Originally posted by arnisandyz
Mark,
Some teachers show “do it like this”, without any explanation, others present the material in such a way that you are taught not only how to do a technique, but why or when you would do that technique. I think most of the good teachers that teach technique based do themselves know the principles behind the technique. They prefer instead of teaching concepts to teach the movement and let the student find it for themselves. (Could this be a reason why the Professor said “don’t show your students, or keep it for yourself?)
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By they way, could you consider “Attributes” like timing, rhythm, coordination as “Concepts” as well?
arnisandyz
I agree with your post. What I was wanting in a sense to see was that if it was common to teach the technique in a seminar as a general thing, and then in private with much more explanation. Or was it that some people figure out the concepts/principles behind a technique for themselves and then pass that on to their students. Among the head instructors especially of the FMA arts.
Professor Anderson stated in his post on the 1st page about how GM Remy taught a base technique and then a multitude of techniques afterward off of the base technique to teach the principle of which many techniques can be worked. Maybe I've misunderstood the post but I always took it as a progression of techniques and showing the conectivity of them ("the connection") however GM Remy never (that I remember) taught it as a principle as in "this is the principle do this, do that...". And I was wondering had I just missed the boat totally.
I have heard in the past about the head instructors (not only in FMA but in Martial Arts in general) keeping things for the family to keep them in the position of teacher. I was wondering if that was what Remy meant ("don't show your students") considering his background and the culture he came from. Why give out his serects to a bunch of people instead he shows the technique and people get what they pay for.
Since I don't live in the same kind of culture, I teach technique and if the student has the base technique down then I'll help them fine tune it by showing principles/concepts to make it work better. Like what I showed GM Remy. I don't really hold it back.
Another question this kind of brings up is that does the head instructor really know the principle and can they explain it as such, or is it they just know from years and years of training that this works best and they just do it. To them it's all one and the same, it works. I once asked GM Remy if he could show me a lock (his over the shoulder two finger lock throw/TD), since I was having a problem keeping the lock on and making it work. He grabbed my fingers (nicely, in that he didn't rip them off) bent them back till they about came through my palm quickly brought them over my shoulder and down to the floor.(WHAM). He didn't explain any principles as to bringing the fingers over the shoulder to cause me to go off balance etc. etc he just did it. And asked if I understood. Heck yeah my fingers were numb for 10 minutes after that.
I guess this is what I was really wondering about. This seemed to me the way he taught at least everytime I asked for help on anything. I just wondered if in private it was any different.
On the attributes /concepts I'm not sure I would say they are the same thing but similar. I think it can cross all sorts of lines. Timing is an atttribute yes, but if I'm teach a technique that involves dodging a baseball bat swing (timing) and closing the distance to charge/crash in then I would think it is in the concept of a counter to that type of an attack.
Mark