Manny
Senior Master
What's the time it takes to become a black belt for a regular guy having three classes of karate per week?
Manny
Manny
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Hi Manny,
there are way too many variables at play to have a real answer to this question. The answer will vary for every person.
It depends on how well a student "gets it". Some students are more gifted than others and they grasp the concepts and develop the skills more quickly. Other students have no aptitude for it and will NEVER grasp it, even if they train for 500 years. Most people are somewhere in the middle of that continuum.
It depends on how much time the student practices outside of class, and the level of quality in that training.
It depends on the quality of the instruction and the quality of the training sessions in those classes as well.
I've seen your other thread where you propose a training schedule of roughly five years to shodan, with roughly one year between promotions. I understand that you are looking for a platform to enforce a higher standard of training, not rushing the students thru the curriculum, taking your time and getting the students to develop their skills solidly before moving on. I applaud that effort. For some students, five years may be longer than they need, for other students five years is nowhere near enough time.
In my view, the standards that are held by most martial arts schools are dreadfully low, embarrasingly low. I understand your effort to raise the bar and insist that your students step up to a higher level. Do not be dissuaded from this goal. I see nothing wrong with your approach, just understand that in some (many?) cases five years may not be enough time and don't be afraid to hold it for longer than that if appropriate. And don't be afraid to enforce your standards.
You got me very well. In the dojang I train the average children/guy gets his/her shodan afther 3 years of training, in very few cases (the gifted as you mentioned) it's a good time, but in the average 3 years is not, simply the cuality is not there.
I know a judo sensei (old school) that his highest level student in the kid-teen level is a 15 years old boy who has trained 7 years and he is now a brown belt and candidate to shodan maybe in one more year. The judo sensei told me he has this kid since 7 and that this boy has learnt very well.
For my, having children or teens or even men and women testing every two-three months for a kup is too little, and yes if it was in my hands I will test my students every 6 months for kup, this means the exchange of blet wopuld take one full year, the belts we have at dojang are: White, Yellow, Green, Blue, Maroon, Red and Black.
Maybe I am asking to much and maybe 5 years to become a black belt is too much FOR THE AVERAGE student, but what I am very true is that 3 years is too little time. Again there could be a very nice student or a gifthed one that with alot of hard work and dedication could be a BB in 3 years and maybe a little less.
I want to know in okinawan or japanese karate what is the average time for the average student to become a BB.
Manny
What's the time it takes to become a black belt for a regular guy having three classes of karate per week?
Manny
10 minutes!
And if you call in the next half hour I will throw in a second black belt for half the price! And that's not all!!! You also get a Bruce Lee fanny pack just for calling!!!
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Or not... I read in another thread here that e.g. Shinyu Gushi sensei smokes and he is, I believe, 8. or 9. dan in Uechi ryu. So, in other words, you shouldn't generalize.If you smoke, there is not way you are going to black belt until you are willing to quit smoking.
Or not... I read in another thread here that e.g. Shinyu Gushi sensei smokes and he is, I believe, 8. or 9. dan in Uechi ryu. So, in other words, you shouldn't generalize.
On the other hand, Kyan died shortly after WW2 from malnutrition because he gave all of his food to children.I heard stories of Chotoku Kyan who was an alcoholic and a womanizer who goes to bars and get into fights to test his skills as part of his training, and he encouraged his students to do the same.
That is your choice, but beside the point. The point is that you said that in a traditional dojo, you can't get a black belt if you smoke and while that may be true at your dojo (don't know, don't really care), it most certainly is not the case in many other traditional dojo.My personal choice is that since I teach kids Karate, I should live a clean life, be straight edge.
Maybe I am asking to much and maybe 5 years to become a black belt is too much FOR THE AVERAGE student, but what I am very true is that 3 years is too little time. Again there could be a very nice student or a gifthed one that with alot of hard work and dedication could be a BB in 3 years and maybe a little less.
...
Manny