DavidThomas
Yellow Belt
I would recommend taekwondo OR Judo. They will learn focus, discipline, exercise, and will also enjoy being with other kids their age, plus, the classes are very structured. That is good!
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Okay. Shamed into a real answer, my opinion is wrestling... At least in the USA. It's a common sport in schools, which means it's affordable. While it's a contact sport, it minimizes blows to the head, which I think is important for kids. lots of great life lessons are taught, and it's a fantastic foundation for self defense. And it's an Olympic sport, along with a viable scholarship vehicle for kids who excel.Brazilian Jiu-jitsu, in my opinion.
Notice how we all seem to recommend our own art? That is a very naturalistic approach, but if you consider safety and effectiveness, you would all be recommending Kenpo.Ameri-Do-Te. Or Sinanju. Whichever is easiest to find in your area.
Okay. Shamed into a real answer, my opinion is wrestling... At least in the USA. It's a common sport in schools, which means it's affordable. While it's a contact sport, it minimizes blows to the head, which I think is important for kids. lots of great life lessons are taught, and it's a fantastic foundation for self defense. And it's an Olympic sport, along with a viable scholarship vehicle for kids who excel.
Okay. Shamed into a real answer, my opinion is wrestling... At least in the USA. It's a common sport in schools, which means it's affordable. While it's a contact sport, it minimizes blows to the head, which I think is important for kids. lots of great life lessons are taught, and it's a fantastic foundation for self defense. And it's an Olympic sport, along with a viable scholarship vehicle for kids who excel.[/QUO
Totally agree Steve
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Wrestling is fairly new to my area. At least what I consider new. When I was growing up you couldn't find wrestling if you hired a detective agency. Decades later you could even find schools of professional wrestling earlier than you could find real wrestling. But wrestling is growing now, especially in private schools.
The "affordable" part is big, I hadn't considered that. And I hate wrestlers because they never seem to get tired. But, still, given the choice to influence a kid if all things were equal, I'm pushing him to BJJ over wrestling.
Like every youth activity, some kids just won't enjoy wrestling. Some kids don't enjoy chess. That's absolutely true.Yes, it is, without a doubt.
But I'm thinking of kids. Most don't have that mentality. At least, not yet. Especially if they're average, shy or slightly withdrawn.
Agree. And just to add, Judo is a sport available in our high schools here, just like wrestling, and has many of the same benefits. Not sure how many judo scholarships are available, but that would be the one advantage wrestling would have.Many martial arts can potentially be suitable for children - if the instructor knows how to teach children and has developed a curriculum that's appropriate for them. Taekwondo can be good, judo can be good, wrestling can be good, Wing Chun can be good. I've seen videos of kids that are maybe 5 or 6 doing kendo, and saw a bit of a kids' capoeria class one time. There's not a single "best" choice.
Agree. And just to add, Judo is a sport available in our high schools here, just like wrestling, and has many of the same benefits. Not sure how many judo scholarships are available, but that would be the one advantage wrestling would have.
I will say that I am admittedly biased toward sports, particularly for kids. I think TKD, Judo, wrestling and other MAs are better for kids than, say, WC. Not because the arts are deficient in any way. Rather, it's because I see a lot of value in application. Teach a kid how to execute a double leg take down and then provide a venue for them to succeed. They are encouraged to execute their skills in context and they get immediate, objective feedback on their progress. TKD and Judo have similar benefits.
In WC or other styles without competitive elements, the kids are actually discouraged from applying their technique in context, and as a result never really get any objective feedback on their development.
FWIW, this also applies to adults, but developmentally, I think it's crucial for kids.