A long time ago I wrote
Reimagining PCS Categories advocating rearranging the PCS categories. What I was after in that thread was deemphasizing transitions because I felt it distorted program construction. I was also after making the categories better as a teaching tool for the skaters to internalize. While I didn't say it at the time, I never really though fiddling with the PCS would actually improve judging in itself that much. But judging systems do more than score and rank, it actually helps create the boundaries of the programs that are created and it molds the skaters over the years they're judged by the system.
I didn't actually advocate moving to 3 components, but I thought that judges seemed to focus essentially on 3 categories when judging PCS: Skating Skills, Transitions, and then Performance/Composition/Interpretation as one. I linked to
a thread which basically advocated to moving to those 3 PCS categories and there were a couple people in the thread I started that wanted the categories reduced. And 2 months later a
working group was setup and they eventually went the direction of reducing the PCS components to Composition, Presentation, and Skating Skills.
Composition | Presentation | Skating Skills |
| The intentional, developed and / or original arrangement of the repertoire of all types of movements into a meaningful whole according to the principles of proportion, unity, space, pattern and musical structure. | The demonstration of engagement, commitment and involvement based on an understanding of the music and composition. | The ability of the skater to execute the skating repertoire of steps, turns and skating movements with blade and body control. |
| Unity | Expressiveness & projection | Variety of edges, steps, turns, movements and directions |
| Connections between and within the elements | Variety and contrast of energy and of movements | Clarity of edges, steps, turns, movements and body control |
| Pattern and ice coverage | Musical sensitivity and timing | Balance and glide |
| Multidimensional movements and use of space | Unison, oneness and awareness of space (Pair
Skating, Ice Dance, Synchronized Skating) | Flow |
| Choreography reflecting musical phrase and form | | Power and speed |
I think at the time when it was announced that I felt the change was good since it got rid of the transitions score but I kind of felt that Composition and Presentation would be too close to one another. But even with the later I felt that producing fewer numbers that were just winged by judges was still an improvement.
Here's what I"d do differently with 3 PCS categories with minimal changes. In general, I think there's a issue in figure skating in not focusing more on what makes figure skating unique as a performing art in comparison to other performing arts.
Construction | Presentation | Skating Skills |
| Expressiveness & projection | Variety of edges, steps, turns, movements and directions |
| Connections between and within the elements | Variety and contrast of energy and of movements | Clarity of edges, steps, turns, movements and body control |
| Pattern and ice coverage | Musical sensitivity and timing | Balance and glide |
| Multidimensional movements and use of space | Unison, oneness and awareness of space (Pair
Skating, Ice Dance, Synchronized Skating) | Flow |
| Optional: Varied skating tempo | Choreography reflecting musical phrase and form | Power and speed |
I don't like the practice of partly judging a figure skating program by evaluating the the idea(or intention) and then execution(or performance) separately. I don't think it's that helpful and I think this comes from choreographers/coaches wanting some kind of credit or cushion for performances that have issues.
The bullet point that really ruins the schema here is "Choreography reflecting musical phrase and form" being put in Composition. That bullet point alone will end up muddling the distinction with Presentation and will overpower the rest of the bullet points in Composition.
The 3rd PCS factor besides Presentation and Skating Skills should be focused on the technical aesthetic qualities wanted in figure skating programs that are mostly specific to figure skating rather than general to most performing arts. The generalized aesthetic qualities of the program should be put in Presentation. I'd give it a different name than "Composition". Maybe "Construction", "Formation", "Form", "Aesthetic Technique".
The "Unity" bullet point is put in there placate those who want programs seen holistically. I understand where they're coming from and it's good in theory but I think it has problems in practice.
1. Unity is the least definable bullet point. It's far easier to conceive and articulate "Connections between and within the elements", "Pattern and ice coverage", and "Multidimensional movements and use of space" than "Unity".
2. Unity has to be judged more retrospectively than the other bullet points which will cause the less definable bullet points to be devalued and masked over. Programs can specifically be made to manipulate that process to mask deficiencies.
3. Unity could be inferred from "Connections between and within the elements". Or as an overall program effect it could be part of "Presentation".
4. I also kind of feel like Unity could end up penalizing programs with stempo changes(especially if they're deemd too sharp) even though that is something that should be promoted in figure skating programs IMO.
I do think that something like "Varying skating temp" could be part of "Construction" but part of me thinks it should be kept simple with just 3 bullet points.