TKD_McGee Posted March 3, 2002 Posted March 3, 2002 /me dosent read well. _________________ Do unto others, as they done to you. [ This Message was edited by: TKD_McGee on 2002-03-03 14:09 ] Do unto others, as they done to you.
YODA Posted March 3, 2002 Posted March 3, 2002 TKD_McGee --- We're talking about school/class size, not person size!!!! YODA2nd Degree Black Belt : Doce Pares Eskrima https://www.docepares.co.ukQualified Instructor : JKD Concepts https://www.jkdc.co.ukQualified Fitness Instructor (Weights, CV, Circuit, Kinesiology)
SaiFightsMS Posted March 3, 2002 Posted March 3, 2002 Size wise I have trained in areas from the size of a racket ball court to a full gymnasium. I think many times the quality of learning is improved by the more personal attention you get in a small room because there are fewer people. The smaller room also has a drawback. We would find ourselves adjusting our stances to fit the space. Or to avoid stepping on each other. All in all I think it is the quality of the instruction that is the most important no matter the size of the school.
kicker Posted March 3, 2002 Posted March 3, 2002 Well size of a class really doesn't matter But It is better to have a smaller class bacuse then your instructer can teach you more things and help you out more then having a big class makes it really long and sometimes boring But sometimes it is better to have larger classes so you can learn by watching other kids when you do your best it`s going to show. "If you watch the pros, You will learn something new"
thaiboxerken Posted March 4, 2002 Posted March 4, 2002 I think large classes are great because there are so many more people to learn with and from. As long as the instructor is good, I think the bigger classes are nicer. Size of the 'dojo' matters because you need room to train however many students you expect to have. If you only expect 5-10 people, you can have a small place.. when you have 30 then you better have a bigger place to train. Just kick 'em, they'll understand.- Me Apprentice Instructor under Guro Inosanto in Jun Fan Gung Fu and Filipinno Martial arts.Certified Instructor of Frank Cucci's Linxx system of martial arts.
uaskfajardo Posted March 7, 2002 Posted March 7, 2002 Oss. The size of the dojo is no matter. Most of the dojo in japan measure 10 x14 feets. Thiat is small. The thing that matter is the spirit that you demonstrate for practice. We call that " budo " that means spirit. Oss
uaskfajardo Posted March 7, 2002 Posted March 7, 2002 Oss. The size of the dojo is no matter. Most of the dojo in japan measure 10 x14 feets. Thiat is small. The thing that matter is the spirit that you demonstrate for practice. We call that " budo " that means spirit. Oss
Ahazmaksya Posted March 7, 2002 Posted March 7, 2002 At my Dojo there is only 4 of us training including the instructor
SaiFightsMS Posted March 8, 2002 Posted March 8, 2002 10 x 14 are you sure? Many kata will not fit in a space of that size if done with proper stances.
YODA Posted March 8, 2002 Posted March 8, 2002 The Japanese must have big "Feets" YODA2nd Degree Black Belt : Doce Pares Eskrima https://www.docepares.co.ukQualified Instructor : JKD Concepts https://www.jkdc.co.ukQualified Fitness Instructor (Weights, CV, Circuit, Kinesiology)
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