I love it when you talk nerdy.![]()
Stop that your stealing my schtick to get rep points when ever she has them to give

and sadly I get what she was saying la sigh former tier 1 routing engineer.
course now I'm a security architect so

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I love it when you talk nerdy.![]()
I love it when you talk nerdy.![]()
Carol's not nerdy- just smarter than us when it comes to those sorts of things!
If she didn't know what she does, where would she be now, I wonder?
Nah, I'm nerdy. Geeky too.
I'd be FIRED!!!![]()
![]()
Nah, I'm nerdy. Geeky too.
I'd be FIRED!!!![]()
![]()
Ceicei, a question if you would.......
Was the student: A. slow
B. hard of hearing or deaf
c. Very intelligent but thinks differently than others
D. other
The reason is ask is that I am hard of hearing, wear aids in both ears and I do have problems in group settings because of back ground noise and other things.
I have a student that is a lawyer, he is very intelligent but has a lot of trouble in class because of the way he looks at things. His grasp of some very basic forms, self defense etc gets very twisted and it confuses and frustrates him a lot.
I have another student, while very willing is a little slow.
I have to handle them all differently to get my point across. Anyway, in your original scenario you didn't say why the student was having trouble just the she was. So could you clear this up for me because obviously I'm not getting it.
Kacey said:Okay, back to the topic of the thread... students are individuals and should be treated as such. Yes, discipline needs to exist, and yes, a certain amount of standardization needs to be in place - but that should not prevent an instructor from meeting the needs of students who don't fit the standardization; that is a fault far more with the instructor - and his/her instructor - than anyone else. Yes, many people were not trained this way - but there comes a time when you must discard traditional methods if they don't work, and the situation Ceicei described is clearly an instance in which traditional methods are ineffective, to the detriment of the student described, the other students in the class (and how likely will they be to ask questions in the future, I wonder?), and the class/club/school as a whole.
I understand an instructor getting rid of a student that refuses to do the work.Once again, is the teacher there for the students, or are the students there for the teacher? The answer to that one question determines what sort of school it is. In this case, the answer was obvious, and the student did exactly the right thing.
...the faux-ethics of the pseudo-traditional martial arts world...
Over all, I agree with the folks saying that the instructor definitely could have handled this better, given the scant details we've got here. (Details that are missing could effect my opinion, like if the student is having problems every class, or is holding up training until they get the name of the technique. And tone of voice could be an issue, too.)The problem is the whole "I don't have time for this" and "you shouldn't be here" comments. If the student was beligerent and inturrupting class, I could understand telling the student that this is taking away from the other students, and that the question will have to wait until after class. But in what circumstance would it be O.K. in any classroom setting to tell a student in front of everyone that "you shouldn't be here,"??
We don't know the circumstance. Obviously this situation is way worse if the student has an impairment, like a hearing impairment for example. At that point everyone in the entire class should have grown a set and walked out. But maybe the student has a history of being a "problem student." Well, that makes the instructors behavior a little more understandable, yet still unacceptable. If you are going to kick a student out of your program, the professional thing to do would be to do this in private and not in front of everyone.
So in any case, the instructors behavior was unacceptable, and the student shouldn't waste his/her money. And martial arts students shouldn't get caught up in the faux-ethics of the pseudo-traditional martial arts world, and put up with things that they wouldn't ordinarily put up with in the real world.
Ceicei, a question if you would.......
Was the student: A. slow
B. hard of hearing or deaf
c. Very intelligent but thinks differently than others
D. other
Anyway, in your original scenario you didn't say why the student was having trouble just the she was. So could you clear this up for me because obviously I'm not getting it.
Thanks
One student asks, “Can you say that again? I cannot hear you.”
I understand an instructor getting rid of a student that refuses to do the work.
Sean
Wade,
In this story, the student is deaf. For the sake of the story, let's say there weren't very much written material about this martial art, so the research part regarding the terminology would be difficult to do.
- Ceicei
The student could "help the instructor learn how to help".
And, IMHO, the instructor should have done just that. I get frustrated by my students at times, certainly - but I do my damnedest to not show that frustration to my students - and that includes a man who has been in my class 5 or 6 years, who has CP, a developmental delay (IQ roughly 65), and poor social skills. He drives me nuts on occasion - but I don't tell him that, and I do my best to not let him see it. His disability is not his fault, and he does the best he can - and I can't ask anything more than that. There was a lot of trial and error, and a lot of checking with other special ed professionals like the occupational therapist, when he started my class - especially since his parents wouldn't tell me anything beyond "he has special needs" - but he's still there... and he's the only person I know who had his contract not renewed at a well-known McDojo in the area, because of the difficulties inherent in teaching him, and the level of disruption he can cause.The instructor could take the time to sit down and do more research about the particular challenges faced by his students.
I will agree with that. In this particular situation, the student evidently doesn't need, nor have to, teach the instructor who isn't willing to listen and do more than the bare minimum.but were I that student, I would be much more willing to teach an instructor how to deal with my particular difficulties if I had the impression the instructor valued my presence.
Is your objection to the word "help" or do you think I am implying the request for help as an obligation? What is demeaning about "helping another learn how to help"? Would you have wanted this to be phrased in a different way? Help doesn't need to be an expression of weakness. Rather, I think that acknowledging the limitations and and seeking for ways to work with these limitations are an admission of strength. Some people are more capable of doing this than others and may have the ability to convey some ideas.but the way you presented it sounded pretty demeaning to the student, and why should someone pay for instruction to be demeaned?
If the student is a child, then the instructor's response is unconscionable. Children should not have to teach adults how to teach them.
I will agree with that. In this particular situation, the student evidently doesn't need, nor have to, teach the instructor who isn't willing to listen and do more than the bare minimum. Is your objection to the word "help" or do you think I am implying the request for help as an obligation? What is demeaning about "helping another learn how to help"? Would you have wanted this to be phrased in a different way? Help doesn't need to be an expression of weakness. Rather, I think that acknowledging the limitations and and seeking for ways to work with these limitations are an admission of strength. Some people are more capable of doing this than others and may have the ability to convey some ideas.
“This is what we’re going to do.” The instructor states the name of the move. The group repeats the name. Students pair off to practice the move several times over. The instructor then pauses, “What did we just do?” The group repeats the name of the move. “Very good, now we’re going to…” One student asks, “Can you say that again? I cannot hear you.” The instructor looks over and sighs. He repeats saying the name once more. The student tentatively follows and the instructor nods. “Ok, the next one is…”
He continues the same way with the next few moves. There is one move that has an especially difficult long name. The students say the name together. The one student struggles to say this. The instructor waves his hand, “Never mind,” and practices doing the move. At the end of that practice, the group states the name again. The one student is frustrated. “I need to have a way of knowing what it is. I have to see what this is and to make the association.” The instructor replies, “I don’t have time for this.”
The student points out, “You require us to know terminology before we can promote to the next level.”
“Yes, that is true,” says the instructor with a long steady gaze. “This takes too much time. You should not be here.” A long silence stretches to what feels like a minute. With a quiet voice, the student asks, “Are you saying you don’t want me here?” No response from the instructor. A door closes as the student leaves the school.