Need Help With Lesson Plans For TKD

The practice of stretching before the workout is old-school and is still used in many schools. Unfortunately, the science doesn't support it as an effective way to prevent injuries or improve mobility. Stretching is not a warmup. Stretching is something that works best once you are already fully warm.
I think a mix of dynamic stretching and light static stretching at the start of class is a good way to loosen the muscles up. I think the deep yoga-style stretching is something better for after class or on your own.
Skribs is correct when he points out that many TKD schools have a "self-defense" curriculum consisting of a random assortment of techniques which use fundamentally different body mechanics from those used in forms or sparring. (Technique A against a wrist grab, technique B against a bear hug, technique C against a haymaker, etc). I'm not personally a fan of that approach, for a number of reasons. It is possible to use the fundamentals of TKD effectively in a self-defense context. It requires that you understand both the way attacks generally play out in a self-defense scenario (generally starting at much closer range than is typical for sparring) and how to use your blocks, strikes, footwork, etc to deal with them.
The situational technique drilling is something I think you're going to find in every art (including BJJ). I think it depends more on how you approach it than anything else.
 
I'd rather see a student execute a kick at knee level with perfect form and balance than a sloppy. off-balance head kick.
I agree 110%.

A bit off topic, but this is an important point. Not only in building fundamental form but in application as well:
How to kick a guy in the head if you can't kick higher than the waist? Kick him in the knee or groin causing him to bend over, lowering his head to waist height. Now he's in kicking range even for an inflexible kicker.

There is almost aways a solution to overcome a particular weakness.

Related side note: Sometimes in forms/kata there is confusion of why a strike is done to a target that doesn't seem to make sense. That's because the previous technique has moved the target to a different angle, height or distance.
 
I'm not a TKD guy (although I've done a little bit of it along the way), so take what I have to say with a grain of salt. However I have been teaching various arts for some decades, so hopefully I can offer some useful suggestions.
I am glad you decided to reply anyways, all suggestions are welcome. I like hearing different ways different martial artists do things from different styles and different schools. I'm here to learn anything from anyone.

The practice of stretching before the workout is old-school and is still used in many schools. Unfortunately, the science doesn't support it as an effective way to prevent injuries or improve mobility. Stretching is not a warmup. Stretching is something that works best once you are already fully warm.
That is interesting. Yeah, I've just been doing that because that's what I grew up doing.

I recommend starting class with warm-ups which take the body through comfortable range of motion, get the heart rate and breathing elevated, and ideally produce just a light sweat. Later on in class, you can take the students through mobility exercises that are relevant to the techniques you are teaching.
I will start classes with warm ups from now on.

Would "warm-up, stretch, mobility" be a better start to the class?
Is this what you meant by "later on in class?"
Would it be bad to start every class like this? (varying the mobility exercises to be relevant to the techniques we are doing that day)

To clarify a distinction that not all instructors understand - flexibility refers to the ability of the soft tissues to passively stretch. If you do the exercise where one participant sits with their legs extended and a partner pushes on their back to help them reach for their toes, that's flexibility. In contrast, mobility is the ability to move joints through a full range of motion under load, using the muscles. An example of this might be extending a slow, controlled high side kick.
I highly recommend this YouTube channel for relevant exercises: Flexibility Maestro . Despite the name "Flexibility Maestro" his channel is really about mobility. Here are a couple of sample videos:
A much needed distinction. I'm glad you clarified this. You're example for "flexibility" is something we do every once in a while. The vast majority of the time, when we stretch, it's on our own without any partner assistance. Perhaps we need to do that more often. We have done a lot of mobility exercises, just based off of your example here. We have done exercises where we lean against a wall and through a set amount of roundhouse kicks slowly, and then do the same thing with side kicks. We did one recently where your partner stands in a horse stance and puts there arms out in a wide angle and you had to through a front piercing kick (I've also heard it called a teep kick) slowly over one arm, then turn it over and side kick slowly over the other arm without putting it down. I am interested more drills like these if anyone has any or knows where I can find some. I will also check out the resource you have provided me.

