In the cooperative throwing section of the class:
Demonstrated: leg throws 1 to 3 (see this Kawaishi method index of throws)
- 2 x pairs of purple belt (peer learning)
- 3 x white belt - higher belt (most experienced / beginner pairing)
- 3 x white belt - purple pairs continued working on throws 1 to 3 (reinforcement)
- orange - yellow pair, and orange - purple pair worked on 4 to 6 (rotating through the purple belts)
- same as 4 to 6
- same as 4 to 6
- the white-belts spent most of their time on the most fundamental throws
- the purple belts engaged in peer learning, helped the white belts, and got a taste of the higher throws as they rotated into the senior group
- the senior group worked with the beginners initially, but also had time to work on the higher throws, mainly among themselves, but also with the purple belts
- everyone got a taste of at least a couple of more advanced throws (variety and exposure)
The rest of the class was a selection of restraint & control, and then immobilizations, followed by groundwork randori. Not much rotation in these sections, although I jumped in and did some light randori with about half the class (one at a time, not all at once) at the end.
This kind of rotation scheme depends on who turns up on a particular night, and setting it up is a challenge for any teacher. Concerns include: safety; getting the newbies off to a good start; blending the need for consolidation with variety; giving the more advanced students adequate time to practice the more advanced techniques that they will need for their gradings.
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