I know because I taught a college kid, today, using range clubs.
1) Identify the natural design of the club's sweet spot by letting it hang straight down.
2) Support the sweet spot with your extended right index finger. Right hand grip with club in middle of rt forearm with enough space for left hand to "fit in."
3) Put your hands in impact position.
4) Turn up-plane maintaining impact hands extended index finger.
5) Turn down-plane/thrust down-plane pointing the index finger at the ball.
6) The low point of the club must always point at the infinite plane line, or be parallel to it, and I laid two clubs down.
7) Don't drive with your legs, rotate with your chest like a tennis shot.
"Why does the ball feel so soft like we hardly hit it?" "Why is it flying so high?" "Ball Compression, do it again. Read this website at lynnblakegolf.com. and watch all the free videos."
50 balls later, the young man was compressing his shots and some of them were straight and on plane! I emphasized the club plane and no leg drive. They sat for 20 minutes watching me after they were done. I explained I had a bad hip, short-leg, the heartbreak of psorriasis and dandruff. And I was a registered independent and proud of it. "Why do you always hit it further and straighter than we do? " "Go to the website!"
Sean, I have no clue as to what Yoda, Bucket, Kevin, OB, and the other talented pros know. But if I can compress 90% of my shots and have talc/dust on the sweetspot of all my irons, you will be so happy after your lesson you will be elated!
Imagine how well you'll do with a real pro!
Patrick
I was an inner city teacher too. I was a counselor for teens who had severe emotional and behavioral problems in an alternative high school. That job was much easier than learning how to swing a golf club!
I'm happy to hear you can swing the club so well. Perhaps I am just a slow learner or just don't get it. I'll find out tomorrow!