Which movements specifically are giving your injured/older students problems? If it's high kicks, I strongly advocate the practice of slow, controlled low kicks. I'd rather see a student execute a kick at knee level with perfect form and balance than a sloppy. off-balance head kick. If there are other problematic movements, then perhaps some of the folks here can offer appropriate modifications.
the 2 people who are injured have issues with turning their hips over. One of them hasn't been able to get their hip checked out, for financial reasons, so we don't know exactly what is wrong. The other one is very accident prone and has injuries all over. Collar bone, hips, wrist, knees, you name it. The old guy, who really isn't THAT old in the grand scheme of things, has an issue with flexibility, mostly, but also has knee and back pain.

That point of throwing low kicks with perfect technique and form rather than a high kick that looks awful, is a great one. When I see the old guy throw kicks mid-section and get off balance, I usually think "he's doing the best he can" without realizing that starting lower with good form and then working his way up after gaining some flexibility, is a way better, and more beneficial, way of going about it. This is one of those things I should have realized WAY sooner and should have already been doing. I guess part of it is I assume he's there just to keep his body moving, so I am not as worried about perfect technique. But if in doing perfect technique, it also either helps with mobility or flexibility, or it acts as a milestone marker of flexibility and mobility, either way is a lot more beneficial than just "doing the best he can."

for the ones with hip injuries they struggle a lot with side kicks, so i usually just replace their side kicks with a front piercing/teep kick or push kick. I don't know if this is the best thing to do for them, especially without knowing exactly what is wrong. I don't know if doing things that would normally strengthen areas around the hip, hip flexors for example, would be better for them or if it would injure them more. I also don't know if the pain is even in the hip flexors or elsewhere in the hip. Even if I did know, I'm not sure there is much I can do about it, safely, because that's something a doctor and physical therapist are by far more qualified to handle than I am. I'm not sure if I am thinking about this correctly, so please correct me if I'm wrong and should be viewing this with a different lens.

Unfortunately, whether you want to teach the more common approach or the more realistic approach, you aren't going to get the necessary expertise from suggestions on this forum or even from tutorials on YouTube. You're going to have to seek out additional training, learn the techniques and tactics that you want to teach, and practice them with live resistance enough to understand the common failure points and how to address them.
Yeah this is true. I would have to learn them in person and practice them enough to really understand what is happening and why its working before I teach it. I was ready to jump head first into that one, but this is a much wiser choice.

How you do that depends a lot on what's available in your area. There might be seminars which offer some of the material you are looking for. If you can make friends with practitioners of different styles who are open to sharing ideas and information and doing situational practice, that can be very useful. As a coach, I enjoy working with people who have prior experience and showing them how they can leverage their existing skills in contexts that they aren't used to. However, that usually has to be part of a one-on-one session. I can't do it in a class of people who don't have that background.
I am not aware of any seminars that happen in my area. They would most likely be a 2-3 hour drive at the closest. My master instructor has some connections in another state that some of the hapkido people have gone to for seminars. But I don't remember hearing anything about any TKD seminars. How would I go about looking for seminars and when and where they are happening? I would be interested in looking into that, just to see how feasible it is for me.

There is a karate school who we share a school with, and, if i recall correctly, he just recently got his 10th degree within the last couple of years. And we do share different ideas, though a lot of time I learn something and he just gets a "fun fact" that he most likely already knew. But I do enjoy learning about all different styles and the way they do things, as well as why they do them. I guess part of the reason I wanted to learn about the practical tools TKD has to offer is because I am curious about the "why" we do things. Something that was rarely ever taught to me growing up is what each technique is doing. I know the applications of a couple techniques in a couple of the forms, but a lot of them I have no clue. I've never really like forms, I just did them because it was part of TKD. And if I am doing them, might as well do them properly. I would much rather kick and move, either on the bags or during sparring. But I feel like learning the practicality of each technique would make them that much more interesting to me.

Someone shared with me a book on here that I am absolutely going to get, once I have to means to do so, that talks about the practicality of the taegeuk forms. That is something I am very interested in learning about.
 
