To me it comes down to a matter of competency. What am I qualified to teach? I would do my students a grave disservice to try and teach them something that I'm not qualified or competent in.
I agree and disagree here. Normally I say you are right you need to be qualified to teach. But if you are a black belt or an advanced belt under black rank and you see a drill or a technique, a new way to apply an arm bar, a wrist lock, a kick, a strike, or a move (application) from a kata that is found in your kata even if it is a different kata, and it came from a completey different style, art, or method of defense; would you not be "qualified" to teach it? I believe you would be.
I don't think that
theletch1 meant he was going to teach the art of ground fighting, I thoought he was going to teach a few techniques to deal with what might happen if you get taken to the ground. And for that I think any instructor who knows the material however limited it may be is qualified to teach it, even if they are not instructor rank in that other particular system.
If I feel that it is important enough for them to be exposed to, then it should be by bringing in a qualified instructor and I should learn along with them. My experience base should be such that I will then be able to help the students to understand how the "new stuff" they're learning can and should integrate with what they are already being taught.
Sounds good and right however as an instructor are you going to be paying the whole bill to bring in a "qualified" instructor? Are you going to be having your students help pay for the instruction, after all you are bringing in the guy to help them out? However what happens if your students don't want to pay the extra fee? What happens if they have to miss because of work or going to Grandmas house? Will they be excluded from learning the material when you cover it in your classes since they weren't exposed to the material by a "qualified" instructor. I mean the other students were exposed to it by the "qualified" guy along with you so they can continue to learn it during your unqualified teaching time, but what about the guy who missed it in the first place? Couldn't he gain from your unqualified instruction as well?
I'm not trying to be a smart *** here, or give you a hard time. I just believe that as a instructor you know whether or not you can teach the different material and who is to say you are or aren't qualified. Again in regards to limited instruction on a given topic. I'm not talking about a complete system here.
So, as badly as an instructor wants to expose their students to different forms, arts, or situations, they must first take stock of their own limitations. To disregard this fosters too many "jack of all trades, master of none". Knowing "of " something does not make you quaified to "teach" that something.
Respects,
Bill Parsons
Triangle Kenpo Institute
Again I agree and disagree. One of the things GM Remy Presas always stressed to us was to go home and teach the material we learned at the camp or seminar. He didn't care about your rank, rather he knew that by teaching something you learned the material better and that you benifited as much if not more than the student you were teaching the stuff to. And I believe this is true.
I think we get hung up on belt ranks and titles to much at times. Prior to testing for my 1st black in Presas Arnis (a combination of GM Remy and GM Ernesto's systems) under Hock, I was approached by a couple of other martial art instructors who were co workers. They wanted lessons but I was only deemed worthy of their time (so to speak) after I took the test. What was the difference of me passing a test and having a rank to them, they never saw the test, nor my certificate even, but once they heard I passed in conversation with me then I was "qualified" to teach them. This went on for months till after the test then they got serious about possibly taking lessons. All I wanted was someone to train with prior to the test and they wouldn't give me the time of day.
Where I agree with you on your last part of your post I quoted is that years ago I took Wado. Studied it for almost two years and due to my prior training in TKD I was ranked as a brown belt (although I never tested officially for the rank). OK I remember the forms and drills and such but I would never try and teach Wado because I don't feel qualified to teach the system. I'm not a Wado stylist, I don't move like a Wado student, etc. etc. so I'm not "qualified" to teach it.
Mark