As riding instructors, we spend a lot of time teaching technical skills. We teach students how to ride effective transitions, maintain correct position, develop independent aids, and improve their communication in the saddle. We carefully plan lessons that help riders progress toward their goals, whether that’s cantering confidently, improving their equitation, or preparing for competition.
Those skills are important, and they absolutely deserve their place in every lesson program. However, some of the most valuable lessons we can teach have very little to do with what happens between mounting and dismounting.
For many students, especially those who ride only once or twice a week, the lesson program becomes their primary source of horse education. What they learn about horses, horsemanship, and responsibility often comes directly from the culture we create in our barns. If we focus only on riding skills, we risk producing riders who know how to ride a horse but don’t fully understand the horse underneath them.
The strongest lesson programs develop both. They teach riding skills while also teaching students how to think, observe, and care for the horses that make their riding education possible.
Many students enter the horse industry through lesson programs. They may not come from horse-owning families, and they may have little exposure to horses outside of their weekly lesson. That means instructors often play a much larger role than they realize in shaping how students view horses and horsemanship.
Students are constantly watching what we prioritize. If every conversation revolves around ribbons, placings, and riding performance, they learn that results matter most. If we consistently discuss horse care, welfare, and responsible horsemanship alongside riding skills, they begin to understand that those topics are equally important.
The culture of a lesson program is built through hundreds of small interactions. It’s built when instructors explain why a horse is having an easier week, when they encourage students to take their time grooming, and when they remind riders that every horse is an individual. Over time, these conversations help students develop a deeper understanding of the partnership that exists between horse and rider.
As instructors, we have the opportunity to influence not only how our students ride but also how they think about horses for years to come.
One of the most valuable skills a rider can develop is observation.
New riders naturally focus on themselves. They are thinking about their balance, their hands, their posting diagonal, or the next instruction they need to remember. As riders gain experience, however, they should also be learning to pay attention to the horse.
Experienced horsemen notice changes. They recognize when a horse feels different than usual, when energy levels shift, or when something seems slightly off. They understand that horses are living animals with individual personalities, preferences, strengths, and limitations. They also recognize that horses are constantly communicating, whether through their behavior, attitude, or way of going.
This awareness doesn’t happen automatically. It has to be taught.
Simple conversations before and after lessons can encourage students to think differently. Ask them how the horse felt during the warm-up. Ask whether the horse seemed more relaxed or more energetic than usual. Encourage them to pay attention during grooming and tacking up rather than rushing through the process.
Over time, these habits help students develop the awareness that separates true horsemanship from simply learning how to ride.
Lesson horses are often some of the most valuable teachers in any riding program, yet they are frequently the most overlooked.
A quality school horse spends its days helping riders learn. It carries beginners who are still developing balance, supports nervous riders who are building confidence, and adapts to the different needs of multiple students throughout the week. These horses provide an incredible service to our programs and to the students who ride them.
Unfortunately, many riders don’t fully appreciate what lesson horses contribute to their education. They become focused on their own goals and progress without considering the role the horse plays in making that progress possible.
As instructors, we can help change that perspective.
Talking about the value of lesson horses helps students develop gratitude and respect. When riders understand the patience, consistency, and reliability these horses provide, they often become more thoughtful in their own actions. They take more care while grooming, pay closer attention while riding, and become more aware of how their behavior affects the horse.
These are important lessons that extend far beyond a single riding lesson.
One of the biggest mistakes lesson programs can make is treating everything outside of riding as secondary.
Students often view grooming, tacking up, and untacking as tasks that need to be completed before or after the “real” lesson. In reality, these activities are an essential part of a rider’s education.
The time spent on the ground provides opportunities to teach responsibility, attention to detail, safety, and horse care. It allows students to become familiar with their horse, learn proper handling skills, and develop confidence around horses in a variety of situations.
Groundwork also teaches students to slow down and pay attention. They learn to notice changes in condition, recognize signs of discomfort, and become more aware of the horse as an individual rather than simply a mount for the day.
Some of the most important horsemanship lessons happen before a rider ever puts a foot in the stirrup.
Another concept worth emphasizing in every lesson program is that riding should be viewed as communication rather than control.
When something doesn’t go as planned, many riders immediately focus on how to make the horse comply. While there are certainly times when riders need to be clear and effective with their aids, there is also value in teaching students to think critically about what may be happening underneath them.
Was the request clear?
Did the horse understand what was being asked?
Is the rider giving conflicting information?
Could fatigue, discomfort, or confusion be affecting the response?
Teaching students to ask these questions encourages problem-solving and empathy. It helps them understand that successful riding is not about forcing a result but about developing effective communication and understanding.
The riders who learn this mindset often become more patient, more thoughtful, and ultimately more successful in the saddle.
The horse industry needs riders who understand more than technical skills. It needs riders who appreciate the responsibility that comes with working with horses and who understand that horsemanship extends far beyond the arena.
As instructors, we have an incredible opportunity to shape the next generation of horsemen. Every lesson, every grooming session, and every conversation provides a chance to teach values that will stay with students long after they leave our programs.
When we intentionally incorporate horsemanship into our lesson curriculum, we create riders who are more observant, more respectful, and more capable of developing meaningful partnerships with horses. Those riders not only become better horsemen, they often become better riders as well.
At the end of the day, teaching riding skills is important. But helping students understand and appreciate the horse itself may be one of the most valuable lessons we ever provide.
How do you incorporate horsemanship education into your lesson program?
Education for lesson programs and instructors