View Full Version : How long is a class?
jks9199
09-16-2007, 04:24 PM
A couple of threads have made me curious...
How long does a typical class last? I teach for about 2 (sometimes a little more) hours in a "regular" class; I'll do longer classes on occasion when scheduling permits. We do break our youngest kids (preteen) out after about an hour, due to attention spans, but otherwise, I have a hard time figuring out how to do warmups, demonstrate/instruct, then drill in less than 2 hours.
Sukerkin
09-16-2007, 04:29 PM
We have three hour classes with a 'break' in the middle that can be of variable length and sometimes is indistinguishable from training apart from the prescence of a cup of tea at hand rather than a katana :lol:.
MBuzzy
09-16-2007, 06:02 PM
We only go for about an hour....which means that after warm ups...about 45 minutes. Depending on who does warm ups, sometimes less.
A couple of threads have made me curious...
How long does a typical class last? I teach for about 2 (sometimes a little more) hours in a "regular" class; I'll do longer classes on occasion when scheduling permits. We do break our youngest kids (preteen) out after about an hour, due to attention spans, but otherwise, I have a hard time figuring out how to do warmups, demonstrate/instruct, then drill in less than 2 hours.
Adult classes are usually 1 hr. Kids classes vary depending on age. Kids that range in the 4-6 category would usually be a 1/2 hr due to their short attn. span. The teens would be 45min.
For myself, I'd usually try to have something already planned, to use as a rough outline. Of course, that 'lesson plan' is subject to change depending on who shows up for the class.
IMHO, the kids really didn't require too much warmup time, and most of the adults would arrive early and start to warmup/stretch, so I really didn't do more than 10 mins. worth of warmup. I wanted to get to the meat of the class.
Mike
Brian R. VanCise
09-16-2007, 06:48 PM
I like an hour and a half. For me that is an ideal training time. I will do intensive training for a couple of hours and of course seminars for quite a bit more. However, day in and day out an hour and a half seems to work really well for adults when training.
Tames D
09-16-2007, 07:31 PM
We have always gone 1 1/2 hours. But recently have gone to 2 hour classes. We get more done in 2 hours but I prefer 1 1/2 hour classes. There seems to be a little more burnout in the last half hour for most of the students.
Blindside
09-16-2007, 07:36 PM
2 hours, the first half hour is a warmup, calisthenics, bodyweight exercises, and stretching.
Fushichou
09-16-2007, 07:45 PM
Most schools I've been to have had about two hour classes. Some have had an hour and a half. A few have had one-hour, which seemed too short (by the time you've warmed up and got going, it's time to stop).
I've had some longer classes, but there comes a point where people get too worn out to keep going as intensely as they could before.
I think there is a sweet spot you reach, of how long can you practice before you (or the bulk of the class) tires out. Less time than that and you feel like it's incomplete, more time than that and people start to get worn out and class becomes less productive. In my experience that hovers around two hours.
Steel Tiger
09-16-2007, 07:54 PM
An hour and half to two hours depending on the core subject matter for the class. This gives us about an hour to an hour and a half of training time.
Kacey
09-16-2007, 08:55 PM
1 1/2 hours, including 15-20 minutes of stretching/calisthenics - although I'm always willing to stay after and help anyone who asks me to.
MarkBarlow
09-16-2007, 10:22 PM
45 minutes of training and 10 minutes of games (if they've given me a good workout) for the ankle biters and 90 minutes for adults.
tntma12
09-17-2007, 12:14 AM
I teach about 1 1/2 to 2 hours depending on who shows up. I too find an hour to be too short.
jks9199
09-17-2007, 01:11 AM
Responses so far have been enlightening...
As a loose rule, I've found about 2 hours of training following about 30 minutes of warmups is a good balance for adults. Our current situation works best if we end after about 2 hours total (mostly teens; they've got school the next day...). As I said, the younger kids (7 to 12) burn out after about an hour -- and you've got to keep them moving during that hour.
In terms of seminars/clinics, I've noticed that if folks don't get a break after about 2 hours, they lose focus. Give 'em a break, and they can go for another 2 hours or so... (Oh... and if it's classroom/lecture... most people get seriously squirmy after about an hour.)
stone_dragone
09-17-2007, 08:26 AM
In my classes at home we would have a 2 hour practice. Minimum of 30 min (sometimes 45) for warm-up and conditioning and the remainder for kata, drill and sparring or self-defense, grappling and sparring.
When I moved to alabama and later to Tennessee, I found that most of the schools that I attended hold about 1-hour classes.
My father-in-law (MT Member Shiho)'s aikido class is an hour and half, I think...might be 2 hours, it went by so fast it was hard to tell.
terryl965
09-17-2007, 09:10 AM
Childern classes 1 hour, teenager and adults and fight team1.5 hours. Saturday classes are two hour for everybody Sunday is devoted to God and the church.
