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Martial Arts Instructor

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You ask him to participate in a demonstration with you and throw him to the mat to teach him who is boss.

He is embarrassed in front of the class, but was that your goal? What if he continues to become more disruptive as a way of getting back at you for what you did?

And what if he goes out and spreads the word that a martial arts master roughed up a mere student?

Martial arts instructor Jodi Forlizzi says instructors often rely on gut instinct when making decisions. Good decision-making skills, she says, are learned over time.

"As young instructors, we don't always have the right decision-making skills and we're not always sensitive to the issues of other people. So it can be hard. I think it's something that comes with practice and time on the task," says Forlizzi.


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