TKDTony2179
Blue Belt
To puzzle your minds and get you thinking.
http://www.24fightingchickens.com/2006/07/23/how-long-until-black-belt/
http://www.24fightingchickens.com/2006/07/23/how-long-until-black-belt/
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The points he makes are not lost on everyone. It's one reason why Western Martial Arts have gravitated to the historic western "Guild" system still used today by certain Unions and skilled laborers. It is most typically expressed as one of two sets, one more modern and one more historic. Scholar -> Free Scholar -> Provost -> Master. Or: Aprentice -> Journeyman -> Master. There are no more than 3 or 4 and all represent skill. The common use term "Masterpiece" or "Masterwork" comes from this hierarchical system when a Guild member would create a single piece expressing his high skill and mastery of the physical "art" which he was performing. In modern Academia this is equivalent to defending a Doctoral Thesis.To puzzle your minds and get you thinking.
http://www.24fightingchickens.com/2006/07/23/how-long-until-black-belt/
Yes. I was thinking much the same thing a while ago.I always enjoy reading 24 fighting chickens.
Kirk - it occurs to me that the rank system in BJJ roughly corresponds to the Scholar -> Free Scholar -> Provost -> Master stages you mention. (We do have degrees of black belt, but those really are reflective of time spent teaching rather than further skill development.)
That said, I think belt ranks are necessary for some arts. Kenpo has a large amount of material (forms, sets, "techniques"), so it needs a ranking system in order to organize it all into a syllabus. Wing Chun (our family's version, at least) is much more simplified in that regard, so we can get away without a rank system (relative experience is the only real "rank" system we follow).
As an administrator (the guy in charge of the decisions) you have to decide what a belt grading represents. What exactly does a given belt rank mean? Does it represent technical skill? Knowledge of the system & techniques? Raw fighting ability? A combination of all?It's intersting, take an art like muay thai with no belt system and certainly no belt/grading worn during tournaments. Then take karate generically, also a lot of tournament and kumite focus but all the varying belts. Is an experienced muay thai fighter without a belt any less capable a martial artist or fighter than a third dan blackbelt? What does it all mean?
There are some naturals that just move and look awesome when performing kata and wipe the floor with much more senior practitioners that can be pretty lackluster. You can get some dedicated or simply "natural" green belt that can hand out a whoopin to many blackbelts in kumite. You get some big or athletic guy off the street who can pumel your average, train twice a week for an hour, blackbelt in a brawl.
What does it all mean?
Even in your own system - even own club - there can be questions and disparities. We had a third dan train with us regularly enough from another goju club (which was nice) and he was solid at kata but his technical fighting skills were pretty shabby, he would struggle to do a decent high mawashi and looked just awful trying an ura mawashi geri (I caught sensie rolling his eyes once, hehe). What's that all about?
We had a third dan train with us regularly enough from another goju club (which was nice) and he was solid at kata but his technical fighting skills were pretty shabby, he would struggle to do a decent high mawashi and looked just awful trying an ura mawashi geri (I caught sensie rolling his eyes once, hehe). What's that all about?