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Are you saying a completely new school/system/instructor is now using the same physical location that a former TKD school used or that a TKD school and another style are sharing the same location?Is it a big deal if another martial artist (karate, tangsoodo, etc) starts teaching at a taekwondo school? Is there a grace period in order for them to learn new forms, holding pads, etc?
I don't understand how someone trained in another martial art can be teaching Tae Kwon Do. How can he teach something he doesn't know? It makes no sense to me.No, an instructor who doesn’t have a taekwondo background or black belt in taekwondo teaching taekwondo. Black belt in another martial art.
I don't understand how someone trained in another martial art can be teaching Tae Kwon Do. How can he teach something he doesn't know? It makes no sense to me.
Tang Soo Do is pretty close to Tae Kwon Do, and I could see a practitioner in that, or another art advancing quickly through the ranks, possibly even starting at an advanced belt (red belt, or brown belt?) and eventually teaching, but not just walking in not knowing anything about TKD.I was wondering if this is common or I’m just being picky! I didn’t know if some were closely related that I was unaware like tangsoodo.
Tang Soo Do is pretty close to Tae Kwon Do, and I could see a practitioner in that, or another art advancing quickly through the ranks, possibly even starting at an advanced belt (red belt, or brown belt?) and eventually teaching, but not just walking in not knowing anything about TKD.
pretty much but at the same time there is so much overlap that they could teach on techniques, punches, kicks, stances, dynamics and fight strategies
That fact that they are being forthright about it is a positive, meaning they seem to be honest. But there are areas where many 'holes' could surface.No, an instructor who doesn’t have a taekwondo background or black belt in taekwondo teaching taekwondo. Black belt in another martial art.
TSD is very similar to Moo Duk Kwan TKD. But not so much for WT or ITF TKD. If you were a low Gup rank who was rooted in WT, the TSD and ITF stances would be awkward for a while, for example.Tang Soo Do is pretty close to Tae Kwon Do, and I could see a practitioner in that, or another art advancing quickly through the ranks, possibly even starting at an advanced belt (red belt, or brown belt?) and eventually teaching, but not just walking in not knowing anything about TKD.
Is there so much overlap though?
We've had a 1st kup kkw tkd person come to our ITF school before.
Some techniques (punches, kicks and blocks) they knew were superficially similar, but the stances, transitions, dynamics and strategies (especially sparring) were so different that it negated most of the similarities.
That didn't make their insights useless (at least not to those of us who were willing to use them), but it did mean that them teaching (irrespective of rank) just wouldn't be compatible with the syllabus - unless they effectively started over.
And that's between two arts with almost the same name and a partially intertwined history...
Is it a big deal if another martial artist (karate, tangsoodo, etc) starts teaching at a taekwondo school? Is there a grace period in order for them to learn new forms, holding pads, etc?
The thing is, you'll find the same problem going from one KKW school to another.
For example, my first school put a huge emphasis on stances and learning the correct foundation from the get-go, where my current school the strategy is to "learn by doing" and for students to just get used to the stances over time. Another difference is a lot of schools drill the spin-hook kick with placing your foot forward after the kick, we drill to spin all the way back around.
It was a bit more than just a different focus though.
From what I've seen, the ITF stances are wider, longer and lower than those in kkw, even with the same name.
For instance, an image search for "walking stance" gives me:
View attachment 22620
Which to us is more like "standing around not taking any notice stance". At a push, it's almost a vertical stance, sort of.
And:
View attachment 22621
Which is a "correct" walking stance - for us.
If I went into a kkw school and started teaching a walking stance as in the second pic?
Do you have a "front stance"? Your walking stance looks like our front stance, except our knee would be more bent.
Not that I recall or am aware of.
There is a low stance, which is like the walking stance shown but one foot length longer.
So then instead of a technical difference, I think we're more talking about a difference of vocabulary.
Still, it's along with what I was saying - different schools do things differently. At my old school we had separate names for axe kick and crescent kick. At my school, they're both called "axe kick". Neither school is wrong.
Wasn't saying that either was wrong in themselves.
More that an instructor from one would be 'locally' wrong more often than not at the other.
Which is part of why I think most instructors are from in-house. If you go to another school, you have to learn their stuff first.
It's probably less of a deal in sport-focused arts.