17 August 2011

Growing Judo in the United States


One of the big concerns I hear a lot online about judo in the United States is its lack of growth. Most of the time, the concerns are expressed in tones of distress as though there’s nothing that can be done to grow judo or that the concerned don’t feel that national organizations are doing enough or are just doing the wrong thing. The lack of growth is a great concern for judo in the U.S. but one of the problems with that line of thinking is that it removes the individual coach from any responsibility for growing judo. That’s the wrong thinking.

The first thing we have to do is develop judo students into good judo players. That means we don’t concentrate on making champions before they are safe. We concentrate on developing their basics like falling, throws, and hold-downs before we teach them how to grip fight or competitive rules and variations. Once they’re safe, then we start teaching them how to randori, maybe “Kelly’s Capers” will help that, and from randori to shiai.

That’s just the first part of growing judo: develop the players. After the players are developed, then we develop the coaches. A good coach knows how to compete and has been on the mat fighting for the win. They know what training has to happen for success. They know how to motivate their fighters in training and on the mat. This is not an easy thing to teach, but it is seriously lacking because too many don’t see their players as individuals, but copies of themselves. The coach emphasizes what works or worked for the coach while ignoring the player’s needs and abilities.

Our current coaching education program is definitely a work in progress, but they’re being very close mouthed about it. I can’t find much in the way of information, the program, apparently, changes every time a new chair comes in. It happened when Big Jim took over and it seems to be happening now that Bill Montgomery has the chair. Personally, I don’t care, but this kind of constant flux for an education program is foolish. Certainly updates should happen, but complete overhauls should be rare.

The last time I looked at the program (http://www.usja-judo.org/GrowingJudo/GrowingJudo2009_01.pdf) the only real references and resources were incredibly limited. However, when I went to the clinic in Las Vegas more references were provided and some mention was made of modifications of the program. Unfortunately, I’ve heard naught since then. It would be nice to hear about some updates.

After coaching, we need to develop teachers. Coaches are not teachers and teachers are not coaches in their duties. While one person may be both a teacher and a coach, the roles are definitely separate. A teacher teaches, a coach refines and develops for sport. USJA doesn’t have any teacher development program. That’s absolutely not any good.

I’m not sure how to formally teach teachers, but I have a process that I use and it’s a lot of hands-on teaching. It’s been successful for me, though I haven’t produced any black belts, yet. On the other hand I have some very exceptional teachers of whom I am very proud (Alana, Rolando, Eddy, Ashley – this means you!). One of the things that I use is a very thorough and detailed standards and benchmarks, promotional standards, and calendars. I also teach my students about lesson planning, scheduling, and interpretation of standards and benchmarks toward application. Mostly, though, I teach the how to teach by having them teach others that are junior to them, in some cases Juniors. My method is definitely not the best; however, it is very effective for me.


The goal for me is to build a cadre of effective teachers and coaches to place in every school in my town. I think this is one of the keys to growing judo. The more emphasis we place on youth programs, the better off we’ll be by developing judo players from the beginning and developing ways and means to keep them integrated and involved in judo. I expect this will take awhile because I have to develop a number of instructors because I just don’t have very many.

The first stage was actually creating the club itself. I started that in 2007 and we’ve been slowly growing every since. After that was to start a program at either the military school or the local community college. Unfortunately the local military school still hasn’t decided about judo as an academic class, although it has allowed me to create a club (thanks Ron), though growth there is tenuous. However the local community college has allowed me to teach a credit course in beginning judo which has really taken off (10 signed up first semester and 11 signed up for this semester).

The next stages involve taking some of my instructors and branching into the high schools, then middle schools, and finally elementary schools. These programs will be after-school activities rather than academic classes in the public schools based on public school standards and benchmarks, though I will certainly be working to figure out a way to implement judo as a high school class at the military school and the local high schools.


So, that’s my theory on how to grow judo in the United States: Build a good youth program and get judo in the schools! Build good coaches and help them become good instructors!

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2 comments:

Mr. Martial Arts said...

Hi, good post. I have been thinking about this topic,so thanks for posting. Keep up with your great writing.

Loren said...

I will probably do a few more posts on this topic in the near future.

Maybe something on planning, starting with developing an overall plan, then breaking it down to the lesson plan stage.