Classroom lesson 路 Sport馃嚢馃嚪 South Korea

Taekwondo - the Korean kicking sport

A martial art famous for incredibly high, fast kicks

Two taekwondo athletes in helmets and chest guards facing off

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Taekwondo is Korea's national sport. It is a kind of martial art - which means a way of training your body that comes from a long tradition - and it is famous for spectacular high kicks. The word taekwondo can be split into three parts: tae (foot), kwon (fist) and do (the way). So it literally means 'the way of foot and fist'.

Tell me more

Taekwondo has been an Olympic sport since the year 2000. Athletes wear a white uniform called a dobok and a coloured belt to show their level - starting with white (beginner), then yellow, green, blue and red, all the way up to black (expert). It can take years of training to earn a black belt.

The most famous taekwondo moves are kicks. Top fighters can spin in mid-air and kick a target two metres off the ground - higher than their own head. Practising those kicks takes balance, flexibility and a lot of stretching, because the legs need to be able to reach high without getting hurt.

Lessons usually start with a bow to your teacher and your training partner. After that, students warm up, practise patterns of moves called poomsae, and then practise sparring (controlled, padded mock-fights). The bow at the beginning and the end is a sign of respect - taekwondo treats everyone in the room as a partner, not an enemy.

Around 80 million people practise taekwondo around the world. It is taught in schools in over 200 countries. The headquarters of world taekwondo, called Kukkiwon, is in Seoul, and teams from every continent travel there to take their black-belt tests.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a sport begin and end with a bow to your training partner?
  2. 02What sports or hobbies require you to be flexible? What about balanced? What about brave?
  3. 03What would help you get good at something - just talent, just practice, or a mixture of both?
Try this

Classroom activity

In the hall (with the teacher leading), warm up gently and try a simple taekwondo move: stand with feet apart, hands in fists by the waist, and 'punch' forward one arm at a time, swapping fists. Count to 20 together. Then try a 'front kick' (gently!) - knee up, foot out, knee back. How do you feel after 30 of each?