Ok,
A couple very interesting questions and some of the answers have wandered off on tangents.
In another thread people have been discussing how to teach the forms. I have a slightly different question. How do you handle students who want to do the form differently from how the school teaches them? I'm not talking radically differently, but different speeds, stances, that type of thing.
Your question needs clarification. Schools don't teach, instructors do so this is where the age old question always rears it's head, "Who your instructor?"
Ch'ang Hon TaeKwon-Do has a very specific, spelled-out definition of your question - called SaJa Jido, or student/instructor relationship (and for very good reasons). If it is my student, then it is "My way or the highway".
Reason: If you wish to be your own teacher then you don't need me. I don't have the time to teach someone who does not want to learn what I have. Think of it this way, what if the student said, "I don't want to learn this pattern, show me the next one". The student is assumeing they know the path better than someone who has already been down, and led countless other down the path. I can afford to loose this student.
I'm sure that many of you have gone to touraments and/or associate with different TKD schools and have seen the Chon-ji forms performed differently. Heck, I've seen plenty of schools that spell the names differently. The school that I teach at associates with a group of TKD schools and while we all teach the same forms - the masters of each school trained with each other earlier in their careers - there are some slight variations to the forms. I also have had a very ambitious student who managed to get her hands on videos from General Choi's Encyclopedia of TKD. There are some differences there to what we teach at our school.
This is why students should travel, to compare! Because as a black belt you need to learn more than just moves you need to learn how to think. Instructors who are unsure of what they are teaching, or who live in fear will try to keep their students from traveling.
However, instructors must never forget what it is like to be a student. That is why we hold National patterns seminars to continually go over things so you don't get "drift". It is up to the organization/higher ranks to work with instructors on what they are teaching. (What a concept, an organization doing things for the instructors).
There will always be slight variations unless you can come up with homogonized people. What are these differences from, the student or the instructor? There are very few variations with reguards to stances, technique... However, just like judgeing, many aspects are constant: Balance, focus, intent, breathing, power...
So to the TKD instructors out there...
How do you handle this?
How sure are you that what you learned is what the General started?
Does it really matter?
Yes I am sure because I studied under the Genreal. However, your question misses the issue.
An instructor must only teach what they know and understand. If not then you are not being true to your students. You can not teach with the definition, "Well, because the higher ups said so". This really means you don't know what you are teaching.
Now the second point, (or on the other hand) instructors, as well as students aren't just hatched. There are young inexperienced instructors as well as seasoned ones. So there isn't an instructor out there that hasn't made a mistake. The true test of a good instructor is to have enough YOM CHI to admit in front of their students when they were wrong. Many fear this as they think it shows weakness.
There are several points in a Black belts career where you realize you don't know as much as you should. One of these points is 4th Dan where you put stripes on your uniform. Inadequacy! So many compensate for this by throwing their rank around. "Because I'm a 4th dan and I said so!"
It is a common phase that any good student will go through. However, the best instructors have the integrity to say, "I don't know" or "I'm unsure" rather than try and bull you.
I would shy away from an instructor that said they always know the correct answer.
However, a student picks their instructor (not vise-versa) so why would you follow someone to show you the way and then not listen to them?
Just some thoughts :shooter: