Why do you teach?

I looking for honest reasons why people choose to teach MA. More so if you are not a school owner (IE, you teach for someone else), but opinions are welcome from everyone.

What motivates you to teach? How does it support your personal goals? What do you get out of it?

Whether it's altruistic or purely self serving (and anywhere in between), say so - I'm not judging.
My Sifu (Paul Gale) passed away suddenly, myself and my training brothers took over the school. My peers all have kids, I do not. I ended up teaching most of the classes by default. 10 years have passed, I have learned more by teaching than I ever expected. I have learned some things that I may not have ever been exposed to if it werenā€™t for the students, I am eternally grateful to all of them for giving me the opportunity to learn from them. Something Similar happened when my Sigung (James Wing Woo) passed away in his late 90s, One of his students of 45 years (Mike La Teer) assumed teaching and now our two schools are enjoying teaching each other. In addition, I am extremely lucky to have Dr Yang Jwing Ming as my new teacher due to the fact he lives just up the road from me and teaches me and a couple of my training brothers at his house. Teaching can be a great learning experience. Teaching while still being taught is a wonderful balance that makes MA training feel fresh and inspiring.
 
Coming from the opposite angle, I avoid teaching for few reasons:

1) It prevents one from practising. I need every opportunity to practise I can get.
2) The frustration of students making the same mistakes, over and over again despite oneā€™s best efforts.
3) The disappointment of investing a lot of time and effort into students who then disappear without a word.
4) The shameful, ego massaging effects of teaching. Holding court. Showing off.
But the opposite to your queries is SO rewarding as a teacher. Be it martial arts or something else.
 
I wonder if posters would mind indicating what a belt colour stands for with regards in ā€˜time to achieveā€™...just approximately, just so the rest of us have some idea of experience. Grey, red, pink are so arbitrary.
In our flavor of FMA, It took me 3 years to achieve Black. That was with approx 4 years of prior FMA experience. I also had years of experience in Muay Thai, JKD and TKD experience. Iā€™ve been at the school for 7 years and supposedly will be testing for my 2nd in spring of 25.
 
I wonder if posters would mind indicating what a belt colour stands for with regards in ā€˜time to achieveā€™...just approximately, just so the rest of us have some idea of experience. Grey, red, pink are so arbitrary.
1st Dan is an average of 6-8 years.
 
In my first style, it took 12 years for me to achieve first dan (granted i started at 5 years old). In the next, it took 5 years for me to get the equivalent of 2nd dan (not an art with belts).
 
Exactly my thoughts! Baa humbug!
I am a teacher and spent all my adult life as one. Itā€™s why I hate how martial arts try and force anyone who gets a brown belt to teach to advanceā€¦.not everyone can teach. Some simply donā€™t want to and some simply arenā€™t made to teach thereā€™s nothing wrong with that itā€™s just not them. But instructors try and force it on people for free labour and try and sell it as something for them. Now yes as you get to the higher Dan black belts thatā€™s where teaching does come into it and so fine if you want to get to 4th or 5th and higher degree black belt then yes I can totally see teaching as needed requirement but for the early black belts in my eyes it should be 100% on your skills. Whenever Iā€™ve started a new club and been there a while I make it very clear I will never teach so donā€™t ask me. Now yes if Iā€™m partnered with a beginner and theyā€™re struggling obviously Iā€™ll give some pointers to help them but I will not be running classes on my own or teaching large groups basically because I just donā€™t want to and that is something a lot of traditional martial arts teacher canā€™t seem to understand
 
I am a teacher and spent all my adult life as one. Itā€™s why I hate how martial arts try and force anyone who gets a brown belt to teach to advanceā€¦.not everyone can teach. Some simply donā€™t want to and some simply arenā€™t made to teach thereā€™s nothing wrong with that itā€™s just not them. But instructors try and force it on people for free labour and try and sell it as something for them. Now yes as you get to the higher Dan black belts thatā€™s where teaching does come into it and so fine if you want to get to 4th or 5th and higher degree black belt then yes I can totally see teaching as needed requirement but for the early black belts in my eyes it should be 100% on your skills. Whenever Iā€™ve started a new club and been there a while I make it very clear I will never teach so donā€™t ask me. Now yes if Iā€™m partnered with a beginner and theyā€™re struggling obviously Iā€™ll give some pointers to help them but I will not be running classes on my own or teaching large groups basically because I just donā€™t want to and that is something a lot of traditional martial arts teacher canā€™t seem to understand
All of the points you express are understandable and in general I agree. But as others here have expressed, teaching can be a learning experience for you as well. There are many things you may know on a certain level, but when you try to explain it to someone else you are forced to dissect the concept (sort of like concept bunkai) and often this gives you some revelation, viewpoint or understanding of the thing you thought you knew, but in a way you didn't know you knew it. It challenges you to see things from a certain angle you may not have previously done and thus see things you've taken for granted over the years. Teaching can also keep your techniques finely tuned as you try extra hard to provide the students a good example. I see teaching as 50% for the student's benefit and 50% for my own.
 
I also despised teaching kids.
I must admit I lack the patience to do well with most kids and end up being too demanding and "hands on," especially with non-dedicated students and current culture. This is clearly a character flaw which I own up to but don't have the ability or inclination to change.
 
not everyone can teach. Some simply donā€™t want to
Sometimes you just don't have choice.

I was a research assistant when I was in the UT Austin computer science graduate school. When my research fund ran out, I had to be a teaching assistant instead. The professor came to me and asked me to teach Kunth's MIX. I told the professor that I had learned the CDC 6600 assemble language, but I have not learned the Knuth's MIX. The professor said, "Knuth's MIX is a new assemble language. Nobody in the graduate school know it. You just have to learn it and teach it at the same time." That semester, I was a teacher and also a student at the same time.
 
All of the points you express are understandable and in general I agree. But as others here have expressed, teaching can be a learning experience for you as well. There are many things you may know on a certain level, but when you try to explain it to someone else you are forced to dissect the concept (sort of like concept bunkai) and often this gives you some revelation,
viewpoint or understanding of the thing you thought you knew, but in a way you didn't know you knew it. It challenges you to see things from a certain angle you may not have previously done and thus see things you've taken for granted over the years. Teaching can also keep your techniques finely tuned as you try extra hard to provide the students a good example. I see teaching as 50% for the student's benefit and 50% for my own.
Iā€™ve heard this idea before but it suggests that a practitioner is a mindless automaton just going through the motions of repetition. That will be the case for some admittedly, but Iā€™d suggest most of us do think deeply as we practise and for the benefit of our own progress. During these sessions we may hardly break into a sweat because weā€™re thinking, ā€˜I canā€™t do this because because my centre of gravity is outside my base šŸ¤”ā€¦.I need to enlarge my base slightly by perhaps pulling my knee around to this point. But thatā€™s really difficult due to the high coefficient of friction on that knee unlessā€¦šŸ¤”ā€¦I engage my core, specifically, hip flexors, and shift my weight more onto the other knee and BANG! I can do it. Oh quickā€¦let me try that againā€¦.YES! Let me write it down!!ā€ Weā€™re active learners and although we might not articulate these ideas for the purposes of teaching, we still go through the same process.

In my experience, many teachers are insufficiently verbally articulate to get these subtleties across or unable to arrange their thoughts in a logical progression of ideas to allow the learner to perform a technique. These tend to be the types who advocate endless repetition from their students rather than analysis/repetition. The martial arts are full of such teachers, unfortunately.
 
I must admit I lack the patience to do well with most kids and end up being too demanding and "hands on," especially with non-dedicated students and current culture. This is clearly a character flaw which I own up to but don't have the ability or inclination to change.
Itā€™s not a character flaw at all! Itā€™s perfectly normal and human. It sounds like you are better at teaching advanced students who have dedication, resilience and have moved beyond the very basics.

I admire school teachers for their ability to teach children and I give thanks that I donā€™t have to. But degree and advanced studentsā€¦I loved teaching them.
 

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