Hi,
you've hit upon a subject near and dear to me so I apologize for the long answer. my daughter is 5yrs old and just tested for and received her orange belt three weeks ago.
i am a novice to Kenpo and my only knowledge and experience as it is, is through helping my daughter and observing and talking with her instructor and other Kenpoists (oh yeah, and a bunch of Larry Tatum videos). i debated long and hard before enrolling her in Kenpo because of this issue and others.
i think the techniques can be great things for kids to learn...
once they are mature enough to understand when and where and what circumstances might warrant use of those techniques.
and when they are mature enough to learn them.
I've noticed that many of the instructors vary what they teach the kids at my daughters school. mostly because, as someone else pointed out here,they're not nearly ready physically or in attention span and retention to learn certain things. most of the kids are between 3 and 9 years old. they go through generally five to ten techniques per belt.
i'll limit my post to yellow and orange belt testing because that's where my kid is orange. some of the kids are taught short one and most are taught the kicking set for orange.
but i think they alter their teaching in content many times because the child they are working with just isn't ready to take on any more.
now i'm gonna brag some (sorry). Courtney, learned 18 of the 24 techniques, short one right and left and the kicking set. the techniques her instructor left out she tells me are difficult to learn because of size. from what i could tell from the videos and from practicing with her, i think my kid does them pretty darn well (proud daddy, sorry).
now the reason why i think learning potentially dangerous techniques is ok for my kid.
1 she can retain the info.
2 she can perform the techniques
3 and i think most important, she really does know how dangerous they are and why she needs to think before using them.
now "bad people trying to take me away or hurt me"
might sound really simplistic, but not too bad an answer to me. she knows Karate is not for the playground or with friends or even with mom. only with dad. lucky me. she also knows they are not for sparring.
her instructor goes over the importance of knowing when and where to use techniques constantly and so do i at home.
so.... my answer is... it probably is and should be an individual thing. There is plenty for the kids to learn at the dojo. balance, coordination, footwork, punches, kicks, etc. But i think it would be unfortunate if some great instructors with a good feel for their kids didn't teach kids everything they could learn just because they are kids.
great line from a movie Stand and Deliver "students will rise to the level of expectations"
if we expect kids not to be able to understand, not to learn, then they won't. I've always said give them a chance. push the limits, open the doors, give encouragement and watch carefully to guide them but not limit them.
thanks for the soap box.
Courtney's Dad
