Beginner improvement plans
A 30-Minute Beginner Improvement Plans Session Plan
Make a short practice session productive with a warmup, contact work, short game, and a simple finish.

The goal: leave with one win
Thirty minutes is plenty if the session has shape. Don’t spend the first twenty minutes deciding what to do. Arrive with a small plan and a clear finish line.
A simple 30-minute session
| Time | Work | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| 5 min | Warmup swings and short putts | Rhythm |
| 10 min | Half-swing wedges or 9-irons | Clean contact |
| 10 min | Chipping or pitching | Landing spot |
| 5 min | Pressure game | One ball, full routine |
Pressure game
End with five balls. Choose a target, step back, rehearse, and hit only one ball before changing clubs or targets. This prevents the beginner from relying on rapid-fire repetition that never happens on the course.
What to write down
After practice, note one thing that worked and one thing to revisit. “Held finish on short irons” is more useful than “good session.” Small records help beginners see progress even when the scorecard still looks messy.