miguksaram
Master of Arts
In a nutshell if you have a mentally/physically disabled person as a student, can they reach a black belt in your school if they are unable to perform to the standards like non disabled students can?
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Call me a jerk, but I'll admit to having mixed feelings about it. I'm OK with some allowances granted for physical disability, but IMO there needs to be some objective measure of achievement, sustainable outside of "he is doing the best he can". I regard it more like a college degree of sorts - there are clear requirements that must be met before the degree is conferred.
In a nutshell if you have a mentally/physically disabled person as a student, can they reach a black belt in your school if they are unable to perform to the standards like non disabled students can?
Black Belt isn't just about demonstrating techniques it's about the person and their will and attitude. The spirit to overcome counts for a lot.
What about if the person can't do all the things that an able bodied person can do (for example, physical limitations around high kicking and running), but could still beat the snot out of an equivalent graded able bodied person? Do they get a Dan grade? Where is the line?
Sparring and/or fighting ability trumps a lot of other things in my book. In the end, we are looking for the application of all this stuff we practice right? If so, the ability to USE what we learn is the highest measure there is.
For what it's worth I would rather have one disabled student who always attends class and gives me his or her all than ten healthy people who drift in and out of class and then quit after three months.
Black Belt isn't just about demonstrating techniques it's about the person and their will and attitude. The spirit to overcome counts for a lot.
Totally agree, I was asking Twin Fist, who I thought had taken the hard line, but maybe not judging from his second post.
Can someone who can't kick do TKD if they are great with their hand techniques and can use them as effectively as a kicker can kick?
But in college, there are accommodations made. The key isn't to compromise standards. In college, a deaf student can have an interpreter. If the measure of success in a math class is the ability to learn and execute the math functions being taught, and the student is being unnecessarily handicapped not by their impairment, but by the mechanism of instruction, then the student could fail for reasons unrelated to the standards of the school.you dont graduate from college cuz you tried hard.
you graduate by achieving success and passing the minimium standards.
I treat rank the same way.
there is a minimum standard of ability that is required.
otherwise? thats what honorary belts are for