evenflow1121 said:
heh, you think that is bad, I once visited a school that taught roughly 12 techniques per belt, but you could get the other 12 if you would join up with them as a bonus lol. That was the most amazing croc of **** I ever saw, but hey people apparently were buying into it.
On a side note, I believe that you should keep the 24 tech curriculum and allow your students to decide what works for them, while I do not believe that a school with legitimate and honest reasons for deleting material is a fraud or McDojo, I think it is best for students to decide. IMO they should be exposed to it all.
You've made a good point about teaching all and allowing the student to have the opportunity to work on it and develop what works best for them.
But I'm gonna play devil's advocate here a little, for the sake of discussion.
What is commonly referred to nowadays as "EPAK" has a much reduced curriculum from what Mr. Parker's kenpo originally was when he started teaching in the US. According to Tracys (let me make it clear that I am not advocating Tracys or anyone over another, this is just for the sake of discussion) they have kept the entire original curriculum as Mr. Parker taught it in the 1950s. There are no such things as "extensions" to be taught at later belts. The technique was taught in its entirety, but many of them have several variations. Tracys curriculum is 10 techs for yellow, 30 each for Orange thru 4th Black, and 41 for 5th Black. Grand total: 381, but with variations Tracys claims 600 (I never counted to verify that).
So assuming Tracys are telling the truth about this, Mr. Parker clearly deleted a huge pile of material from what became the later versions of the art. Mr. Parker clearly felt it was appropriate and necessary to make deletions. How does this jive with keeping everything?
It doesn't. I think the truth is that the art is constantly evolving. It evolved under Mr. Parker's guidance, and it will continue to evolve under the guidance of his students, and those that come after them. Since he had so many students, it will evolve in many different ways. The experiences of these people (including experiences in arts other than kenpo) will affect the direction in which the art goes, under their guidance. Some people will add material, some will delete material, and some will alter, combine, and split material.
If you check Tracys website, they list a lot of additional material that is clearly from Chinese arts, and not kenpo in origin. They took the route of "more". I don't personally agree with this approach, but that's what they do. I have seen other kenpo organizations that have only 4 or 5 techs per belt, and one master form. I'm not sure I agree with that much streamlining either, but it's another approach. I am sure that for those who understand the various systems, they all work remarkably well.
So how do you decide what is right? I think it is a personal choice that one makes, based on their experiences. Sure, some people know more and understand better and are more skilled than others. But this will always be the case. I don't think any one person, or small group of people, can claim the right to interpretation of the art, and everyone else needs to just follow what they say. Everyone can only do their best, based on their understanding and experience. And when you meet someone who can teach you to understand better, the art for you evolves some more. It never ends, and there will probably never be a final, perfect system with a never-changing curriculum.