I have been doing massive amounts of reading on the history, founding, philosophy, etc. of TKD. I even have the 15 vol. encyclopedia written by Gen. Choi. (note: This book should not be the be all and end all of TKD knowledge.) This might be a rather broad set of questions, but they all pertain to the teaching of TKD.
Firstly, there is a lot of myth/legend taken as fact when discussing the founding of things such as the Hwa Rang Do and origins of TKD, and while General Choi wrote a lot of these into his encyclopedia, doesn't make them accurate.
I see a lot of schools teaching TKD without questioning what they are actually teaching. I was curious to know what you all think about your education and whether you feel it's right to teach students unverified facts(myths) as truth? It seems that it's taught "just because", and not many instructors truly do any research.
I am not here to insult or put down anyone teaching this knowledge. When I was at my old school, it was taught to me and I never thought to question it until I began wanting to teach my own students. This raises issues, as forgoing the teaching of 'core' histories/philosophies means that one would no longer be teaching 'traditional' TKD.
I'm not a huge fan of federations/associations, as I feel they are mostly focused on money and politics than accuracy and truth. I understand that I am free to teach anything I'd like and not be under pressure from said fed/assocs, though as a person that strives for truth, I am interested in what others have been taught and their ideas of what should be taught, especially when you know it to be less than clear-cut.
It is my wish to remove as much of the politics from my teaching as possible. What do you (other instructors) teach and why? Do you feel obligated to teach what you were taught? Would you or have you changed your curriculum when you have found errors or just keep steady so as not to cause problems?
Firstly, there is a lot of myth/legend taken as fact when discussing the founding of things such as the Hwa Rang Do and origins of TKD, and while General Choi wrote a lot of these into his encyclopedia, doesn't make them accurate.
I see a lot of schools teaching TKD without questioning what they are actually teaching. I was curious to know what you all think about your education and whether you feel it's right to teach students unverified facts(myths) as truth? It seems that it's taught "just because", and not many instructors truly do any research.
I am not here to insult or put down anyone teaching this knowledge. When I was at my old school, it was taught to me and I never thought to question it until I began wanting to teach my own students. This raises issues, as forgoing the teaching of 'core' histories/philosophies means that one would no longer be teaching 'traditional' TKD.
I'm not a huge fan of federations/associations, as I feel they are mostly focused on money and politics than accuracy and truth. I understand that I am free to teach anything I'd like and not be under pressure from said fed/assocs, though as a person that strives for truth, I am interested in what others have been taught and their ideas of what should be taught, especially when you know it to be less than clear-cut.
It is my wish to remove as much of the politics from my teaching as possible. What do you (other instructors) teach and why? Do you feel obligated to teach what you were taught? Would you or have you changed your curriculum when you have found errors or just keep steady so as not to cause problems?