For those of you who deliver seminars, what is your focus when you deliver seminars to other styles, or to an open group? I've actually had a couple of requests and a soft invitation this week, so I need to think about what I'd actually do with a seminar. Do you teach some basics of your style? Focus on some aspects that should apply to most martial artists? Teach some principles for translating training into defense/competition/whatever?
Gerry
I've attended a multitude of different seminars (different arts) as a student and an instructor, now that I'm teaching I've brought in instructors to teach seminars and have taught a few myself. I enjoy attending seminars and encourage my students to do so as well. So here are my thoughts.
So far I think everyone has given you good advice so my points might tie in with some that others have mentioned.
1) Try and know your audience, have a general idea of where they are coming from; i.e. sport, competition, self defense, focused study of the martial arts (more like a traditional school) etc. etc.
a) What will the skill levels be? Ages? is it open to outsiders or just the school?
b) Do you have an idea of what the host school teaches, skill set wise? Do they include throwing, falling, rolling skills, joint locks, etc. etc. or are the more stand up karate/TKD styles?
2) How long do you have to teach?
If a instructor or a school knows what you teach, I think you should be able to find out some general information on what they teach, their skills etc. etc. and it could be very good to start a dialog with the host instructor as to what they teach and partner with them to come up with a game plan so to speak. Obviously this all ties in with the above but I would talk with the host then offer suggestions of material and see what they think and go from there.
You asked what "we" (those that teach seminars) teach and for me it all depends upon the above items. For instance.
I teach American Karate/TKD and Presas Arnis (FMA), both are blended type arts. The American Karate/TKD is really the ITF forms as the base but the rest of it is more of a hybrid system (we have no real connection to Korea). The Presas Arnis is a blended system of Kombatan and Modern Arnis. For me because they are blended systems to begin with, I in turn will blend say double stick techniques to different weapons outside of main stream FMA, like Sai, Tonfa, Kama or Bo to demonstrate and teach the principles behind the disarms or the blocking and striking techniques etc. etc. I'll take applications of our Modern Arnis forms and translate the movements to the empty hand TKD forms etc. etc. Both of which is to show how things are connected between the arts.
Here's some suggestions
1) I would make a connection to the host's school's primary art technique wise. This way you help the students learn quicker and feel more comfortable if they can reference a connection ti something they already know in their mind. Second this also helps to validate what the primary style is teaching because they see it in a wider context.
So if I'm talking to a group of mixed martial artists some Karate, TKD, FMAers, etc. etc. I try and find common ground between the systems at some point touching on what they do and show a drill, technique, something that ties in with their art but maybe shown or done a different way. GM Remy Presas was the guy who taught me this (through his teaching), he was a master at making everyone have a pretty good time and connecting with them. He took basic drills like Single Sinawali (high forehand low backhand, high forehand low backhand) and related that combination to an inward block and a downward block to the karate/TKD guys and used that then as a launch pad to teach; flow, locking, trapping, take downs, both with sticks and empty hand all off of a simple drill.
Contrast that to someone who starts off teaching a numerical striking drill pattern that is fundamental to studying Modern Arnis, or the guy who starts off teaching rolling and falling skills. Both of these skill sets are necessary to study the parent art, but aren't useful to the average student if there isn't backup or follow up instruction at that school.
2) Try not to be dismissive of the primary style or other arts. As a American Karate TKDoist (my primary art in the 1980's-90's) when ever I went to GM Remy's seminars I felt at home; contrast that to going to the JKDC seminars to learn the FMAs in the 1980's and I felt like I was the black sheep. I think the feeling kind of came from the whole "Absorb what is Useful" book and karate and TKD wasn't really seen as useful and was therefore dismissed back then especially amongst the trainees at the seminars. (This isn't a condemnation or JKDC Kali, I only meant to show the differences in how to approach teaching.)
3) Unless asked to present NGA as in teaching the art, I wouldn't if there isn't a back up at the host school. Instead find something in common and teach on that and use it to show similarities and/or the differences between your art and the host schools.
At a recent seminar I taught at, one instructor whom I know is a high level karate instructor and he decided to teach on Aiki knife defense. I taught on impact weapon defense. This was primarily to karate students of all ages and ranks. Now first off teaching Aiki knife defense to all ages is problematic for me, however age aside, their basic skill set was striking and hard force to force blocking, so why teach a blending type of defensive strategy to a bunch of people who are more use to force to force blocking and knife defense at that? I mean if they make a mistake going against an impact weapon they could get hurt, going against and edged weapon they could get killed. Big difference. Where as I took a set of principles such as; move off line, block, hit the person, maintain control of the weapon hand, take the weapon away (or take the person to the ground etc. etc.) and built the defenses off of that changing things for each attack slightly but always building on those themes or principles.
While I was basing my defenses off of Modern Arnis everything I showed them didn't take a new skill set to learn, they could add the material to their existing skill sets, I constantly refereed to their primary art, their primary drills etc. etc. to help them make the connection between the two. The instructor teaching the Aiki defenses was just teaching the Aiki defenses along the lines as self defense or knife defenses, but coming at it from a completely different mind set.
4) Bring a good partner to demo with. Then your partner can also walk the floor and help to correct technique and give added or more personalized instruction.
5) Watch what is being shown to the kids (if any are present), again I believe showing knife work to little Johnny and Suzy can be problematic.
6) Be realistic in defenses; explain how if you disarm the person and then turn around and feed it back to them (stab them) you are probably going to jail. Or if you take the person to the ground and then try and beat them with their stick like the LA police did with Rodney King then you are probably going to jail.
Hope this helps and good luck.