Thursday, February 23, 2012

The Abstract Art of Teaching

We currently have a handful of students training to become teachers.  One question I get is "how do you teach a student?"

Three things: patience, awareness and the color blue.

The color blue?  WTF?

I know you are wondering how I ever teach martial arts when talking about Blue.  Let me ask you what color blue you are now picturing; royal blue, sea blue, baby blue, or green?

Green?  Well it is yellow/blue right?   There you go.

As an instructor, it is not my duty to enforce the royal blue filter on students.  I need to see the information based on the student's blue filter.  At this point, I can upload information they can more readily digest.

Next step is awareness.  Being aware as instructor is be ready for the student's attention span.  Now attention spans run the gambit, anywhere from 2 hours to 2 seconds.  No need to discuss the 2 hour attention span...best students EVAR!  The 2 second attention span theater...well they present more of a challenge.  You are lucky to teach them something easy like punching with their right hand.  Then for the next 60 minutes you two run around punching things with your right hands.

My teachers-in-training have commented on my mantra when i do this, (Switch your hands, switch your hands, switch your hands.)

Well, that is part of teaching.  Teach technique and then reinforce it until it becomes muscle memory.  Then it is up to the student to drill it.

And now the first aspect of teaching...patience.  We all wish to teach the perfect technique the first time perfectly.  Never happens.  We have to be patience and be happy when the student flails the proper limb in the proper direction.  This is a good start and we can refine from there.

That is teaching in a nutshell, patience, awareness and blue.  Or if you prefer, a buddha wearing blue tinted sunglasses.

May the attention span be with you,

DarkArashi

1 comment:

Sherrie said...

This line cracked me up: "Then for the next 60 minutes you two run around punching things with your right hands". I totally get that! And yes, patience... a much needed trait for one to be an effective teacher of pretty much anything important. Enjoyed this blog.