Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to describe any physical activity as entirely useless but a 30 minute Tae Kwon Do lesson, even if conducted at breakneck pace is unlikely to impart much familiarity with the art. Martial arts is about ingraining physical techniques and responses to stimuli until they because more or less automatic. You’re not going to get that in 30 minutes or even an hour. Once upon a time, instruction ran two hours, three times a week.
2 hrs for 7 year olds?? Mine does 30 min twice a week. And shes a patient person who listens.
It sounds like a lot of people are saying twice a week. I think we could do that.
This might be a dumb question, but how tiring is a 30 min session of TKD vs, say, an hour of soccer? I'm wondering if we could do TKD followed by swim, or maybe TKD after music. He has a lot of energy, but we haven't doubled up on activities before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to describe any physical activity as entirely useless but a 30 minute Tae Kwon Do lesson, even if conducted at breakneck pace is unlikely to impart much familiarity with the art. Martial arts is about ingraining physical techniques and responses to stimuli until they because more or less automatic. You’re not going to get that in 30 minutes or even an hour. Once upon a time, instruction ran two hours, three times a week.
2 hrs for 7 year olds?? Mine does 30 min twice a week. And shes a patient person who listens.
Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to describe any physical activity as entirely useless but a 30 minute Tae Kwon Do lesson, even if conducted at breakneck pace is unlikely to impart much familiarity with the art. Martial arts is about ingraining physical techniques and responses to stimuli until they because more or less automatic. You’re not going to get that in 30 minutes or even an hour. Once upon a time, instruction ran two hours, three times a week.
Anonymous wrote:It’s hard to describe any physical activity as entirely useless but a 30 minute Tae Kwon Do lesson, even if conducted at breakneck pace is unlikely to impart much familiarity with the art. Martial arts is about ingraining physical techniques and responses to stimuli until they because more or less automatic. You’re not going to get that in 30 minutes or even an hour. Once upon a time, instruction ran two hours, three times a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had to pay for aftercare anyway, so the lessons were just an extra benefit (that got done while I was at work/commuting). I think I paid $200/month, inclusive.
During COVID, we dropped the aftercare and just did lessons. We paid about $120/month for three lessons per week.
They get you on the belt tests. They start inexpensive—about $30 for a yellow belt, but each progressive test gets more expensive. The black belt test was $500 (included a new uniform for black belts, and a nice, embroidered belt).
$500! That’s way more than I would have thought. Do weekend events (do they have tournaments or something) cost extra too?
Anonymous wrote:I had to pay for aftercare anyway, so the lessons were just an extra benefit (that got done while I was at work/commuting). I think I paid $200/month, inclusive.
During COVID, we dropped the aftercare and just did lessons. We paid about $120/month for three lessons per week.
They get you on the belt tests. They start inexpensive—about $30 for a yellow belt, but each progressive test gets more expensive. The black belt test was $500 (included a new uniform for black belts, and a nice, embroidered belt).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our school is 2-3 days a week and $140-170 month.
The after school program is similarly priced, I believe, and you can pick all 5 days or fewer.
I was thinking just once a week since he already does music, language and a sport. Is once a week not worth it to make progress and get into a groove? I don’t have any experience with martial arts.
Anonymous wrote:Our school is 2-3 days a week and $140-170 month.
The after school program is similarly priced, I believe, and you can pick all 5 days or fewer.