A bit off topic, but this is an important point. Not only in building fundamental form but in application as well:
How to kick a guy in the head if you can't kick higher than the waist? Kick him in the knee or groin causing him to bend over, lowering his head to waist height. Now he's in kicking range even for an inflexible kicker.

There is almost aways a solution to overcome a particular weakness.
Yeah this wasn't something that I really thought about until I did hapkido where a lot of kicks are specifically designed to do this.

We did have one technique that we called the "cut kick" (I say "we called" because I've seen it taught to be used differently, and I'm not sure if it was changed to that or if it was always like that) where you would kick almost like a side kick but your pushing your opponents hips down so they bend over and then you can kick the head easier.
 
I am glad you decided to reply anyways, all suggestions are welcome. I like hearing different ways different martial artists do things from different styles and different schools. I'm here to learn anything from anyone.


That is interesting. Yeah, I've just been doing that because that's what I grew up doing.


I will start classes with warm ups from now on.

Would "warm-up, stretch, mobility" be a better start to the class?
Is this what you meant by "later on in class?"
Would it be bad to start every class like this? (varying the mobility exercises to be relevant to the techniques we are doing that day)



A much needed distinction. I'm glad you clarified this. You're example for "flexibility" is something we do every once in a while. The vast majority of the time, when we stretch, it's on our own without any partner assistance. Perhaps we need to do that more often. We have done a lot of mobility exercises, just based off of your example here. We have done exercises where we lean against a wall and through a set amount of roundhouse kicks slowly, and then do the same thing with side kicks. We did one recently where your partner stands in a horse stance and puts there arms out in a wide angle and you had to through a front piercing kick (I've also heard it called a teep kick) slowly over one arm, then turn it over and side kick slowly over the other arm without putting it down. I am interested more drills like these if anyone has any or knows where I can find some. I will also check out the resource you have provided me.


the 2 people who are injured have issues with turning their hips over. One of them hasn't been able to get their hip checked out, for financial reasons, so we don't know exactly what is wrong. The other one is very accident prone and has injuries all over. Collar bone, hips, wrist, knees, you name it. The old guy, who really isn't THAT old in the grand scheme of things, has an issue with flexibility, mostly, but also has knee and back pain.

That point of throwing low kicks with perfect technique and form rather than a high kick that looks awful, is a great one. When I see the old guy throw kicks mid-section and get off balance, I usually think "he's doing the best he can" without realizing that starting lower with good form and then working his way up after gaining some flexibility, is a way better, and more beneficial, way of going about it. This is one of those things I should have realized WAY sooner and should have already been doing. I guess part of it is I assume he's there just to keep his body moving, so I am not as worried about perfect technique. But if in doing perfect technique, it also either helps with mobility or flexibility, or it acts as a milestone marker of flexibility and mobility, either way is a lot more beneficial than just "doing the best he can."

for the ones with hip injuries they struggle a lot with side kicks, so i usually just replace their side kicks with a front piercing/teep kick or push kick. I don't know if this is the best thing to do for them, especially without knowing exactly what is wrong. I don't know if doing things that would normally strengthen areas around the hip, hip flexors for example, would be better for them or if it would injure them more. I also don't know if the pain is even in the hip flexors or elsewhere in the hip. Even if I did know, I'm not sure there is much I can do about it, safely, because that's something a doctor and physical therapist are by far more qualified to handle than I am. I'm not sure if I am thinking about this correctly, so please correct me if I'm wrong and should be viewing this with a different lens.


Yeah this is true. I would have to learn them in person and practice them enough to really understand what is happening and why its working before I teach it. I was ready to jump head first into that one, but this is a much wiser choice.


I am not aware of any seminars that happen in my area. They would most likely be a 2-3 hour drive at the closest. My master instructor has some connections in another state that some of the hapkido people have gone to for seminars. But I don't remember hearing anything about any TKD seminars. How would I go about looking for seminars and when and where they are happening? I would be interested in looking into that, just to see how feasible it is for me.

