Are the proficiency standards per-belt or more generally defined? How are they defined?
Students are allowed 2 mistakes in moves. They are allowed 3 mistakes of fundamentals. (stance, wrapping, hand position, foot position, etc.), obviously the standard slides as the student progresses through rank. For instance, if a white belt is testing, I wouldn't fail the student if they left out a kihap and punched to the up when they should have punched to the middle. However, if more mistakes are made, the student would retest in 3 months (at no fee to retest). If their cat stance is grossly of balance of the 70%-30% weight distribution, and their hidden fist position is sloppy, but the rest of their techniques are acceptable, then it is a passing grade. If 3 or more fundamental issues occur during forms examination, the student will be retested in 3 months. TBH, the responsibility is on the individual school heads to make certain the student is ready to test before they are ever put on the floor for the examination to begin with.
What are the one-steps that are learned at white belt? What are expectations of them at higher belts?
It is my understanding that they are the original 5 white belt one steps ( I originally learned them as 3 step sparring when I was a white belt, but it was reduced to one step sparring in the 1990's for ease of learning). #1: side step parry and punch, followed by a reverse punch. #2 side step parry and punch, followed by a knife hand strike to the jaw. #3 front kick, followed by punch and guard. #4 Side kick followed by punch and guard. #5, side step to the outside, side kick, elbow, spin elbow, back fist to the face, knife hand to the groin. There is no expectation at higher ranks other than maintaining proficiency of the basic 5. At all other ranks, you are expected to have 5 hand defenses, 5 foot defenses, and 5 combination hand and foot defenses. At black belt you are also expected to have an additional 5 take down defenses.
I'm going to have to try this out on myself. I'm not sure how well I'd do with it, and I'm very good at forms.
I've never had an issue with this. In fact, some of my favorites are to start back-to-back with 4 people with Koryo, and we end all with our hands making a circle with the arc strikes.
Lots of others have issues, and will end up starting at different angles and all finishing facing the same way. I never understood why people have such issue with starting at a different angle.
In anxiety of the moment it is an easy way to test the calmness of the mind.
Can you tell me more about the thesis?
1st dan is basically a 3 page paper on 3 topics #1, who are you and why did you join? #2 what have you learned mentally and physically from TKD training over the past few years? #3 what are your responsibilities going to be if you pass the examination, how are things going to be different, how are things going to be the same? what are your new goals?
After 1st dan, the thesis topic is a bit more abstract. Pick a topic about tkd, expound upon it. 2nd and 3rd dan tend to be more about technical proficiency, while the higher rank you get, the more about teaching and philosophy the thesis becomes.
The examining board often tries to intentionally twist your own words against you, to see if you can articulate your true intent after being physically exhausted.
EDIT: Apparently Shift+Enter posts right away, which is why I posted this without all my questions.