Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I think more should care as the KKW is the world TKD academy. Having a certificate from them means something, with that something evaluated by individuals in the way they see best. I pride myself from having certificates signed by what I consider the principle founder of my martial art. Imagine having a certificate signed by the man who made the name TKD.I do.
But unless you want to teach Kukki TKD and want to certify your students through KKW....
Otherwise... who cares.
Actually that may not be the case, as the WTF will now recognize students & their certificates issued by the WTA, a group of ITF Pioneers. I also read somewhere that the Olympic rules do not allow for discrimination, as no boxer needs a piece of paper from the ABC Boxing Group. They just need to win their national trials or successfully complete their respective national selection process.Unless you want to compete in the Olympics or train students to compete in the Olympics it's not necessary.
Pax,
Chris
Actually that may not be the case, as the WTF will now recognize students & their certificates issued by the WTA, a group of ITF Pioneers. I also read somewhere that the Olympic rules do not allow for discrimination, as no boxer needs a piece of paper from the ABC Boxing Group. They just need to win their national trials or successfully complete their respective national selection process.
That would appear to be a key legal point that may vary from nation to nation & their respective laws & legal processes.In that case it's totally unnecessary. (I'd be interested in seeing a case brought before the Olympics with a non-KKW certified person wanting to compete, though. Does one have to be KKW certified to compete for a country's Olympic team in the first place?)
Pax,
Chris
I think it would also be nice to have.I have a KKW cert, but a personal dojang certificate much higher. Although my primary art is TSD, I do help teach at a Kukki-TKD dojang once a week.
I would just say it's a 'nice to have'.
Certain things have an intrinsic value. Food, for example, has intrinsic value; we need it to survive. Land has intrinsic value; it is required to grow crops in any meaningful amount.No, I am not KKW certified and I have been fairly outspoken in the past about the lack of value in general of 'certification' from any organization, not just the KKW.
KKW certification has a value similar to that of gold. It is valuable to a large group of people. It does afford you certain benefits that would be otherwise unattainable. It also impresses a great many people who do not have it. But you do not need it to teach taekwondo or to train in taekwondo.
Like gold, it affords you things that you may not 'need' but that will enhance your experience and that will connect you to people that you might otherwise not be able to connect with.
Daniel
How many of you have the kukiwon certification (black belt)? I don't need to be a black belt certificaed by KKW to teach or even open a dojang I guess, and I know that some guys here are just certificated by his/her own dojang. It's so crucial to be kuki certified?
Manny
I absolutely agree. Certifying a person with 'bad' taekwondo doesn't make their taekwondo any less bad; with or without the certificate, it's still bad.Yep, I've said all along if membership in an org gives you the chance to train with excellent people, than it is of value. I'm a member of the United States Aikido Federation which has ample seminar and advanced training opportunities.
But to be blunt, if your TKD (or karate or aikido or whatever) is bad, no amount of certificates or membership cards can cover that. And furthermore, the place of the organization should be way behind in importance to the relationship you have with your own teacher. I sometimes get the feeling that for some, the exact opposite is true.
Sounds like you would make a good & qualified candidate for a KKW skip Dan(s) program. Thank you for your response & keep up the good work.(in response to Karatemom)
I am embraced by the inctructor and students. I enjoy working with them, and have received very positive feedback. The instructor has turned over class to me completely some nights, and may be there training or has even left, trusting me to run class for him (I do attend an Arnis class afterward).
So even though we may do some things differently, the vast majority is identical. They get to learn some new things from me, and I have fun teaching them. Partly I think it's just my teaching style. I just explain my 'style' is from an older TKD (started in the mid '70s) but we're all TKD. I had tested up through 5th Dan for TKD and have been promoted to 7th in TSD - but I eventually did test and was registered for a 1st Dan KKW. My TSD instructor was 9th Dan KKW but didn't award KKW certs. I received my last TKD promotions from a TKD/TSD master who is 6th Dan KKW.
I've trained in independent, KKW & ITF dojangs besides TSD & HKD, and spent many years with several Japanese styles too. It's all good. Experiences come in many flavors which all add to my general knowledge and background. Helps me to better relate to students from all different schools/styles. I just prefer TSD.
Plus in my view it can devalue the perceived value of the certificate. This if it happens, can have a corrosive effect on other like certified & deserving students.I absolutely agree. Certifying a person with 'bad' taekwondo doesn't make their taekwondo any less bad; with or without the certificate, it's still bad.