Amherst Martial Arts

📍 Korean language schools in Amherst

Amherst Martial Arts
6.9

Amherst Martial Arts is located in Amherst (Usa). Featured in the korean language schools category, it has a rating of 6.9. Check all the details here.

Features and services of Amherst Martial Arts

Accessibility

  • Wheelchair-accessible car park

Amenities

  • Toilet

Payments

  • Credit cards
  • Debit cards

Children

  • Discounts for kids
  • Family discount

Parking

  • Free of charge street parking
  • Free parking lot
  • On-site parking

Amherst Martial Arts is in position 6 out of 10 in korean language schools in Amherst

Customer Reviews

★★★★★
★★★★★

Amherst Martial Arts has a rating of 5 out of 5 based on over 5 reviews on Google

Ann Butler

My daughter began taking Tae Kwon Do at the Amherst Martial Arts Kicks and Corrals summer camp and enjoyed it so much that she decided to start weekly lessons after school. After a year and a half, I am amazed at her progress. The instructors at Amherst Martial Arts encourage the students to build up their physical skills as well practice the tenets of Tae Kwon Do. She has gained so much strength, agility, discipline, perseverance and control.The school is a community where students can learn at their own pace and level, yet also support one another. It has been a wonderful experience!

Ann Butler ☆ 5/5
Michael Ash

Amherst Martial Arts is now offering virtual classes (for the duration of the lockdown), and they are excellent. Highly recommended! Amherst Martial Arts is a wonderful and distinctive Tae Kwon Do (Korean Karate) studio. The head, or sabumnim, of the studio, or dojang, is Annie Schwarz, a 4th degree black belt, who founded Amherst Martial Arts in 1991. Annie has a terrific manner with children that is supportive and builds confidence, self-reliance, and camaraderie. Both of my children began Tae Kwon Do here starting at age 6. The lessons were terrific for younger children, building gross motor skills, confidence, and self control. My younger child, now a frosh in high school, earned his black belt last summer. He continues to stay in shape and to develop his skills as a student, and he also teaches classes for younger students. He has since recruited me (returning to Tae Kwon Do after a 30-year hiatus). The adult and older teen group which I've joined is lots of fun and very supportive. Classes run for an hour, begin and end with a moment of meditation followed by thorough stretching, and they are great, vigorous exercise. We work towards promotion via belt tests, but mostly we enjoy the workouts. Amherst Martial Arts is completely gender neutral and non-macho in its approach. It is one of the best co-ed sports I've encountered. Annie also offers occasional women's self-defense courses. Lastly, Annie directs Kicks and Corrals, an Amherst-area summer camp which offers horseback riding, Tae Kwon Do, and swimming. Amherst Martial Arts students have guaranteed spots in this high-demand summer camp.

Michael Ash ☆ 5/5
Laura Quilter

Amherst Martial Arts, a taekwondo school, is a really special space in Amherst. It has been operating for more than 20 years, educating countless children, as well as hosting summer camps (taekwondo, swimming, and horseback riding). It's the complete program: philosophy, strength, forms, and practical application -- self defense and sparring. The strength of this program is not just in the excellent and serious instruction, but in the warmth of the community. The children are kind and supportive to each other, an attitude fostered by the teachers. The children and teens really form relationships with each other. The school is a labor of love for the instructors; they haven't raised their rates in years, because they want to keep it accessible. At some other places that I've seen, the programming aimed at kids can feel like a mill, processing lots of kids, keeping things fun but what are the kids actually learning? I've seen some kids' martial arts programs described as "belt factories" or "belt mills", where the belt tests are meaningless, and the kids aren't actually learning the forms, much less the philosophy and mental disciplines. No matter how skilled the adults are, they have to take teaching kids seriously -- not just as entertainment for the kids and babysitting for the kids. That is the opposite of Amherst Martial Arts, which feels like a cross between a school and a home -- the best kind of home, where everyone is working together, learning and improving and supporting each other. The kids have a lot of fun -- there are lots of opportunities for games and silliness -- but they also learn to buckle down, concentrate, try harder, improve. I've seen kids come in, too shy to kick at all, gain confidence just from the gentle, non-judgmental opportunity that comes again and again in a session, until they start finding their own ability to move and then start putting their all into it. This is huge for girls especially who may not have been given social encouragement or support to yell, kick, punch, roll, etc. The instructors are great at knowing how to relate to different kids at different levels: kids sometimes need gentle encouragement, sometimes sternness and seriousness, and often humor, and helping kids have fun AND then buckle down to focus and learn is a real art.

Laura Quilter ☆ 5/5
Jeremy P.

I trained under Sabumnim Annie for several years while I was at UMass. She's an excellent instructor, and I'd highly recommend her studio.

Jeremy P. ☆ 5/5
sundarii Moreira

My kids attend to that class and the teacher. are very nice I love it there

sundarii Moreira ☆ 5/5

Information about Amherst Martial Arts

Address

Amherst Martial Arts is located at White Barn Studios, 20 Dickinson St, Amherst, MA 01002, United States

Phone

The phone number of Amherst Martial Arts is +1 413-512-1370

Website

The website of Amherst Martial Arts is: amherstmartialarts.com

Business Hours

Monday: 18:00–19:00
Tuesday: 17:30–18:30
Wednesday: Closed
Thursday: Closed
Friday: Closed
Saturday: 16:00–17:00
Sunday: Closed

Contact Amherst Martial Arts

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