The curriculum of Huronia Goju-Ryu is not a checklist of techniques but a method of development. Training follows traditional Okinawan Goju-Ryu as transmitted through Kenshikai, emphasizing structure before speed, understanding before advancement, and responsibility before rank. Progress is measured by consistency, comprehension, and conduct—not time served.
How to Use This Section
This page provides orientation, not instruction. It outlines your responsibilities at each stage, how training is organized, how to use the training videos properly, and what is expected between classes. Technical instruction remains in class, through correction, and through assigned material. If something is unclear, ask in person.
Training Structure
1. Kihon (Fundamentals)
Posture, stance, alignment, breath, and mechanics form the base of all technique. Nothing advances without structure.
2. Kata
Kata are treated as physical instruction manuals, not choreography. Each kata contains posture, timing, power generation, and application.
3. APPLICATION & PARTNER TRAINING
Partner work develops distance, control, timing, and realism. Training is cooperative, controlled, and responsibility-based.
4. BREATH & INTERNAL MECHANICS
Goju-Ryu breath training supports stability, power, recovery, and composure. This is introduced progressively and deliberately.
5. CONDUCT & RESPONSIBILITY
Discipline, respect, and reliability are part of the curriculum. Rank increases responsibility — it does not reduce it.
Training Videos
Training Videos are organized by rank and are intended to support home practice, reinforce material taught in class, and maintain consistency between sessions. They are not substitutes for instruction. If something in a video conflicts with what you were taught in class, the class instruction takes priority.
What Is Not Public
The following materials are intentionally kept private: detailed grading criteria, instructor notes and corrections, evaluation standards, and internal training methodology. This protects both the integrity of the art and the safety of the students.
Member Responsibility
By training here, you accept responsibility to train honestly, ask questions respectfully, practice within your current level, and represent the dojo appropriately. Huronia Goju-Ryu exists to preserve Goju-Ryu as a life-preservation art—not a commodity.
How To Practice At Home
Training at home is intended to support what is taught in class, not replace it. Home practice should reinforce fundamentals, structure, and awareness—never introduce new material or reinterpret what has not been taught directly.
Students are expected to practice within their current level, focusing on basics, assigned kata, and slow, deliberate movement. Speed, intensity, and experimentation are secondary to accuracy, posture, breathing, and control.
Training videos are provided as reference tools only. They are not substitutes for instruction or correction. If a movement, sequence, or principle is unclear, it should be addressed in class.
At-home video or Zoom instruction may be made available upon request for private guidance when in-person correction is not possible.
Home practice should be consistent, honest, and restrained. Quality matters more than duration. When in doubt, reduce complexity and return to fundamentals.
Kenshikai Core System
Kata
FUKYUGATA
Fukyugata Ichi (Fundamental Form 1)
Fukyugata Ni (Fundamental Form 2)
Kyozai (Fundamental Form 3)
Gekisai Dai Ichi (Attack and Destroy 1)
Geiksai Dai Ni (Attack and Destroy 2)
KIHON
Sanchin (Three Battles)
KAISHUGATA
Saifa (Smash and Tear)
Seiunchin (To Control and Pull)
Sanseiru (36 Hands)
Seipia (18 hands)
Shisochin (Four Direction Battle)
Seisan (13 hands)
Kururunfa (Hold Patiently and Suddenly Destroy)
Suparinpai (108 Hands)
HEISHU
Tensho (Rotating Palms)
Ranking
MUDANSHA
White Belt
Yellow Belt
Orange Belt
Green Belt
Blue Belt
Brown Belt
YUNDASHA
Shodan
Nidan
Sandan
Yondan
Godan
Rokudan
Nanadan
Hachidan
Kudan
Judan
Supplemental Training & Extended Study
In addition to the Kenshikai Core System, Huronia Goju-Ryu includes supplemental areas of study intended to deepen understanding, broaden application, and preserve traditional knowledge. These areas do not replace or override core curriculum requirements.
Okinawan Kobudō
Traditional weapons training studied as a companion to Goju-Ryu. Instruction is introduced deliberately and progressively, emphasizing control, structure, and historical context. Kobudō study supports understanding of distance, timing, and body mechanics but is not part of the Kenshikai grading system.
Hōjō Undō
Hōjō Undō refers to traditional Goju-Ryu conditioning practices used to develop structure, grip strength, joint integrity, posture, and resilience. Training may include classical implements and body-conditioning methods introduced gradually and applied purposefully. Hōjō Undō supports karate practice; it does not replace technical training or kata.
Ongeikan
Ongeikan supplemental training reflects the dojo’s broader investigative and applied approach. This may include expanded partner work, principle-based application, and cross-disciplinary concepts used to reinforce Goju-Ryu fundamentals.
Cross-Disciplinary Exposure
Where appropriate, concepts from related disciplines may be explored to support balance, control, adaptability, and understanding of range. These studies are contextual, non-ranking, and never substitute for core Goju-Ryu requirements.
Non-Negotiable Standard
Advancement and rank are based on demonstrated proficiency within the Kenshikai Core System, which serves as the required foundation for all grading.
In addition, Ongeikan training includes supplementary requirements that reflect the dojo’s extended study, applied investigation, and responsibility expectations. These elements do not replace or alter Kenshikai standards, but must be met in conjunction with them.
Progression requires completion of both the recognized Kenshikai curriculum and the additional Ongeikan requirements appropriate to the student’s level.