beau_safken said:
We more or less avoided planting scenarios for the reason of it can make people nerotic if they think about it all the time. The advise we gave a lot is...the best way to defend against a grab is to not be grabbed. Also we covered the basic, If its dark outside and your alone in unfamiliar territory dont do that. Situational awareness really requires more than just scenarios, its all a state of mind.
That's basically what I do also - if I want scenarios to apply techniques to, I ask the students (kids and adults) to come up with situations - then they are situations that actually apply to the students, rather than my guesses of which situations they'd be in. This also gives me ideas about what they want to learn.
I do have one favorite scenario for kids, about control and appropriate use, which actually happened to one of my students years ago. My student, Mason, was at school, when another student tried to pick a fight with him - more, he tried to make Mason hit him first (in a school, whoever throws the first punch, no matter the reason, gets in the most trouble). The other boy called Mason names, then started on his brother, then his mother... and Mason stood there and took it (Yay! This was very impressive - Mason was 12 at the time, and had a very short fuse). Meantime, the boy had Mason phsyically backed into a corner where he couldn't get out without hurting the other boy. When Mason refused to hit him, the other boy hit Mason, who started blocking (no punches or other strikes, just blocks) - this went on for several minutes until a teacher showed up. The other boy had bruises on his arms from the blocks, but never laid a hand on Mason, and Mason never hit him. Both boys were suspended for being in a fight - but as far I'm concerned, Mason did everything right - he protected himself, and never went beyond the minimum necessary to do that; he could have easily hit the boy back and hurt him. This is my example to my students of an appropriate response to a situation - that you need to respond and adjust to the situation, not automatically go full out.