dunno said:
before i can respond, can you tell me if you have ever brought a child from scratch up to level 10 or elite?
More extensive credentials do not automatically make somebody right, nor does a lack thereof automatically make them wrong. Not sure if that's where you were going with this, but if so I'd like to point this out from the start.
Anyway, that said, I think the difference here is goals. Yes, kids who train level 3 are likely (but not certain) to do better at level 4. If your goal is to produce level 4 state champions, then level 3 is a great stepping stone on the way to that goal.
But if your goal is to really train kids up towards the top levels of the sport, level 3 is, in my opinion, a waste of time. Rather than spending time memorizing routines and practicing the specific choreography, that time can be MUCH better spent working the crucial skills themselves.
My goal as a coach is to prepare my girls to someday join a college team. Scoring well at level 3 and 4 (and for that matter, levels 5, 6, and 7) does NOTHING WHATSOEVER to advance them towards this goal.
Now there are some skills in these routines which are important for the kids to learn and learn cleanly. A roundoff backhandspring on floor, for example, is important to learn well. A kip is important to learn well. But learning exactly where her arms are supposed to be at exactly what point in the compulsory routines (and incurring massive deductions if she gets it wrong)? Useless. Utterly useless. And while spending time teaching this choreography is crucial to their scores at the compulsory levels, it is completely inconsequential with regards to how they will do at the upper levels.
So nevertoold, you are exactly right when you say that level 3 will help kids score better at level 4. My disagreement with you is on whether that actually matters at all in the long run. In my opinion, it doesn't.