Grading information for children(Boys & Girls 6 to 11 years inclusive)
Beginners do not have to have 24 stamps (ask your instructor for advice). These requirements are the bare minimum. All juniors need time to enjoy and absorb their training to progress. Each child has different abilities and no two children can be judged or treated the same. Different time scales are relevant to different children, the minimum times between gradings and the minimum attendance stamp requirements are a guide only; some junior karate students need a great deal more to achieve a successful pass at their examination. If a junior student has more stamps than the minimum requirement all the better, the student in question shall be in a much better position to take their grading. Stamps in excess of the bare minimum of 24 cannot be held over for the next grading, these stamps represent time and effort spent on training for the grade in hand, any new training shall be spent on a new syllabus and a new preparation for a new belt. New training requires a new commitment with new stamps as a training record of that new commitment. There is no short cut to developing karate as constant and regular training is needed to progress. A grading is an examination for which the applicant must be fully prepared. This preparation takes time which can vary greatly between individuals; a student who is deemed not up to standard will fail and will need to prepare again for the belt previously applied for. If a student fails their belt (no award made) they may only apply again for their belt when they have made suitable preparations and then can apply to retake the grade after a minimum of one month (4 weeks) have elapsed.
Advice and guidance from their instructor is very important as to when the student should re-apply to grade. |
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