He formally was trained to 3rd degree with a larger organization but then left and started his own school at which time he automatically jumped himself to an 8th degree. Hopefully you have good credentials from a TaeKwonDo organization. I also currently have Kukkiwon rank so even though it isn't perfect, it shows some legitimacy.
This is something I definitely will not do. I would like to get 4th degree in some way before I open my own school. My plan (if someone will agree to it) would be to test using the curriculum I have developed, as a sort of 3rd-party audit of both my abilities and my curriculum. For them to say something along the lines of "I, as a 5th degree black belt in Taekwondo, certify this individual as possessing the skills and knowledge of a 4th degree black belt, and a curriculum capable of teaching martial arts up to the 3rd degree black belt in Taekwondo."
Obviously this isn't perfect, but something to that effect.
Worst case scenario, if my job situation does not improve and I am unable to find a mentor, I can either start teaching at 3rd degree and figure something else out from there, or I can self-promote to 4th degree. I don't feel that's a big jump. I've taken 4 out of 4 intermediate tests. My Master even said, "Any other school you'd already be 4th degree." I was teaching 20 hours per week for 4 years, and helped develop our COVID remote training program. I am currently still active in martial arts (even if not TKD), and I'm coaching multiple martial arts. I don't want to self-promote. But if I do, it will be a sliver of a degree, and not jump 5 degrees.
If you teach a Traditional Taekwondo then as long as you know a lot of traditional Poomsae, similar to the ones used in Tang Soo Do then you really wouldn't need a mentor or organization.
I have created my own forms. I'm not super happy with the official Taegeuk forms that I learned or the unofficial versions of the Palgwes. I keep it simple at 8 forms (most schools I think have added Kibon or other forms) and no extra rote memorization. I want to focus more on building a foundation through repetition at the beginner level, and then an understanding through a more dynamic approach to training at the advanced level.
I am interested to hear more about the curriculum you would plan to teach.
Probably a topic for another thread. The general concept is that beginners are going to focus on basic punches, kicks, and blocks; and do them all over and over and over again to build muscle memory. Intermediate level will add in elbow strikes and intermediate kicks, there is still a lot of repetition, but some variety from class to class. Advanced level starts to focus on application - different types of footwork, differences in doing things in forms/sparring/fighting, mix in more of my other martial arts trainings (Hapkido and Muay Thai, I know it's an odd mix).
The beginner and intermediate levels are built mainly on the Taekwondo class that I trained in for most of my time (where I nearly got 4th degree). The approach I plan to take in the advanced level is more a "move-of-the-week" like we do in my BJJ and Muay Thai classes.
One of the reasons I want to avoid memorization as much as I can is based on a few different folks I remember from my old school:
- Guy who just practices the memorization and not technique. Knows enough to pass the test but doesn't do any moves well.
- Girl who is technically sound but struggles with memorization. Gets very frustrated when she does the wrong foot (or something) and gets in her own way. Quit to do wrestling and is constantly winning golds there, so she is an excellent martial artist.
- Girl who was a red belt and quit, then came back a few years later. Technically sound, but couldn't remember any of the forms or combos, so she felt like she knew nothing and was useless, and quit.
- Guy who comes in from another school as a black belt, and it takes him years to catch up on our curriculum.
- When I went to a new school, and there are a half dozen different rote memorized rituals, including the stretching and warmup routine, closing ceremony in full Korean, three separate student creeds, a school cheer, and a few other things. I spent more time practicing and learning these rituals than I did on Taekwondo.
Instead, I want people to be able to come to my school and assimilate quickly, so they can start learning what matters - the application of technique.
To that end, instead of having students memorize self-defense one-steps for testing, I instead plan to have them pick one from class or even modify it or create their own, which will be their own self-defense. (This will be an upper belt thing). It's still something they memorize, but it's something they connect with and they can feel proud of. And someone coming in from another school can show off something they know from where they were before. It's a way to celebrate creativity and diversity, instead of just have everyone do the same combo.