Great posts in this thread.

Originally Posted by
Charlemange August K.
no such thing as a bad student only a bad teacher
Not sure if I'm nitpicking, but from my experience (I did substitute teaching for a bit), there IS such a thing as a bad student. It's a student who absolutely refuses to learn no matter how many times you try to reach them. But I suppose in the context of martial arts, that person wouldn't exactly be considered a student, would they?

Originally Posted by
Chris Herzog
Its a life long endevor, not something you can just do. Its takes hard work like everything else. Study, reps, execution, review, change, rinse and repeat. Its not just regurgitating techniques you learned from someone else, you need to study kinesiology, human physiology, sport phychology and coaching. I've put more into developing into a coach than anything else I've ever done. Training for high level competitions was easy compared to being a coach, all I had to worry about was what I had to do to win. I now have to do that for everyone that walks in my door or has me at their school. Its not about teaching them your game, its about teaching them a game that will work for them. Very few of my students move and roll like me, a good coach will guide a student on their own journey, not one that tells them how they will move and react.
Great post. I appreciate those little details that help guys like me. From the fat whip when I didn't have enough core strenth to do a proper whip up, to that foot on the hip to get the extra distance to be able to play rubber guard. You're a great coach. I know one day I'll be able to bring home a gold for the team.

Originally Posted by
Cody Kietzman
I think its important to mention the importance of having a clear grasp on what you are teaching. You have to know the ins and outs of what you are teaching. Example: Can I do a heel hook? Yes. Am i qualified to teach a heel hook? No. It's because I lack the level of skill required to pass the intricate details of the hook onto another person. It's really important to focus on knowing your own game and own technique really well before you can dream of passing it on. IMO there are only a few things worse than bad teaching/teaching out of your ass.
I posted a drunk post on this a while back. I'm what I jokingly call a youtube blackbelt. LOL. I've watched hours of youtube vids on techniques. I THOUGHT I knew what I was doing...until I started learning from Coach Herzog. That's because I know in theory how to do certain things...but Coach know in practice and with a record of great results how to do things RIGHT. Good post Cody.

Originally Posted by
Jason Hyatt
I have a sincere love for education and educational theory and coach hit this right on. Far too often, we view teaching as a natural byproduct of being good at something. Being really good at something is not the same as being really good at helping other people learn how to be good at it too. Teaching is its own discipline with its own techniques, methods, research, and theoretical underpinnings. Developing a curriculum with specific intent takes a lot of time, effort, and thought. The craft of teaching isn't about the subject matter, its about the subjects. You have to not only understand your discipline, but you have to understand how people learn and how they apply what they've learned in practice.
I have nothing to add to this. Just quoting for truth.