Kwan Jang
Purple Belt
As a school owner, I believe that the quality of my advanced students, especially my black belts, is the quality of my product. As it is in most industries, you can have short term success by putting out a poor quality product, but in the long run it will come back to bite you. Of course, it should be noted that many of the schools that are successful on the money side, but weak on the combative or technical side provide a strong service for teaching the lifeskills that many parents are looking for for their children.
There are schools that teach a large volume of students that keep a very high quality of their students with very high standards. Using BJJ as an example, Renzo Gracie's school often will have more students in a single class than many schols will have in their entire student body. When I fought at this year's NAGA world grappling championships, Renzo's team brought did very well in the medal count. Our schools (my instructor also helped Renzo, as well as Ralf and Cesar develop their teaching format) and Steve LaVallee's schools are known for producing high numbers of high quaility students as well.
It should be noted that when you compare BJJ's ranking system to others that their purple belt is placed roughly where most other quality programs have their 1st dan, their brown is where most have 2nd and their black is where most have 3rd. Not only in time and training, but purple is a teaching rank, too. So, let's compare apples to apples and oranges to oranges here. I agree fully with their idea of making their ranks something you truly have to strive for and grow into.
Even our schools have struggled the last few years with the quality issue as we've grown, but IMO we are correcting those mistakes.
There are schools that teach a large volume of students that keep a very high quality of their students with very high standards. Using BJJ as an example, Renzo Gracie's school often will have more students in a single class than many schols will have in their entire student body. When I fought at this year's NAGA world grappling championships, Renzo's team brought did very well in the medal count. Our schools (my instructor also helped Renzo, as well as Ralf and Cesar develop their teaching format) and Steve LaVallee's schools are known for producing high numbers of high quaility students as well.
It should be noted that when you compare BJJ's ranking system to others that their purple belt is placed roughly where most other quality programs have their 1st dan, their brown is where most have 2nd and their black is where most have 3rd. Not only in time and training, but purple is a teaching rank, too. So, let's compare apples to apples and oranges to oranges here. I agree fully with their idea of making their ranks something you truly have to strive for and grow into.
Even our schools have struggled the last few years with the quality issue as we've grown, but IMO we are correcting those mistakes.