Over at Kenshi 24/7 is a nice article by the author, George McCall on his evolution as a kendo teacher over the past several years. An excerpt is below. The full post may be read here.
A few years ago I wrote and published my high successful Kendo Coaching Tips and Drills
manual, the first of its kind, and still – afaik – the ONLY publication
of its kind in the English language. The idea to write a more advanced
manual for instructors first came in 2008. It then took four years of
keiko, experimentation, keiko, writing, keiko, editing, and more keiko
before it was finally released. For the first time in my life something
concrete had come from my study of kendo that I could be proud of.
Over 10 years have elapsed since I first put pencil to paper to plan out the chapters, and during those years I have continued to practise and teach kendo on an almost daily basis.
However, I am not the same kenshi today that I was in 2008 or 2012. I
have grown older, my family and job responsibilities have changed, and,
importantly for todays topic, a couple of younger, very able teachers
arrived at my school.
Chatting briefly to a European kenshi who came to the Kyoto Taikai this year,
I pointed out that teaching in school is much different to teaching at
an adult dojo: I have the students for about 2.5 years before they leave
the club. Students, then, are forever rotating in-and-out, and their
age-range is always 15-18 (whereas I am always getting older!).
All of this has had an impact on my way of teaching kendo. First of
all, after the first few years of teaching a lot (the years I was
writing the coaching manual), my basic keiko method was firmly installed
in the club. This meant I eventually stopped having to to repeat myself
over and over again: the first few batches I taught directly passed
this on to their kohai, who passed it on to theirs, etc. The basic club
“style” has thus become my style.
The continual rotation of students over a short period of time, and
the realisation that not all of them will continue at university level,
has deeply impacted how I instruct (for the first few years I was not
attuned to the cycle). For example, if someone comes in to the club with
experience, I don’t try to bend them in to doing kendo my way – I
generally look for their good points and try to motivate them to improve
by thinking for themselves. If someone starts in high school, I aim to
train them in solid basics, with the aim of passing nidan before they
retire from the club.
The arrival of younger teachers (one in particular is quite forthright!)
kind of disrupted things in the beginning, until they themselves got
used to me. Delegating large jobs to them (for example, deciding shiai
members, or teaching the gasshuku) helped give them a sense of place and
responsibility. I also encourage them to teach, though the basic kihon
menu must stay the same (I also ban jigeiko on weekdays unless its
before a shiai). I, of course, still lead the club, and do all the
paperwork.
The rotation of students, the fixing of the club basic style, and the
coming of younger teachers, has, over the last few years, led me to explicitly
teach to the group less. Instead of trying to coach everyone at the
same time, I now tend to focus on an individual students technical and
spiritual/mental development, and leave the more general, wider comments
to the young teachers.
Oh, and I can now concentrate on my own kendo more.
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