Earl Weiss
Senior Master
It is an arbitrary demarcation. That said, I've got to question any curriculum that waits until 3rd dan and up to introduce close range combat material. Thoughts?
What curriculm waits until then?
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It is an arbitrary demarcation. That said, I've got to question any curriculum that waits until 3rd dan and up to introduce close range combat material. Thoughts?
Hmm, is it more icredible to use the term novice, than those that use the term "Master " when the entire syllabus has not been learned?
Aside form refining your material after 4th Dan do you not continue to have greater insight into the techniques?
Yep, less patterns. Of course without any real applications to speak of, the forms aren't too meaningful anyway other than as an exercise of coordination, discipline, and perhaps idle tradition. Like I said, in the old Jhoon Rhee system it wasn't any big deal to learn some new patterns. It's not like they were really used to teach fighting concepts, nor were any of the other drills even remotely connected to the hyung.I am not sure what you learned under Jhoon Rhee, since he has had different systems including Chang Hon, but a clue to what was missing from how he taught that system was the fact that it only had 20 of the 24 patterns. Kind of like learning the alphabet and leaving out 4 letters.
The same is true in martial arts. Just what have we been practicing all this time if it is to not gain fighting skills?
Respectfully said.
What curriculm waits until then?
This may be a nitpicking remark, but there is no WTF taekwondo. The WTF neither certifies nor creates requirements that satisfy certification. The WTF establishes a rule set under which athletes compete. This rule set has caused athletes to adopt a number of practices that are not otherwise found in taekwondo (hands down, backward leaning upright stance, predominance of high kicks and a distinct lack of punches. This does not dictate a taekwondo curriculum; only a rule set that really, anyone can compete under, even karateka or athletes with other martial arts backgrounds.Are we talking WTF or ITF?
Perhaps it is a big assumption to think that you can complete a martial art system like Taekwon-Do?
You asked a very simple, straightforward and legitmate question. However, it would take a great deal of time and space to answer thoroughly. I will explain why. In the 15 volume set , each pattern is preceded by a section of "new Techniques" for the pattern. Of course to what degree they are "New" is a matter of degree. It may simpley be an open hand version of a closed handed technique, or a technique seen before performed in a different fashion or at a different level (or something much different such as a "Sweeping Kick") but then you need to understand where in another volume the parmaters are explained as having an open hand facilitates a grab, and from there determine how that might be used.I clarified in #37 that I referred to a hypothetical system. Hopefully no such infamy actually exists.
I am curious about what techniques Chris referred to when he said you'd not be getting an accurate portrait if you just looked at cumulative 1st dan material.
If your only goal is to learn fighting skills then learning a martial art is a huge waste of time.
Now that I have yyour attention we would of course have to define"Martial Art"
"We" (meaning the collective "WE" not necessarily you and I) would first have to agree on the definition. Not likely .
For my thoughts see: http://371078645507472465-a-1802744773732722657-s-sites.googlegroups.com/site/ntkdacad/files/TheMArtialQuestionSept.2002TKDTimes.pdf?attachauth=ANoY7cqVeQPVXRTftkcqL1p-_RFZzhQaF8nxleh1dXFj1a6LeZvF0VXxVCNOGbHqGPg_mM83-Qz2ltqLKAb6kc5hJLEYqLzFGxNqdh0aBt2L9CEr0cXJtJ0jjYnmLYuXtMhsqY09W7fMAHvmALs9jTllun2cdkNIcVxHnLjiLY0ydwTsfvs8EfNjBrfvl-vebTv3F3bN9IKdv4zB1XUW4OoF_gGJGBN38fxpDFjv0sfIlaiuQv8adaI%3D&attredirects=0
Not asking you to accept my point of view. Only to get wghere I am comiong from when I say, if you only want to fight, don't learn a martial art. You are looking for something that would be better off called a "Martial Science" Art is irrelevant.
Really?
By 1st dan, one should have been well-acquainted with the fighting concepts of the system. One can certainly learn more techniques into the black belt ranks, but it should all build on the philosophies that should have been taught from day one.
Oh, I expect we'll get the usual 'TKD is a complete art if taught properly' remarks, so let's dispense with that red herring entirely.
I suggest people post their curriculum up to first dan.
If you're saying there are many more requirements in ITF TKD after 1st dan that dramatically transmute the art, I'd be less than impressed as someone tenured in martial arts. It is of course your system however.
It could be all of those things. This topic is fairly broad after all about whether cross-training is needed to complete TKD.
By the way, that's pretty incredible to me that you in the ITF consider a 3rd a novice black belt. Are high dan ranks so common then?
In Goju-ryu karate, I am a yondan (4th) and I have learned all the material in my system. As I progress upwards in rank, it's just a matter of refining what I have been given already as well as service to the art.
When I studied TKD and I attained 2nd dan in the old Jhoon Rhee system, it was understood that I pretty much had everything under my belt too. Other than a few new hyung there wasn't anything else to learn, and given the lack of form application work, it's not like it was any big deal to memorize a handful of new patterns.
This may be a nitpicking remark, but there is no WTF taekwondo.