There is a karate school who we share a school with, and, if i recall correctly, he just recently got his 10th degree within the last couple of years. And we do share different ideas, though a lot of time I learn something and he just gets a "fun fact" that he most likely already knew. But I do enjoy learning about all different styles and the way they do things, as well as why they do them. I guess part of the reason I wanted to learn about the practical tools TKD has to offer is because I am curious about the "why" we do things. Something that was rarely ever taught to me growing up is what each technique is doing. I know the applications of a couple techniques in a couple of the forms, but a lot of them I have no clue. I've never really like forms, I just did them because it was part of TKD. And if I am doing them, might as well do them properly. I would much rather kick and move, either on the bags or during sparring. But I feel like learning the practicality of each technique would make them that much more interesting to me.

Someone shared with me a book on here that I am absolutely going to get, once I have to means to do so, that talks about the practicality of the taegeuk forms. That is something I am very interested in learning about.
Just to be clear: the hip injuries and such that you mention some of the students have, did they get them from training with you, or from other activities?

If they were injured training with you, that should be a clue to examine what you are having them do. And just from the standpoint of smart business practices, I hope you are carrying liability insurance in addition to having all students sign a liability waiver.
 
Just to be clear: the hip injuries and such that you mention some of the students have, did they get them from training with you, or from other activities?

If they were injured training with you, that should be a clue to examine what you are having them do. And just from the standpoint of smart business practices, I hope you are carrying liability insurance in addition to having all students sign a liability waiver.
The one that I mentioned who hasn't been able to get it checked out, I don't know what the cause was. I will ask her the next time I see her.

The other one has had injuries long before coming into TKD, and has been careful to not do anything to make them worse. She won't do things if she knows she can't do it, and I trust that she knows whether or not she can do it because she has delt with these kinds of issues for so long. Any new injuries are usually outside of the school. I don't think any of them have been due to my classes.

We do have students sign waivers, I don't know about the insurance though.
 
The one that I mentioned who hasn't been able to get it checked out, I don't know what the cause was. I will ask her the next time I see her.

The other one has had injuries long before coming into TKD, and has been careful to not do anything to make them worse. She won't do things if she knows she can't do it, and I trust that she knows whether or not she can do it because she has delt with these kinds of issues for so long. Any new injuries are usually outside of the school. I don't think any of them have been due to my classes.

We do have students sign waivers, I don't know about the insurance though.
Check on the insurance. It is very important, and not terribly expensive.

I may have missed this, but what is the relationship at this point between your teacher and the school? Does he still own the business while not being active? Has he sold it to you? Does he have any actual connection to the business other than historical?
 
Check on the insurance. It is very important, and not terribly expensive.

I may have missed this, but what is the relationship at this point between your teacher and the school? Does he still own the business while not being active? Has he sold it to you? Does he have any actual connection to the business other than historical?
To be clear, personal liability insurance does not cost much but it would not cover you in a leadership/training situation. You need business liability insurance, and it is a good bit higher. Fo example, my $5m personal liability is <$300/year per person. My $5m business liability insurance is about 15x's higher annually (one person). It does cover all three of my businesses, however.
 
I may have missed this, but what is the relationship at this point between your teacher and the school? Does he still own the business while not being active? Has he sold it to you? Does he have any actual connection to the business other than historical?
You did not miss this, I didn't explain it. At least not very well. Here is what happened:

My master instructor used to teach at my old school. He and the owner of that school had some sort of drama happen, so at some point after that he opened his own school. He really only did Hapkido, he may have done taekwondo at one point, but if he ever did he dropped it for some reason. He left the other school while I was still climbing through the ranks. Years later, around the time I first got my first degree, the person who owned the first school was getting sick and potentially dying (idk what specifically she had, but she is ok now). After she closed down her school, my master instructor took all of us in and started the current taekwondo program. Months went by and at one point he asked me to take over a class. I don't remember what happened between this point and me being the main instructor for the kid's class, but I was only the main instructor for the kid's class for a while before I started taking over the adult classes. The person who was teaching the adult classes left for college and at that point I took over, because I was now the senior belt, other than my master instructor. He would watch me teach classes all the time, but I didn't get a whole lot of feedback. At some point, he started needing a lot of time for things outside of the gym, so he left me to teach classes pretty regularly. I may have been a 2nd degree around this point, probably even a little bit before the previous instructor left for college.

