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.
Belt Testing as a formality vs. an actual test. After my last belt test my instructor told me it wasn't a test. He wanted me to just push myself and give it my best effort, that my "test" started as a white belt. Thoughts?
I don't see why an instructor would let a student test if they thought that they would fail.
I don't see why an instructor would let a student test if they thought that they would fail.
There is a third approach: Let them decide when it is time to test, but make it clear just because they decided to test does not mean they will pass.I think there are two different good approaches. One is that you don't let people test until they're ready, and the other is that you let everyone test every time and try to really emphasize the idea that it's okay to fail and that the important thing is to get up and try again. We do the former, and almost never fail people, but I think the latter approach has a lot of merit, too. A lot of people are afraid of failure, and can get paralyzed by that fear. Learning to fail and get back up and try again can be a valuable lesson. (I think it would be bad for business, though.)
Fourth approach, stand ready with the receipt book for when they pay loads of money for their belt..............
Our guys don't test they fight. Now because they can fail in that environment they work very hard at being good martial artists.
Testing you could fail would put some fire into peoples training that you may not get otherwise.
I m a strong advocate of treating belt testing the same way as you would do a competition. So you are at top form when you do that test.
Not a huge fan of this, at least for self defense styles. It lends people to focus only on what works for them in a fight, rather than learning the system as a whole.Our guys don't test they fight. Now because they can fail in that environment they work very hard at being good martial artists.
Testing you could fail would put some fire into peoples training that you may not get otherwise.
I m a strong advocate of treating belt testing the same way as you would do a competition. So you are at top form when you do that test.
Not a huge fan of this, at least for self defense styles. It lends people to focus only on what works for them in a fight, rather than learning the system as a whole.
I would have thought you would want to apply what works for you regardless if it is self defence or otherwise.
Our guys don't test they fight. Now because they can fail in that environment they work very hard at being good martial artists.
Testing you could fail would put some fire into peoples training that you may not get otherwise.
I m a strong advocate of treating belt testing the same way as you would do a competition. So you are at top form when you do that test.
In the past, I have charged a small testing fee, simply to keep students (usually kids, whom I do not teach now) from coming to a test unprepared. They were wasting my time - time I could have been teaching them or someone else - by being unprepared to test. I've solved that in my program by no longer allowing the students to select when to test. Since formal testing is there to verify what I see in class, I now make the decision when a student is ready to test.We don't charge to test or to promote. If a student advances to a new color belt, they owe us $10 for the belt itself. Not exactly a huge money-maker. I know many martial arts styles depend on testing fees and promotion fees and mandatory shias and so on to earn revenue. We do not. A promotion is something a student earns, not an opportunity to scalp them.
Yes. That's only a slight variation on they way I came up in mainline NGA. We don't do big testing days. Most tests or test segments take 20-30 minutes (except the self-defense tests - those can last an hour or more, and are scheduled separately), so they are done during regular classes. The only difference in how I test is that one day a student will walk in, and I'll tell them, "After you warm up, wait over there for me. You'll be testing your Classical Sets today."@gpseymour I just want to make sure I'm understandign correctly. You don't have formal testing or a set designated date where people eligible to test can test. You just test people whenever they are ready?
Yes. That's only a slight variation on they way I came up in mainline NGA. We don't do big testing days. Most tests or test segments take 20-30 minutes (except the self-defense tests - those can last an hour or more, and are scheduled separately), so they are done during regular classes. The only difference in how I test is that one day a student will walk in, and I'll tell them, "After you warm up, wait over there for me. You'll be testing your Classical Sets today."