Kata practice and concepts according to highly experienced judo teachers and referees

Authors

  • Mario Luiz Miranda Universidade de São Paulo
  • Ursula Ferreira Julio Universidade de São Paulo
  • Michel Calmet Université Montpellier 1
  • Emerson Franchini Universidade de São Paulo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18002/rama.v5i2.113

Keywords:

Kata meaning, judo principles, kata characterization, transfer of knowledge, kata evolution

Abstract

The objective of the present study was to characterize the kata practice among judo teachers, responsible by São Paulo State Federation’s kata competition and grade examinations. A closed questionnaire was applied to 20 teachers (male = 18; female = 2). The sample was 46 ± 10 years-old, with judo practice time of 34 ± 9 years, and graduation 5 ± 1 dan. Practice often varied from 2 (50%) to 4 (30%) sessions per month. Nage no kata was identified as the most performed (78%) and preferred (31%) kata, followed by katame no kata (25%), ju no kata (21%) and kime no kata (12%). Initiation of kata study usually started at the teacher’s dojo (79%) and through courses offered by state federation (21%). Practice is directed to techniques improvement (46%), complementation for judo training (29%), spiritualized/mental practice (14%) and for competition preparation (11%). The following attributes are the most important meanings given for kata: foundation (45%), essence (25%), origin (15%), form (10%) and principle (5%).

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Published

2012-07-12

How to Cite

Miranda, M. L., Julio, U. F., Calmet, M., & Franchini, E. (2012). Kata practice and concepts according to highly experienced judo teachers and referees. Revista de Artes Marciales Asiáticas, 5(2), 97–110. https://doi.org/10.18002/rama.v5i2.113

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