So I am now the main instructor for the kids and adult classes 3 nights a week at this point, and this goes on for a while and I get my 3rd degree during this time. About a year or two ago my master instructor tells me that he is probably going to need to either close the school or have someone else take over so he can focus on having time for his wife, because he has too many things going on. Between a day job, the vineyard, and the school, he doesn't have a lot of time to spend with his wife and this was concerning him. Now I'm put into a position where I'm not confident in my teaching, I was expecting him to take over classes more regularly at some point (though, he did not know this), and I may have to take over a business when I have no idea what I want my future to be. Now he wasn't just going to sign the school over to me and then ditch, he was going to get me set up and help me if I needed help with something on the business end. However, I knew that if this going to be something long term, it is still going to be a big responsibility to take over an already existing business and be in charge of everything. One of my old instructors from my first school would pop in every once in a while to see what we were all up to and visit some of his old students, right as it is getting closer to the time when my master instructor is going to need to close the school or hand it off, my old instructor was visiting more often. My old instructor was thinking about opening up his own school one day anyways. So after I told my master instructor I don't know if I could do it, he asked him and then it was done. My old instructor is really cool, he's a super humble and nice guy. I'm glad he owns the school right now, he's doing a much better job than I could do.

So my master instructor set my old instructor up to own the school. To finally answer your question, when I say "own the school" I mean his name is on the lease and he his taking the money and paying the rent. My master instructor is more a supervisor I guess you can say. He didn't just disappear he still pops in to make sure everything is still running smoothly, and he teaches the Hapkido classes Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Hapkido is the one he is more passionate about, and I am far less qualified to take over those classes on a regular bases than I am in taekwondo. I am still in charge of adult and kids taekwondo, my old instructor's name is on the lease, and my master instructor checks in every once in a while and teaches hapkido classes.

I tried explaining as best as I could remember, some things are a little foggy so some parts might be slightly inaccurate, but this is the gist of it.
 
To be clear, personal liability insurance does not cost much but it would not cover you in a leadership/training situation. You need business liability insurance, and it is a good bit higher. Fo example, my $5m personal liability is <$300/year per person. My $5m business liability insurance is about 15x's higher annually (one person). It does cover all three of my businesses, however.
hmmm ok.

we are trying to keep classes as cheap as possible so anyone can afford it, and kids can have something to do. So right now, at least to my knowledge, we are just charging enough to pay for the building. I'll ask my old instructor if we are paying for that or not next time I see him.
 
To be clear, personal liability insurance does not cost much but it would not cover you in a leadership/training situation. You need business liability insurance, and it is a good bit higher. Fo example, my $5m personal liability is <$300/year per person. My $5m business liability insurance is about 15x's higher annually (one person). It does cover all three of my businesses, however.
I’m not sure how you are distinguishing these. My teaching liability insurance costs about $500 per year. I don’t remember my limits at the moment but I believe it is $1 million per incident and $2 million aggregate. I teach in the park, with permission from the City park and rec dept so I don’t have school overhead to cover. The City is named as additional insured. I can have up to 50 students.

Who ever owns the school/business should have liability insurance that covers all of the teachers.
 
it usually goes something like this:
1. Stretch
2. Warm up
3. Deeper stretches
4. Forms
5. Kicking drills on free standing bags (that may or may not use the same 2 or 3 kicks) (This is also where the injured and old struggle)
6. More Forms (If there is time left)
7. Cool down stretches (if there is an extra 5 minutes to "waste")
8. Bow out of class
Swing your leg 20 times right after stretching is recommended.

- inside crescent kick.
- outside crescent kick.
- swing your right/left foot to your left/right ear.
- swing your leg behind and lift up with head down.
 
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