Board breaking and Kata teach efficiency? At what point in a persons training does breaking a little board or performing synchronized movements actually help a person defend themselves? Week 2? Year 2? Year 3 or 4? If I pounced on you out of nowhere and began raining upon you palm strikes, elbows, and kicks to your shin where does Kata come into play to help you? How about multiple attackers? Like I mentioned before I have countless numbers of people come to me from Karate schools frustrated at the fact that they have just spent 5 years of wasted time and money because their goal was to gain confidence in defending themselves within a reasonable timeframe.
I must confess we don't do much in the way of breaking boards. I did a bit of that when I was teaching kids because it gets them to strike through a target, the opposite to sport sparring that teaches you to pull your punch.
As for kata, you have demonstrated not only bias but ignorance. If I was running a bar I would have to know how to mix drinks and open packets of peanuts and chips. I have no need to know how to produce gourmet meals. But if I could produce those meals my business would possibly be better. I certainly wouldn't be saying "learning to cook properly is a waste of time". Krav is like opening the bag of chips, effective if you're hungry. Karate is like walking up to the buffet, far more satisfying and just as effective in satisfying your hunger. If I had to teach someone self defence skills in a short period I would be relying on my Krav background. If I had more time I would use my karate. There is very little in Krav that is not in traditional karate and what isn't in the karate I teach anyway. Kata are fighting systems, not 'synchronised movements'. I teach them as such from the very beginning. The kata itself is just the beginning. It contains the basic information. The bunkai contains the application. How long it takes to be useful depends on the individual. You could start to use it within a few months. How long does it take to be able to use Krav? I would say about the same time. After 12 months Krav guy will possibly be more effective than karate guy. After 5 years Karate guy should be way ahead of the Krav guy. What you are describing is poor instruction.
If you pounce on me out of nowhere my first reaction from karate, as in Krav, will be to protect virtually instinctively. The next is no different in either. Enter and hit. In Krav we still train combinations and these are sequences. You might control an arm, go for a head shot, come in with several knees and when your attacker bends strike to the side or back of the neck and take him down. Kata teaches the same thing. The difference is that if that sequence is not effective in stopping your attacker, Krav guy has to start again. Karate guy using kata has the next move mapped out for him. Plan A fails, plan B follows straight on. If it is not being taught that way blame the instructor, not the kata.
Multiple attackers are different. Kata is not designed for multiple attackers although it can be used to a limited extent in that situation. I much prefer the Systema approach to multiple attackers and that is what I teach my karate guys, once again from day one.
I would suggest that your 5 year karate guy coming to you lamenting the time wasted would be the same coming to me. The difference would be, I would work on his basic skills, show him the kata application and have him up to speed in a very short while. It appears from your comments of five years wasted, that you reinforce that feeling of failure and take him back to step one.
Don't run a school with contract students. I offer personal training and instructor seminars to people who seek my experience. I come from a self defense background where the large majority of respected individuals in my profession agree with my line of thinking. If it offends you because I don't have 10,000 post here my apologies.
I can't believe so many respected individuals would agree with you as most people I know in that field have a martial art background. The fact that you haven't is not your fault but it is your loss.
:asian:
Oh! I don't have 10,000 posts either but I guess I might get there one day.

(I also don't have contract students. I teach for just enough to cover the costs.

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