We
are
all
familiar
with
the
classic
terrified
reluctant
woman
who
has
just
come
along
to
please
her
sporty
partner
or
the
tentative
beginner
taken
to
the
very
top
of
the
mountain
by
an
over-enthusiastic
friend
-
who
of
course
can
already
ski.
Practically
everyone
puts
all
of
this
down
to
a
natural
and
normal
part
of
the
skiing
experience
but
what
if
this
perception
is
wrong?
What
if
all
of
those
problems
are
totally
avoidable
and
mastering
bumps
and
deep
Off-Piste
were
shown
to
be
part
of
a
simple,
easy,
clear
and
rewarding
development
process
that
begins
on
day
one,
for
both
children
and
adults? That
changes
everything.
That
is
what
we
do
and why we are different. We change everything!
Standard
national
ski
instruction
systems
worldwide
are
universally
based
upon
a
dangerous
misunderstanding
of
physics
and
mechanics.
Those
errors
generate
a
set
of
instructions
passed
on
by
every
trained
instructor
that
leads
directly
to
all
of
the
problems
mentioned
above.
Frustrated
skiers
eventually
avoid
coaching
altogether
or
simply
defer
to
authority
and
blame
themselves
for
those
problems.
Most
people
however
suspect
that
something
just
doesn't
quite
make
sense.
They
are
right. Many
accomplished
athletes
from
other
sports
are
astonished
to
encounter
great
difficulty
in
skiing.
What
they
don't
realise
is
that
this
should
never
happen.
Very
few
people
continue
with
coaching
as
adults
because
they
only
ever
hear
the
same
unproductive
information
along
with
corrections
and
“problem
solving”
repeated
over
again.
Meanwhile
progress
remains
stubbornly
elusive and they are offered no new insights.
The
Meta-Ski
system
used
in
the
British
American
Val
d’Isère
Ski
School
has
continued
to
evolve
since
being
founded
in
1995.
There
is
a
vast
store
of
information
with
complete
technical
explanations,
video
and
photographic
support
available
on
the
subject
in
the
“ski
instruction”
blog
here:
skiinstruction.blogspot.com
While
it
is
possible
to
self-teach
from
this
material
it
is
also
extremely
important
to
have
coaching
for
accurate
feedback.
The
reality
is
that
people
only
really
integrate
the
information
properly
with
one-on-one
coaching
on
snow.
Teaching
takes
place
on
a
progressive
scale
-
with
no
"change
of
technique"
to
get
to
another
level. Whether
you
are
a
first
day
beginner
or
aiming
for
80 F.I.S.
points
on
the
international
racing
scene
so
as
to
qualify
to
become
an
instructor,
the
principles
and
teaching
remain
the
same.
The
more
you
learn
the
more
you
discover
there
is
to
learn
-
and
your
teachers
are
only
different
from
you
in
that
they
are
learning
faster.
There
is no"expert" who knows it all - that is an illusion.
Meta-Ski
principles
teach
the
fact
that
all
skiing
requires
the
same
fundamental
movements.
Skiing
sheet
ice
requires
the
underlying
motions
as
skiing
powder.
There
are
only
two
different
overall
movements
existing
and
that’s
because
each
ski
has
two
edges.
The
skier
must
try
to
avoid
“balance”
-
the
key
to
ease
and
success
being
in
dynamics
and
disequilibrium.
From
those
easy
to
grasp
principles
any
skier
can
rapidly
learn
to
handle
the
varying
mountain
environment.
There
is
no
mystery
to
“Off-Piste”
or
“Slalom”
if
the
fundamentals
are
correct.
Beginners
are
not
even
taught
a
snowplough
-
they
are
taught
to
skate
instead
-
learning
how
to
move
the
centre
of
mass
to
control
direction and stopping, right from day one.
Our
approach
to
teaching
is
to
have
three
separate
categories
(as
well
as
child/adult
separation
when
possible).
It
is
stressed
that
this
is
related
to
environment,
not
technique
-
which
remains
essentially
unchanging
but
adapting.
The
categories
are
Technical
Skiing,
Technical
Off-Piste
and
High
Adventure
Guiding.
Within
those
categories
individual
experience
and
fitness are respected.
For
Off-Piste
the
Personal
Development
side
can
simply
involve
going
beyond
your
perceived
limits
in
snow
and
terrain
that
you
have
never
experienced
before.
During
on-piste
coaching
limits
are
constantly
expanded
in
a
very
different
way
as
perceptions
are
challenged
and
altered.
Counter-intuitive,
conscious
and
mindful
movements
take
the
place
of
emotionally
driven
defensive
instincts.
Whereas
standard
teaching
only
reinforces
destructive
defensive
instincts,
Meta-Ski
principles
develop
a
completely
new
set
of
natural
skills
that work to protect both the body and mind.