I woke up this morning happy because Hurricane Sandi makes
it possible for me to write. (School was canceled.) My mind started churning through ideas and
concepts where teaching is concerned. One of the beautiful things about being a
Karate teacher is that my youngest student is 3 years old and my oldest student
is….well, old enough to be revered. In comparing the two types of classes, I
realized that a couple of trite sayings really define the making of a great
kids teacher: “Don’t phone it in.” and “Be in the moment.” This stream of consciousness
reminded me that one of the biggest differences in teaching kids and adults is
this: In the adult class the technology
rules the class. If students bring in a mood or an injury – we push on through
and focus on the class content. However, in a children’s class, the children need
to be the most important thing, even at the cost of not getting everything
done. At least 50% of the time, I’ll forfeit some of the content I have planned
because there is a subject that needs addressing. Ready or not, it takes some
of the training time. That interruption could be anything from hitting each
other without Sensei’s watchful eye making it safe to fear of something new I’m
going to try, to a completely discourteous attitude. In any situation like that
I need to stop rushing through the technology. I need to mentally go to where the kids are, allow them to understand my concept, and then be able to carry all of us together to
the next thing.
Another difference between training my adults and training
my kids is that I rarely plan what the adults will do in advance. When I see
the class, I figure out who is there, what they need, and how many teachers I
have to accomplish it. Then we do it. I
plan the children’s classes a week at a time. I always know what katas
people are learning and what level of self-defense students are on. What I
switch often is how we warm up and what we do at the end of class. (See many
posts for ideas.) What has been happening for over a month now is that I have
to adjust the plan constantly even as I am teaching. This is easy to say, but
doing it is challenging. I’ll use my last two nights as examples:
In a class that usually has 10 kids and 3 teachers (I’m
spoiled), I had 17students and one helper. Instead of dividing into work
groups, (my original plan), I kept the group together with my helper in charge.
I took out the most experienced students. I worked on their level of technology
and then had them help teach the younger students. This isn’t rocket science, I
know, but it did entail thinking on my feet. What that means is that I needed
to clear the baggage from my head, and quickly think of how to BEST take care
of EVERYONE in the room.
Lots of groups at work |
The next night I normally have 15 children and 3 teachers.
Due to the storm we had 10 children and 5 teachers. Everyone was ‘antsy’
because of the stormy weather. I dropped my original plan (standard warm up,
kata groups, and sparring) and told the kids we’d start the day with their
favorite game. We did. Then I said when they go out to their teacher they’d
need to give as much energy to their work as they did to the game. They did! We
continued like that: play with punching bags / work technology/ play with
blockers/ work memorized movements until we did our final game. For that I
mixed two games together (because they requested one and I wanted to spar). I had
never mixed group jump rope and sparring before, but hoped it would work. It
was great! We used my group jump rope (see the post from 7.29.09) and when you
ran out you ran directly into an adult sparring partner.
Again. This wasn't overwhelming. However, I needed to BE THERE and see what we were about IN THE MOMENT.
I needed to remember what I wanted to accomplish but have alternative ways to
get it done. The challenge with adults is so different. They’ll adapt to the
technology offered. The saying goes that when you bow into the training area
(dojo) you leave your troubles and ego at the door. Children don’t know that.
Adults (even teachers) aren’t perfect at it. I’m lucky to be able to teach both because
they complement one another. Children keep me grounded and living in the now
and adults challenge me with their desire to understand the way of karate.
Oos,