Sorry , you think throwing somebody in the deep end is a good training method?
There is a very important reason that there is a certain progression in Wing Chun , it is because each new concept and skill learned builds on the last.
Those who try to short circuit and fast track through these progressions are only cheating themselves of a proper foundation , and usually end up having no stance and no power.
The artificial intelligence has 3 searching methods.
1. Forward search - you search from the root and reach to your leaf (you learn form first, and spar later).
2. Backward search - you search from the leaf and reach back to your root (you sparring first, and lean form later).
3. Bi-directional search - you search from both the root and leaf at the same time (you lean partner drill, sparring, and solo drill (not form) at the same time).
The scientific proof shows the:
- "2. backward search" is faster than the "1. forward search" because there is only 1 root, but there are many leaves.
- "3. Bi-directional search" is twice as fast as both "1. forward search" and "2. backward search". The reason is simple. If you alternate "forward search" and "backward search", you can skip a large amount of "unnecessary" searching area from both directions.
Besides the above scientific proof, if we apply this into our MA training, here is a simple example.
- Your teacher teaches you left Tan Shou and right vertical punch.
- You develop it through your Chi shou.
- You test it through your sparring.
Since you (general YOU) are still a beginner, through "developing" and "testing', you will soon find out that
- your left Tan Shou doesn't seal your center well enough.
- your right vertical punch doesn't generate enough power.
- your body is not unified as one single unit.
- ...
When your teacher start to teach your SNT form, you will concentrate and appreciate all those basic training.
Here is my personal experience. I learned sparring in my early training period. At that period of time, I was only allowed to spar with "1 person attack, 1 person defense" format. When I played my defense rule, I found out quickly that to "move my head away from my opponent's punch" was very important. Later on when I started to learn solo forms, I always included my head/body dodging along with my blocking. By doing this way, even if I may miss my blocking, since my head and body is already move out of my opponent's striking path, I'm still safe from my opponent's punch. If I learned form first, there is no way that I could realize that the "dodging" skill could be that important in my early training stage. Of course my teacher could teach me that "head dodging" is important. It was still better to experience it all by myself.