I'm looking for a few suggestions on how to teach students not to stand in the stirrups while jumping. I have tried every approch I know but am having diffuculty with one student that stands everytime she jumps.

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perhaps have your student two point while trotting over cavalettis? Or perhaps a small grid of x poles? Helping them focus more on dropping their heel while going over an obstacle...
Hi Lena, try taking away her stirrups! Just over small jumps and in a grid to start with . Cheers Geoffery
When I was starting out jumping my instructor would take our stirrups off the saddle and we would do a line of bounces without stirrups. We also had someone else at the end of the line holding up fingers and we had to say how many before we were done so we could prove we were not cheating (by looking down)..
Encourage her to jump bareback. She can always start with a rug on or one of those saddle pads, if she does not feel safe enough. I did lots of this as a kid (and once recently at a barbeque at my aggistment, after a few drinks lol) I probably rode bareback more than with a saddle. I actually had to concentrate on using my stirrups more, as my legs kept going back once I started jumping 1 metre +. The basic grip is still there as I lost both stirrups the other day, while going over a triple and still stuck it easily.
Are her stirrups too long? I have found that some people (myself included) tend to reach or stand while jumping to compensate for too long of stirrup. Maybe try shortening her stirrups a hole or two. It might improve her base dramatically. It did mine.
The best thing that my coach ever did with this one girl that had the same problem in my pony club is to ride without stirrups and go up into two point without them. Now she always does her two point properly even when shes in the stirrups. I hope this helps.
Tell them to push their bottoms (bum) back towards the cantle. They generally can't stand up AND push their bottoms back at the same time. Stops them from jumping ahead of the horse over the jump and keeps the two-point position.
My coach has had me do alot of two point on the flat at walk and trot. Then we started doing two point over poles before progressing to cross-rails. I found that really helped as I was able to get a nice solid two point going.
I'd go with shortening the stirrups, even to the point of them being a little too short. It certainly worked for me when I was learning to jump! My instructor had us up like race jockeys, so we couldn't stand even if we tried...
Try explaining to the student to almost place their butt 'into' the saddle when they jump, with their crotch near the pommel. Try and get her to understand she has to let the horse push her into position, with only a following rein/crest release from her. Sometimes the hardest thing for riders to learn is to do nothing! I've found this, within a few tries, works most of the time. As others said, make sure the stirrups are short enough for jumping.
Hope this helps! Good luck!
By coincidence, Tim Stockdale just addressed this in a blog he added here two minutes ago. Check it out!
http://www.barnmice.com/profiles/blogs/teaching-your-horse-to-jump
hi! my riding school's great but sometimes we have a different instructor and she keeps trying to tell me not to even lean forward while jumping. i've tried to explain to her that buster (the horse i ride) is green and does not respond to her way. when she got on and rode him she couldn't make him step over a trotting pole. she also said to put by bum back in the saddle, which is a good training exercise but should not be a proper position because whenever she says my position was in her mind perfect im offbalanced and end up on the horses neck, until the point when my horse starts refusing and im anti training him. anyway, i suggest you lunge them over a really small jump without reins OR stirrups and gradually make the jump higher. encourage them to lean forward slighty but not stand up. the no reins just means theyre not relying on the reins while learning the new position.

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