I put this in the karate section because that's what I do, but the question is open to all styles as far as I'm concerned.
Did anyone here fail a test for Black Belt? Or watch a fellow student fail theirs?
My instructor doesn't let people test unless he knows they are ready. That cuts down a lot on people failing.
I will say, however, that if you do well on every part of the test except one or perhaps two he will sometimes have you wait a period of time while you work on those areas and then "re-test" on those specific areas. I saw one gentleman test for 1st dan many years ago and he didn't do so great on two of his patterns. He waited for a few months and performed them to demonstrate to people that he had gotten them down. He was then awarded his official rank certificate. There have also been a couple times where people weren't successful on their breaking and had to redo that at a later date. Again, rank certificates were given out when they had completed this requirement.
My instructors told me about a test they both attended a couple years ago where people didn't pass. It was a test for senior black belts and two of the people who were testing failed; one was going for 4th dan and one for 7th. Basically, they weren't prepared.
Like with my instructor's students they were retested at a later date (and passed).
If so, how do/did you feel about it?
No one is going to be 100% every day. If you're going to have a test where it's possible that people will fail then I think retesting on those portions they did poorly on instead of the entire test is fine. That being said, when my instructor tells me to get ready to test I
get ready to test! I've had a couple tests where I've made some errors which were big enough for me to pick up onat the time but, fortunately, I've not been told I'd have to retest on them at a later date.
Perhaps I'm coming at this with the blinders of my style, but anyone who tests for black should pass; otherwise they weren't ready to test in the first place.
That is one philosophy, and I can certainly understand it. My own instrucors have gotten pretty close to that these days, in fact. They told me a story a while ago about their own instructor. He came in to test some of their students - including some they didn't think were ready but who told them they wanted to sit for the test anyway. Well, of course, they all did. They asked him about it later and he told them basically that if they didn't think someone was ready for the next rank they shouldn't let them test.
It's simply a matter of knowing what each party involved is expecting and how theyview the test.
As the first kyu students get closer and closer to black, they are being constantly "tested" in class to see their progress.
This should be happening with all students, regardless of rank, IMNSHO.
The real purpose of our black belt test is to give the candidates a platform to show what they can do, and to test them in other ways (eg. testing the spirit by working them to the point of exhaustion and seeing their attitude when asked to do something more). In a very real way, it's designed to make the candidates believe they've earned it (even though 95% of what goes into earning it happens weeks, months, and years prior to the test).
You could say this about pretty much any rank test, though, not just dan level ones.
On this basis, if we say someone's ready to test for their black belt, and they fail, then as the people setting the test, aren't we at least partly to blame for the failure?
Only if your school or instructor holds to that philosophy. Some schools have different views.
Pax,
Chris