I will be teaching a 2-hour Intro to Wing Chun course at a local college. I'm assuming that the attendees may be newbies not just to Wing Chun, but to martial arts in general. I'm trying to come up with an outline for the class, but I need some suggestions because I am not sure if what I have will last 2 hours.
*Warm-up and stretching (15-20 minutes tops)
*Describe what I feel are the 3 main features of the system
*Run them through a handful of basic techniques. One would be the punch, of course. Then I was thinking of doing 3 blocks: Pak Sao, Gan Sao, and Biu Sao.
*Practice these in the air, then with a partner.
*Practice the blocks in the air again while adding an attack. Then do it with a partner.
*After that, I was thinking of doing 3-5 self-defense scenarios. ("How would you use Wing Chun if someone did ______?")
Does anyone else have any ideas? I was thinking forms would NOT be important, since it is just a 2-hour, one-shot class.
That's an ambitious amount to fit into the 100 minutes you have left after stretching. Remember, there will be questions (maybe a few, maybe a lot - depends upon the group). Remember, also, that to teach blocks and have them work with a partner, you'll have to teach at least some rudimentary striking principles at that point (some will be just awful if you don't). Imagine you had a brand new student who came to class, who was going to work with another brand new student. How much could you cover with that student in the first class?
Have you decided what the desired outcome of the class is? Do you want them to understand WC, or do you want them to have a taste of self-defense? You seem to be trying to reach both, and that (IMO) is too much for 2 hours. If the class is supposed to be an intro to WC, then I'd omit the SD scenarios at the end. Instead, with each technique you teach them, you can demonstrate the self-defense usage for them. They simply aren't going to have any skill in that amount of time.
Here's my primary concern: if you put them through those few techniques, then have them try to defend even a very slow attack, most of them are likely to still be very bad at it - improper structure making the blocks feel weak, etc. So, at the end of 2 hours, they don't feel the effectiveness and don't get a good feeling for WC. On the other hand, if they learn two good blocks and two good strikes, then they can actually get to feel what a good block/strike feels like. Let them get a little bit of a feel for the repetition. Still include the talk about the features of the system. If you want to save some time, you could actually reduce the warm-up. You are unlikely to get them moving much in that amount of time (footwork adds to the learning times), so they have less chance to hurt themselves. Show them a form that has all of the techniques (hopefully there is one) you'll be teaching. Show it with some speed and fluidity to make it more interesting. Then, as you teach each technique, you can point out where it is in the form.
Now, all that said, whatever you plan for, have an extension plan in your back pocket, too. As sure as I am of what I've said, sometimes you get the freak group of people who learn really fast. So, in this case, maybe be ready to teach a short sequence of the techniques they learned. Or just keep those SD scenarios handy, just in case.