TrueJim
Master Black Belt
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]What TrueJim has created is an either/or situation.[/QUOTE]
But that's because it is an either/or situation.
Nobody has even mentioned low standards. What I said was, you either make the standard to be high, or you pick a standard that's somewhat lower.
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]The third option is somewhat illusory, because it's essentially no standards. When you create a unique set of standards for each person, it's no longer a standard at all.[/QUOTE]
I understand your point, but I don't think it's true. As an analogy, if I were coaching a track team, I could say that everybody has to decrease their track time by 10% by the end of the season. That's still a standard, even though the track time goal would vary depending on the individual.
You can do the same thing in martial arts. Assess where a person is, assess where they could be, and assign merit based on how much they've improved. That's still a standard, just like 10% speed increases would be a standard.
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]As a quick aside, when you frame the situation up as TrueJim has done, you are creating a red herring (and also a false dilemma).[/QUOTE]
That's just not true. It's not a false dilemma: it's a real, actual dilemma. Should we set a standard so high that only a few could ever meet it? Do we set it somewhere lower than that, so that more people can meet it? Or do we vary the standard to reflect the potential of the student? That's not a false dilemma. It's a real honest-to-goodness dilemma. If it weren't, there wouldn't be 8 pages of discussion in this thread. It's the fact that it's a dilemma that makes this an interesting discussion!
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]For what that's worth, it's technically illogical for at least two reasons.[/QUOTE]
What two reasons?
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]Where the standards are arbitrary, they become meaningless. Where they are consistently applied, they are meaningful.[/QUOTE]
I wholeheartedly agree with you on both points. (1) arbitrary standards are meaningless, and (2) standards are meaningful only when applied consistently.
But there's nothing arbitrary about saying "decrease your running time by 10%" and there's nothing inconsistent about saying, "and that applies to everybody on the track team." If you can use a standard like that for track & field, or swimming, or just about any other individual sport, there's no reason one can't use it for martial arts as well. And if you can use it for martial arts, then you can use it for disabled people in martial arts.
But that's because it is an either/or situation.
- Either you have a common standard for everybody, or varying standards by individual
- If it's a common standard for everybody, you either make it a high standard, or something lower than that
Nobody has even mentioned low standards. What I said was, you either make the standard to be high, or you pick a standard that's somewhat lower.
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]The third option is somewhat illusory, because it's essentially no standards. When you create a unique set of standards for each person, it's no longer a standard at all.[/QUOTE]
I understand your point, but I don't think it's true. As an analogy, if I were coaching a track team, I could say that everybody has to decrease their track time by 10% by the end of the season. That's still a standard, even though the track time goal would vary depending on the individual.
You can do the same thing in martial arts. Assess where a person is, assess where they could be, and assign merit based on how much they've improved. That's still a standard, just like 10% speed increases would be a standard.
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]As a quick aside, when you frame the situation up as TrueJim has done, you are creating a red herring (and also a false dilemma).[/QUOTE]
That's just not true. It's not a false dilemma: it's a real, actual dilemma. Should we set a standard so high that only a few could ever meet it? Do we set it somewhere lower than that, so that more people can meet it? Or do we vary the standard to reflect the potential of the student? That's not a false dilemma. It's a real honest-to-goodness dilemma. If it weren't, there wouldn't be 8 pages of discussion in this thread. It's the fact that it's a dilemma that makes this an interesting discussion!
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]For what that's worth, it's technically illogical for at least two reasons.[/QUOTE]
What two reasons?
[QUOTE="Steve, post: 1708613, member: 17506]Where the standards are arbitrary, they become meaningless. Where they are consistently applied, they are meaningful.[/QUOTE]
I wholeheartedly agree with you on both points. (1) arbitrary standards are meaningless, and (2) standards are meaningful only when applied consistently.
But there's nothing arbitrary about saying "decrease your running time by 10%" and there's nothing inconsistent about saying, "and that applies to everybody on the track team." If you can use a standard like that for track & field, or swimming, or just about any other individual sport, there's no reason one can't use it for martial arts as well. And if you can use it for martial arts, then you can use it for disabled people in martial arts.