JadecloudAlchemist
09-17-2007, 09:19 AM
Typical class for me is about an hour. Though private lessons sometimes are the ones that do it for me because sometimes a person wants to practice for 4hours or I have to talk for 4hours straight!
tshadowchaser
09-17-2007, 11:13 AM
usualy a class runs about 1 - 1 1/2 hours. private classes from 1 -3 hours.
speacial classes or get togeathers all day
meth18au
09-17-2007, 11:48 AM
2-2.5 hours for my classes, usually it is somewhere between these times. The fighters at my gym go for at least 3 hours though.
It is 1 hour total warm up, stretch, ab work....etc etc. Then the rest of the class for us is shadowboxing, pad work and sparring. Which takes the other hour to hour and a half of our time up.
Tonight was 2.5 hours- I'm absolutely spent...bedtime after I check all the forums!!!
:)
CoryKS
09-17-2007, 12:14 PM
Regular classes at our school are one hour. Privates are 1/2 hour, but they tend to go longer if no one has a lesson scheduled immediately following. We can take as many regular/private lessons as we wish, but we are expected to attend at least two regular classes a week and make up any that we miss.
jus_dann
09-18-2007, 01:05 AM
i had a group of adults i would teach about 2.5-4hours.
some complainned of the time frame and wanted an hour class.
i found they were not ready to train so little.
seems to take an adult a good 10-15 minutes to warm up, which leaves 45 minutes. teaching multiple arts, this left very little time to really work on anything. it was 5 minutes for this, 10 for that, 3 for this,etc. personaly i like a 3-3.5 hour class with a break in the middle. typically when i taught for more than 2 hours, we would have a cooldown and more "mental" teachings to go with the physical ones. i thought that worked best for myself and others alike. but trying to serve up 2 hours of hard trainning in one hour, my guys started dropping like flies, LOL, go figure...
still learning
09-18-2007, 04:37 AM
Hello, Today people want to learn, but unwilling to stay for long classes.
For our school, Pee wees (under 12) one hour is long.
Juniors and adults 1 1/2 hour seems to work for us because most of us school or jobs to go to the next day.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
For the serious guys, most of them only want to train 2-4 hours.
For the average guys most of them 1-1 1/12 hour is fine.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
If you research the old days of B-4 times, lot of those old timers in Japan,Okinawa,China,Korea, and other places, many train for long hours everyday. That is why they were so great.
How long a class should be? at least 3 1/2 miles or two mountains high, or six tree lengths, or eight monkeys tie together, or seven fish long?
Depends on your measurements you want to use here? ................We use the short angle methods in the Japanese versions. (chinese style).
Aloha, ( from three birds flying in the wrong direction).? ...that long?
Lynne
09-24-2007, 10:58 AM
Our adult classes run one hour or 45 minutes, depending on the day and time.
Sparring classes are 45 minutes.
We do a warmup for our regular classes but usually don't do a cooldown.
Darth F.Takeda
09-26-2007, 02:02 AM
Mon. Thurs and Sat. classes are scheaduled for 2 hours but usually are about 1 hour and 50 minutes by the time the mats are down.
Friday a few of us train for 1 1/2 to 2 hours and a smaller group of us are doing 1 hour of training on Mon. afternoon.
When I go up to workout with Dr. Wink's FMA/IMA group it's a 3-6 hour day.
charyuop
09-26-2007, 11:34 AM
The actual class last 1 1/2 hr, but before Sensei comes onto the mat we warm up on our own. Since it is a very small class it depends on what we do. If Sensei "wastes" (it is never a waste, don't misunderstand me) time explaining techniques we can go a bit longer, while if it is pure "work out" the whole time Sensei might have a little bit of mercy on me and cut it a little shorter. However longer or shorter is a metter of 10 or 15 minutes. Thus an avarage of 1 1/2 hr.
Kennedy_Shogen_Ryu
09-26-2007, 12:20 PM
Usually our Karate classes last an hour and our BJJ/MMA classes last at least an hour and a half but usually closer to 2 hours.
ChingChuan
09-27-2007, 01:49 AM
Our training lasts 1.5 hour. I don't think it's too long - rather, it's usually too short ;).
Usually, the warming-up lasts about 20 minutes (depends on who's leading it - it's much shorter when my instructor leads it instead of the assistant-instructor). Then we'll do a few jurus (like 1-30 twice) and after that, the 'real' training begins. My instructor starts explaining something and then we'll all do that (without partner) and then he elaborates on it etc. etc. until everyone has more-or-less mastered the technique / jurus. Then it's time for a water break (about 5 minutes) and after that, we'll all find ourselves a partner and start practising the technique on each other.
Sometimes, we'll do a little work with weapons, which is usually done when eveeyone understand the technique that was taught. In that case, the lesson lasts slightly longer than 1,5 hour ;).
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.1.8 Copyright © 2012 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.