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2007-11-13 07:10:53 · 18 answers · asked by SiFu frank 6 in Sports Martial Arts

18 answers

all martial arts schools should have rules of conduct and should have a posted list of them, this way everybody acts with proper decorum and treats each other properly.
depending on the school there may also be rules for actions outside of the school which make the martial artist a better person.
if the school doesn't have a code of conduct, or some basic rules, then look for another school. This is one to avoid.

and always check if the school is a licensed business, and if the instructors are accredited in the school(form) they are training in.

2007-11-13 07:17:51 · answer #1 · answered by refsocrd1 4 · 2 0

My school has rules and policies that I expect my students to follow in class and when training. It helps to provide a safe, stable place to study the martial arts and train and to keep the injuries down. Outside of the studio while I don't have a code of conduct for my students if they should prove to be overly aggressive, abusive, or ones that are constantly in trouble then it will become apparent well before they reach any rank and I won't keep them as students. People like that generally will exhibit the same behavior in the studio so it serves no purpose for me, my students, or the general public to give them skills and training that will make them more dangerous and harder to control.

2007-11-13 10:05:13 · answer #2 · answered by samuraiwarrior_98 7 · 0 0

Yes, our code of conduct is based on the Bible. I teach a Christian Martial Arts class.

2007-11-13 08:59:16 · answer #3 · answered by Splinter 3 · 1 0

Yes.

http://www.2rivers.org/etiquette.pdf

2007-11-13 07:40:29 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Yes, we have a general code of conduct for all students, and more specific rules and tenets that are required by each individual discipline that our association is involved with.


Ken C
9th Dan HapMoosaKi-Do
8th Dan TaeKwon-Do
7th Dan YongChul-Do

2007-11-13 12:16:42 · answer #5 · answered by Ken C 3 · 0 0

i began one at my college. stumble on a instructor or adviser who absolutely does martial arts. That helps lots in organising a reasoning voice to the college board. Say you want to study extra of the traditions and cultural values in the back of the paintings, it extremely is totally important, besides as attending to understand to guard your self. I ensure that no college board will settle for contact sparring, so that you will be practise as a rule kata. No guns or equipment. "formally", my college club obeyed this. yet considering i for my section met my instructor/adviser at a journey. properly.you could imagine it. My important recommend is as quickly through the indisputable fact that is prevalent, be sure the board doesn't attempt to regulate it right into a "self-protection club". i recognize they're a similar idea, yet be sure it has the call "martial arts" in it. Why? My college board replaced it to "Self-protection club" Then it replaced it to "women individuals's Self protection club". it extremely is bullshit. because I, the founder and president of the club, ought to must be kicked out only for being male. It lost each and each and every of the "paintings" in martial arts and the adviser and that i made an attraction to regulate it again to Martial Arts club because the board destroyed the cultural value.

2016-10-24 04:18:38 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes, of course. Ours has it at the entrance to the floor, reminding you constantly. It covers how you should act in the dojo, as well as the usual "only for defense" information. Also, as our group has teens and children, there are reprecusions for things you do at school. Getting in a fight can lead to a temporary suspension from the dojo.

I'd think pretty much every place has a CoC. Even if it's as basic as the "golden rule", every studio and group should have one.

2007-11-13 12:16:49 · answer #7 · answered by Xinro 3 · 0 0

Actually, I'm more amazed at the high number of M.A. schools that don't. It's like handing a gun to someone without any training in personal responsibility. Mental discipline is every bit as important as physical technique, even for the student's OWN protection from lawsuits or criminal charges.

2007-11-13 07:16:45 · answer #8 · answered by Marc X 6 · 2 0

when I took Karate we had a very strict code of conduct. You would never cross that line.

2007-11-13 07:15:42 · answer #9 · answered by sugar c 3 · 2 0

Traditional and MMA meet with similar codes here in most circumstances. Alot in common when one is trying to build themselves, or care about as to whom is on their rolls.

2007-11-13 08:19:44 · answer #10 · answered by Firefly 4 · 1 0

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