- Joined
- Nov 27, 2001
- Messages
- 442
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This last saturday, my school had a testing. I wanted to share two things on the complete opposite sides of the spectrum, and wanted to know if any other people in chain schools have seen anything like this.
First, I'll share the good. A few years back, a gentleman in his mid-20s came in to our school. It was soon made apparent that he was developmentally disabled. When he started out, teaching him was hard. It took him a lot longer than normal to comprehend new techniques and forms. We also learned that he panicked easily, and lost focus when this happened.
I would be lying if i said that getting him started wasn't frustating. I know it sounds bad, but it does try patience. Though it took him a little longer than some, he worked his way up the belts. The test for his deputy black belt brought on his anxiety. He failed his forms the first time around. He came back, though, and earned his deputy black belt.
Last Wednesday, he had his pretest for black. This was the first time where everyone was able to collectively observe his progress. His pretest went very well with his techniques and forms. Then came the board break, which is a spinning cross through wood. (This is the first test in our system which requires a pine board instead of rebreakables). When I held my hand for practice kicks, his kick came through so fast it hyperextended my elbow, and turned the meaty part of my thumb purple. When we put the wood in front of him, he freaked out. It took him about 15 tries before he broke it. (At our tests, though, it's 3 tries max, or you fail and have to come back).
Today, he tested for his black belt. Not once did his anxiety show itself. His techniques put some of the adults with full mental capacity to shame. His forms where crisp, powerful, and deliberate. His power kicks where able to move the person holding the body-shield, and he broke his board on the first try.
After seeing his test, I must say that I am awe-struck. Despite his mental handicaps, he was able to work hard, and came through shining like gold. Though special allowances might have been made, they were not needed. His performance was nothing short of excellent. I must say I feel rather humbled, because watching him test helped me to see what it is to be a TRUE martial artist.
:asian:
Ok, I did also say I was going to mention something NOT so good. There was a kid from another branch (the chain i belong to has 7 schools) testing for his junior black belt. (Anyone under the age of 16 is officially recognized as a poom.) The kid knew the required techniques for testing. Next came the test for power kicks. When the kid was told to do a spin kick (or turning back kick in other systems), he stared at the instructor blankly. The instructor actually had to SHOW HIM what a spin kick was. When the spin kick didn't produce power, he was asked to do a step-behind sidekick, which is the first board-break technique we are ever tested on. The kid didn't know what that was either, and had to be shown several times before he understood how to do it. This also didn't produce any power. The kid is a deputy black belt, the last rank for before the belt goes completely black.
At first thought, I wonder about the kid. Next thing I wonder, why hasn't he been taught to maintain it? Is there anybody else from another chain school who has seen anything like this?
First, I'll share the good. A few years back, a gentleman in his mid-20s came in to our school. It was soon made apparent that he was developmentally disabled. When he started out, teaching him was hard. It took him a lot longer than normal to comprehend new techniques and forms. We also learned that he panicked easily, and lost focus when this happened.
I would be lying if i said that getting him started wasn't frustating. I know it sounds bad, but it does try patience. Though it took him a little longer than some, he worked his way up the belts. The test for his deputy black belt brought on his anxiety. He failed his forms the first time around. He came back, though, and earned his deputy black belt.
Last Wednesday, he had his pretest for black. This was the first time where everyone was able to collectively observe his progress. His pretest went very well with his techniques and forms. Then came the board break, which is a spinning cross through wood. (This is the first test in our system which requires a pine board instead of rebreakables). When I held my hand for practice kicks, his kick came through so fast it hyperextended my elbow, and turned the meaty part of my thumb purple. When we put the wood in front of him, he freaked out. It took him about 15 tries before he broke it. (At our tests, though, it's 3 tries max, or you fail and have to come back).
Today, he tested for his black belt. Not once did his anxiety show itself. His techniques put some of the adults with full mental capacity to shame. His forms where crisp, powerful, and deliberate. His power kicks where able to move the person holding the body-shield, and he broke his board on the first try.
After seeing his test, I must say that I am awe-struck. Despite his mental handicaps, he was able to work hard, and came through shining like gold. Though special allowances might have been made, they were not needed. His performance was nothing short of excellent. I must say I feel rather humbled, because watching him test helped me to see what it is to be a TRUE martial artist.
:asian:
Ok, I did also say I was going to mention something NOT so good. There was a kid from another branch (the chain i belong to has 7 schools) testing for his junior black belt. (Anyone under the age of 16 is officially recognized as a poom.) The kid knew the required techniques for testing. Next came the test for power kicks. When the kid was told to do a spin kick (or turning back kick in other systems), he stared at the instructor blankly. The instructor actually had to SHOW HIM what a spin kick was. When the spin kick didn't produce power, he was asked to do a step-behind sidekick, which is the first board-break technique we are ever tested on. The kid didn't know what that was either, and had to be shown several times before he understood how to do it. This also didn't produce any power. The kid is a deputy black belt, the last rank for before the belt goes completely black.
At first thought, I wonder about the kid. Next thing I wonder, why hasn't he been taught to maintain it? Is there anybody else from another chain school who has seen anything like this?