Kids Judo Books by Koka Kids
Judo Books by Koka Kids

Teaching Judoka ages 5 to 8

Teaching Judoka is the first part of a two part series on Coaching Judoka written by 3rd Dan judo coach, Vince Skillcorn.

This first post focuses on teaching judoka from ages 5-8, the second post on coaching judoka age 9-11.

Teaching Judoka

Teaching Judoka ages 5 to 8

Teaching judoka ages 5-8 is a post written by Vince Skillcorn

More from Vince Skillcorn: https://www.youtube.com/user/FightingFitnessUK1 

Teaching future judo champions

You do not have to be great to start, but you have to start to become great!

When you are teaching judoka, remember the 5 year old that has just walked into your dojo today has the potential to become the next World or Olympic Champion and as their coach you can give them a head start!

What is the key age for developing motor skills?

Research suggests that when growing up children benefit from specific training methods at certain ages. 5-8 years is a great time to lay the foundation for the future by developing their general motor skills.

Teaching judoka in Japan, they encourage kids to participate in many sports at this age through their school structure, allowing kids the opportunity to develop many key motor skills (hand eye co-ordination, spacial awareness etc.).  

This motor skill development can be built on in the club environment too. Within their normal Judo sessions and warm up by including basic gymnastic exercises, ball games and reactional activities, and movement drills.

Teaching Judo through Visual Learning (learning through seeing) 

Children in this age range will learn best visually, so do not get to bogged down explaining things in great depth.

When teaching judoka, make the demonstrations as accurate as possible and don’t be afraid to ask someone else to demonstrate if necessary!

Use simple drills like this Kesa-Gatame exercise for novices or this turnover for beginners to build confidence with groundwork judo.

Encourage them to watch Judo videos and guide them on what to watch, used responsibly with parental guidance Youtube is a great resource and its free!

Watching current high level fighters will not only benefit their learning but provide fantastic role models and help create aspirations for the future.  

Show a wide range – keep it general 

Don’t be afraid to show them as much Judo as you can over these development years. Most of us follow a grading syllabus but don’t let it dictate everything you teach, cover as wide a range of techniques as you can.

No child is the same so one technique might work for Johnny but will not work for Freddie, by experiencing a wider range in their early years they have a better chance of finding their “favourite” technique that suits them to develop in later years.  

Teaching Judoka with short attention spans 

It’s not rocket science, children at this age children do not have the longest of concentration spans. Keep it short and sweet! I have also taken the decision to ban all energy drinks on my classes, children do not need them it just jacks them up and ultimately makes your job harder!  

Lastly and most importantly, keep it fun!!!

Make judo lesson memorable using these tips.