Someone pulled me aside today and said they wanted to get their 6 year old involved in a martial arts program and asked me for recommendations.
He was more concerned about what would be good for his child.
If you were to pass along suggestions to my friend, what would you say to him? What do you think is important in a kids program?
Excellent....EXCELLENT topic Carol!!
First and foremost, find an instructor that is Very open with the parent about anything they ask. If they are in the least bit reserved or 'defensive' when asked many questions about their art, their background, their philosophy (of training children in MA) or their routines....then that's NOT the instructor for their (or anyones) child.
Also: Style is not only NOT the primary issue, it's hardly even secondary. TRUE........I'd highly recomend they not involve them in a system that is centered on the use of weapons (PMA, Kendo, Kenjutsu, Kobudo...etc.)..but other than that......GO FOR IT. Kempo...fine, Judo.....Great, TKD...wonderful...
etc.
I myself started in the martial arts when I was seven, and I've only taken about three years off total. I know several others like me who've been long term martial artists since childhood....and none of us stayed with the same art that we began in. That's rare indeed! (Nice if someone can do it, but it's not the norm) So what the style is doesn't matter overall. What matters the MOST are:
The care of the instructors. do they LOVE kids? Are they considerate? Do they hold high standards of behavior in and out of the classroom for themselves, their kids and their adult students.
Look at their advanced kid students, look at their advanced teen students and look at their advanced adult students....
scrutinize them!!!! Then...ask yourself, "DO I want my child to develop to be like them? To act like them? To move like them?" Because those are samples of what happens to people that train under that/those instructors! Those are the people who will be a big influence on and roll model for the kidos!!
I was highly influenced by the older people in my dojo! Greatly. There are aspects of how I move and how I believe and how I behave that I could go back in time, point out an adult martial artist from my past and show you where I gleaned that aspect of myself from!!!!
Check their experience with Kids.
Learn wether or not their training of children differs from their training of adults. If their thoughts are that their isolation of kids into a "Kids" program is just so that they don't bogg down the adult class....then that's not the school for them, because that instructor doesn't take into account the special needs of developing kids as martial artists. There must be some underlying philosophy as to HOW to raise up a preadolescent martial artist!! If not......move on.
last, but not least, don't wait for THE perfect school/instructor. They don't exist. Get them into the best you can find, encourage them, help them to feel good about their progress! Help them set goals, lead them to design a plan of steps/stages to achieve those goals (Watch the classes and learn what the instructors expect of them.....then expect those same things when you HELP your child practice!)....then CELEBRATE every stage of success With your child!!!
Never demand a child be perfect!!!!!!!!
....just improving.
This is a subject near and dear to my heart!!!
Your Brother
John