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I think that they are all important skills. You have to be able to articulate specifics. I tell my students all them time, they should do as I tell them not as I show them :o). And you have to figure out how you can help each of them individually at certain problems. Time management is not soooo important when the training is on a regular base. On seminars on the other hand, you should find a way to make that seminar a round self contained thing, so nobody has the feeling something is missing.
The most important part is that the instructor knows what he is doing and that he can explain why his students are doing a particular exercise. That reference to the context is most important at least in my eyes. As a teacher you have the responsibility to tell them students what the deal is. Most teachers teach traditional (sports) karate and advertise that with self defense and what not. Most of them do that unintentionaly, they simply don't know better because they were thaught so.
Hi,
I think that they are all important skills. You have to be able to articulate specifics. I tell my students all them time, they should do as I tell them not as I show them :o). And you have to figure out how you can help each of them individually at certain problems. Time management is not soooo important when the training is on a regular base. On seminars on the other hand, you should find a way to make that seminar a round self contained thing, so nobody has the feeling something is missing.
The most important part is that the instructor knows what he is doing and that he can explain why his students are doing a particular exercise. That reference to the context is most important at least in my eyes. As a teacher you have the responsibility to tell them students what the deal is. Most teachers teach traditional (sports) karate and advertise that with self defense and what not. Most of them do that unintentionaly, they simply don't know better because they were thaught so.
Regards Holger
Being able to simplify seemingly complex concepts.
Enthusiasm and a desire to teach to the very best of their ability.
Honesty, Authenticity, Safety.
I know it's not MA but I think there's a lot of good advice here from the RKC (Kettlebells) certification.
I am an RKC therefore I shall:
Gary
Gary,
Can't fault it, direct to the point and no frilly bits