Well, Chris, this might just be a potato, potatoe semantic, but I submit your assertion about missing out on the full portrait of TKD if you cut off at 1st dan is actually incorrect then. We all develop better understanding of our art after more practice. If nothing has substantially changed in how ITF TKD chooses to handle a specific combat situation (technique and tactic) beyond 1st dan, then 1st dan in fact serves fine as a cut-off point for discussion.Transmute the art? No, not really. But do people come to a better understanding of the principles of TKD after training longer? Sure. Are the things in the syllabus that appear after first dan building on what has preceded them? Yes, obviously. Do they contradict the previous principles? No. Do they add insight into what you've already done while teaching you more stuff? Yes.
I'm sure that was accurate for the system you studied but, as I have pointed out before, there's more than one style of TKD and making generalizations from one's background to the art as a whole isn't necessarily going to yield accurate results. In other words, when it comes to talking about TKD maybe empty your cup a little.
Generally, Kukkiwon tkd is called Kukki taekwondo. WTF is a rule set. My point was not so much to nit pick about the difference, but to point out that firstly, there is one, and that neither the WTF rule set nor Kukki taekwondo is intended to be fully complete.Yeah, technically the same could be said about ITF Taekwon-Do. As such it doesn't exist. It's more proer to call it Chang Hun Taekwon-Do. But ITF TKD and WTF TKD are just easy to use short hand terms for people (maybe WTF'ers could start calling it KK TKD since that would be more accurate). As long as people know that I don't see a problem with it. YMMV, of course.
Pax,
Chris
Well, Chris, this might just be a potato, potatoe semantic, but I submit your assertion about missing out on the full portrait of TKD if you cut off at 1st dan is actually incorrect then. We all develop better understanding of our art after more practice. If nothing has substantially changed in how ITF TKD chooses to handle a specific combat situation (technique and tactic) beyond 1st dan, then 1st dan in fact serves fine as a cut-off point for discussion.
Empty my cup? Huh?
Yes. If you equate TKD with what you learned and think that completing the syllabus at 2nd dan like you did covers the entirety of TKD then I'd suggest that is an innaccurate picture of TKD as a whole. The stuff I've posted has been apparently an inadequate attempt to present a wider picture of what TKD is (at least some of it), despite your arbitrary cut off point of 1st dan.
How long after first dan? Second, third, fourth? I would humbly suggest that's something that should be placed in the geup rank material. The ability to defend and get up from a prone position seems fairly key to me in a street fight.Then I guess we'll just have to disagree. I didn't learn prone defenses in a systematic way until after I was a first dan, for instance. Did what I learned change underlying principles of TKD? No. But it certainly built on what I already knew and added to it new things.
I'm not sure how this changes what I said above at all. We all have different perspectives. That's a given and shouldn't even be a sticking point. You spoke for your piece of TKD and I did for mine. End of story.
How long after first dan? Second, third, fourth? I would humbly suggest that's something that should be placed in the geup rank material. The ability to defend and get up from a prone position seems fairly key to me in a street fight.
I think you're missing my point, but never mind.
I was a seocnd dan when the bulk of that material made it's appearnace. I had learned bits and pieces when I was a first dan, but this material as a whole came later.
Your opinion on what should go where in a MA's syllabus is interesting but irrelevant to the original topic of this thread ("completeness" of TKD as a MA). I can only assume in your own style they get into a ground game at a fairly low rank given your opinion.
As for it being a key ability in a street fight, I suppose that would depend on whether or not you buy into the Gracies' stats about 90%+ fights ending up on the ground (that was based on law enforcement figures, which tend to go prone due to cuffing the suspect, after all). It's certainly a good ability to have, but I'd say knife work would be more helpful (and easier) to acquire. YMMV.
In our hapkido curriculum, defending and getting up from a prone position comes at the very end of the geub ranks, after which the student is a dan bo for a while before testing for first dan.How long after first dan? Second, third, fourth? I would humbly suggest that's something that should be placed in the geup rank material. The ability to defend and get up from a prone position seems fairly key to me in a street fight.
It all depends I suppose on how much material is being covered. Realistically, there is much more material to be learned in a standing position than in a prone position, and it is not unreasonable (though nor is it necessary) to require students to master those techniques first.
Yeah, I'd love to get a look at that. I have some of the volumes of the Encyclopedia but I didn't really see what I was looking for. I believe I will purchase the CD-Rom version and check it out. Of course, that begs the question, does the Encyclopedia contain the hoshinsul program?From what I understand, the Chang Hon system has a fairly full hoshinsul program as well as forms, one steps, three steps, and all of the various specific techniques to learn, so something is inevitably going to be at the tail end.
Yeah, I'd love to get a look at that. I have some of the volumes of the Encyclopedia but I didn't really see what I was looking for. I believe I will purchase the CD-Rom version and check it out. Of course, that begs the question, does the Encyclopedia contain the hoshinsul program?
Back in my day (Pre-Olympic) “real” TKD it didn't need anything.... but I have been away for a very long time... did somebody lose part of it someplace![]()