Haze
Blue Belt
Curriculum is set to 3rd Dan. Above 3rd Dan is not tested for but awarded.
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Explorer said:Does your system or school have a curiculuum for the Dan ranks? Everybody has a curriculuum for the kyu ranks ... but many have little direction for advanced students beyond time in rank and classes attended.
I wonder if this is why the dropout rate at 1st Dan seems so high.
Does your system or school have a curiculuum for the Dan ranks? Everybody has a curriculuum for the kyu ranks ... but many have little direction for advanced students beyond time in rank and classes attended.
I wonder if this is why the dropout rate at 1st Dan seems so high.
I don't find Dan learning a fixed goal, instead work to engage the Dan student in the larger range of studies that their Kyu trianing prepared them to enter.
The first step is a 6 month course on a partial understanding of the use of Seisan' Kata's opening section, as an answer for every sort of attack possible. Not just the way to use the movements but a study of the underlying principles behind those choices, and working from basic attacks to higher level attack counters.
At that point the fun begins. Our average minimum time an adult Dan trains with us over the past 23 years is about 16 years. The senior Dan's have been in the program the entire time.
As individual learning potential is the rule, the method of advancement is controlled by each Dan's focus and efforts.
There are a number of components to our Dan studies.
1. The study of application potential of our Kata. One of my instructors shared 800 ways to use our 8 Isshinryu kata, and that is only one answer. The focus is never on numbers, but how to take the underlying principles and learn how they work with any technique. The study is individualized into each Dan's core choices for rational self defense, and as their studies progress they add new material to their core and deduct material at the same time to keep their studies fresh.
2. The study of Kobudo Isshinryu Bo, Sai, Tonfa, Bando Staff and Stick, a private Family tradition of kama and knife (the last two only for the seniors). On the whole the use is not for weapons for self defense, but rather learning how the weapons skills add additional oomph into the empty hand utilization of karate technique. This is a decades long training program first aquire skill, then to develop power and speed with that skill, and then to learn how to shift that into kata application study.
3. A very focused study of kata from outside systems. These forms are from Shorin, Shotokan, Tomari, Goju, Ching Wu, Tai Tong Long, Ying Jow Pai, Sil Lum and Pai Lum systems. Not for their application potential, but to use as a technique base to defend against. These kata also work a different range than our core Isshinryu and in turn make the Dan's abilities somewhat different from many assume Isshinryu might use.
4. Additional focused studies from aikido, siliat and tai chi chaun. These include various force multipliers for advanced practice (ie. energy point alignment or the knee release in practice).
5. A few individuals will undergo separate apprenticeship training to become an instructor, in addition to their other stuides the first requirement is 15 continious years training with the same instructors. This is an entirely different track of study. No one who hasn't followed that track will be an instructor.
6. Upon acquisition of some knowledge and skill, the Dan might enter the ongoing research study behind our arts potential.
While there are some signposts (Dan Grades) along the way they are a composite of various factors of the indvidiuals training. As a group they never refer to dan grades and only prefer to train.
If the Dan is engaged in the fuller study of their art, they will find a way to keep training. The only mitigating factors have been individuals who have moved away because of working needs, or those in their 60's who personally feel they have reached an age where other interests beckon..
The entire purpose of a Kyu program ought to be to prepare indivduals to begin training for life as a Dan.
Of course young persons training is to prepare them to move out and on with their lives, their own life far more interesting than keeping training in their home town.
For the adult, the reasons become different.
pleasantly,
victor smith
bushi no te isshinryu
Each of the credit levels start new after promotion (i.e. you need 215 credits for nidan and an additional 250 for sandan).Requirements for Promotion Past Shodan
Once a student is promoted to Shodan, it is the equivalent of a High School diploma within the martial arts. It is after a student earns their black belt that their training in the martial arts is said to truly begin. Martial education after Shodan is similar to college courses in that more of the requirements for promotion are directly affected by the students studies outside of the dojo as well as the continued practice and improvement.
In addition to minimum time-in-rank requirements for promotion beyond Shodan, the following requirements also apply:
Minimum Credits Required for Nidan 215 Credits
Sandan 250 Credits
Yondan 300 Credits
Teaching Credits
10 Hours of Teaching
Assistant Instructor 5 Credits
Primary Instructor 10 Credits
Outside Martial Art Training
Another Style of Karate
Intermediate Rank (Blue-Purple) 5 Credits
Advanced Rank (Brown) 10 Credits
Shodan or Higher 15 Credits
Another Percussive Art (TKD, Kenpo, etc)
Intermediate Rank 10 Credits
Advanced Rank 15 Credits
Shodan or Higher 20 Credits
A completely different Art (Kung Fu, Jujutsu, etc)
Intermediate Rank 20 Credits
Advanced Rank 25 Credits
Shodan or Higher 30 Credits
Tournament Involvement
Competing
One Division 1 Credit
Judging
One Division 5 Credits
CPR or First Aid Training
Certification 5 Credits
Instructor Certification 10 Credits
Independent Research
Book Report (From Reading List) 5-10 Credits
Research Paper (Approved Topic) 5 -15 Credits
Article Publication (Black Belt, etc) 25 Credits
In-depth Bunkai Presentation 5 Credits
Other Approved Project 5-25 Credits
Each new approved Kata 15 Credits
Seminar Participation
In-School 5 Credits
Out of School 10 Credits
Giving a Seminar or Demonstration 15 Credits
Weapon Training
Demonstrate Weapon Proficiency
Each New Weapon 10 Credits
Each New Kata, Old Weapon 5 Credits
Community Contribution
Significant Service, Contributions, etc 5-50 Credits
Military Service 5 Credits/year (only since last promotion)
Cut directly from our manual. No real set curriculum, but a guide for future training. These requirements are on top of time in grade requirements.
Each of the credit levels start new after promotion (i.e. you need 215 credits for nidan and an additional 250 for sandan).
what the hell constitutes a credit though?