I am refering mainly to moving targets, doves, running rabbits, etc, anything that is not sitting still. sure the .410 has little or no recoil, it also has very litte shot pellets.
with such a small amount of shot in the air, misses are quite common with the .410, the more the misses the more the "shooters confidence" goes to zero
a 20 gauge, imo, would be a much more suitable shotgun
while teaching kids at my skeet range, I will not let them shoot the .410, I will go mainly with the 20 ga.
every once in a while I will let some "cocky kid" shoot his .410 at the range, the misses will usually be 3-4 times greater, after 1 round of skeet [25 shots], the student will grab the 20 gauge and basically never mention the .410 again
most all single barrels carry a lot of kick with them
I like to see a new shooter/hunter start with a pump shotgun, this will make the new/learning shooter not to become trigger happy, plus having to pump the gun, imo, also gives a small added safety type feature
I hope that the above is helpful, please feel free to ask any questions
always remember the following
the .410 is the easiest to shoot because of very little felt recoil
the .410 is the hardest to hit with because of such a small shot charge