A full house of spectators enjoyed taekwondo kicks, forms and board breaking during Stevens Taekwondo Academy belt promotion testing at the Stevens Point YMCA recently. More than fifty color belts and five black belts displayed their improved skills and earned new belt levels.
Justin Green achieved fourth dan black belt status with an impressive demonstration of seven forms including pyongwon, advanced kick combinations and an excellent sparring round. Green also broke 4 concrete blocks with his forearm.
Mark Regnitz,, Thomas Lima, Laura Borth and Riley Drechsler earned first degree black belts in a comprehensive oral exam, advanced sparring and kick combinations and performance of koryo and four taebek forms. Regnitz, sponsored by his son second degree black belt Dylan Regnitz, used a 360 side kick for his board break. Second degree black belt Bri Tarpey sponsored Lima, who executed an impressive back spinning hook kick speed break on his board. Borth cleanly snapped her board with a 360 back spinning sidekick after her sponsorship by third degree Kyle Mealy, her most recent instructor. Drechsler broke her board with a double switching high front kick. She was sponsored by her instructor, third degree black belt Steve Decker.
Three other students were recognized for excellence in testing. High green belt Andrew Cameron won the first place trophy, yellow belt Jill Miller earned second place and new red belt Charley Neufeld took home the third place trophy.
Master instructor Dwight Stevens judged the testing, assisted by senior masters Mark Henkel and Bill Dragolovich.
Masterful Self-Defense:
Grandmaster Dwight Stevens, senior master Bill Dragolovich and master Dan Zierke presented a free self-defense class at UW-Stevens Point.
YMCA STA Class Schedule:
February 21 First class Spring session
February 23: 8 p.m. make-up testing
March 20 & 22 No classes--UW/YMCA Spring Break
April 5 Last class of Spring session
April 10 & 12 No classes
April 15 Belt promotion testing, 1 p.m. YMCA gym
April 17 First class Summer I session
May 24 Last class Summer I session
June 5 First class Summer II session
June 10 Belt promotion testing, 1 p.m., APR
July 12 Last class Summer II session
July 17 & 19 No classes
July 24 First class Summer III session
August 12 (tentative) Belt promotional testing 1 p.m. APR
August 30 Last class of Summer III session
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Saturday, February 4, 2012
Neuroscience and martial Arts Training
Recent neuroscience research into the brain function of elite athletes, detailed in the January 14, 2012 issue of Science News, validates traditional martial arts teaching methods and gives hope to novices aiming to improve.
Taekwondo and other martial arts require constant and continued practice of the basic kicks and blocks which combine into forms and sparring techniques. Several researchers are clarifying why that practice makes things work.
Using functional MRI scans on athletes’ brains has allowed John Milton, a neuroscientist at the Claremont Colleges in California, to identify the areas of the brain utilized while performing or planning specific actions, like a golf swing. Professional golfers show far more localized activity, beginners show dispersed activity.
To reach this more subconscious control of a complex movement, Milton explains athletes must rehearse, train repeatedly and develop the nerve connections needed for precise motor control. Sounds a lot like Dr. Stevens saying “Practice, practice, practice” doesn’t it?
These studies also support the claim that practice of forms improves focus, since Milton sees the less dispersed brain activity as indicating that the experts don’t get bogged down by extraneous information, as ‘in the zone’ they ignore the rest and focus.
There’s an additional factor at work in the benefit of training repetition, according to Daniel Wolpert of the University of Cambridge, England. He describes the nervous system interaction with the musculoskeletal system as flawed with transmission errors along the way causing sensory ‘static’ varying in degree by genetic inheritance.
The good news? Wolpert says anyone can “train muscles and refine a way of moving that reduces the bad consequences of the noise that already there.” So with persistence and indomitable spirit, anyone can improve performance.
Another element of martial arts training has traditionally been watching others perform both basics, forms and sparring. Even when the body is still, the brains of observers show neural activity similar to actually effecting the motions. Salvatore Aglioti of Sapienza University (Rome) says this mirror neural activity is the brains’ way of simulating the motion, “a system for matching what you do with what you see others doing.”
So to the speed up that kick, perfect that form or improve sparring, those traditional training methods are just what all these doctors would order. Practice and continue to practice, watch and try to focus on both doing and seeing. Those taekwondo masters know how to teach!
Sunday, February 12-- 1 pm belt promotion testing at Stevens Point YMCA
--no classes February 14 & 16
February 21 -- first class of new session
S
Taekwondo and other martial arts require constant and continued practice of the basic kicks and blocks which combine into forms and sparring techniques. Several researchers are clarifying why that practice makes things work.
Using functional MRI scans on athletes’ brains has allowed John Milton, a neuroscientist at the Claremont Colleges in California, to identify the areas of the brain utilized while performing or planning specific actions, like a golf swing. Professional golfers show far more localized activity, beginners show dispersed activity.
To reach this more subconscious control of a complex movement, Milton explains athletes must rehearse, train repeatedly and develop the nerve connections needed for precise motor control. Sounds a lot like Dr. Stevens saying “Practice, practice, practice” doesn’t it?
These studies also support the claim that practice of forms improves focus, since Milton sees the less dispersed brain activity as indicating that the experts don’t get bogged down by extraneous information, as ‘in the zone’ they ignore the rest and focus.
There’s an additional factor at work in the benefit of training repetition, according to Daniel Wolpert of the University of Cambridge, England. He describes the nervous system interaction with the musculoskeletal system as flawed with transmission errors along the way causing sensory ‘static’ varying in degree by genetic inheritance.
The good news? Wolpert says anyone can “train muscles and refine a way of moving that reduces the bad consequences of the noise that already there.” So with persistence and indomitable spirit, anyone can improve performance.
Another element of martial arts training has traditionally been watching others perform both basics, forms and sparring. Even when the body is still, the brains of observers show neural activity similar to actually effecting the motions. Salvatore Aglioti of Sapienza University (Rome) says this mirror neural activity is the brains’ way of simulating the motion, “a system for matching what you do with what you see others doing.”
So to the speed up that kick, perfect that form or improve sparring, those traditional training methods are just what all these doctors would order. Practice and continue to practice, watch and try to focus on both doing and seeing. Those taekwondo masters know how to teach!
Schedule Reminder:
Sunday, February 12-- 1 pm belt promotion testing at Stevens Point YMCA
--no classes February 14 & 16
February 21 -- first class of new session
S
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