In Largo, the tradition is different.Many instructors teach 5-6 nights a week for the love of the art and no money at all.
The dojo and attached residence was built by Sensei Martin and his students in the early 1980's.
The free-standing building was built for the purposes of karate instruction. There is over 7000 sq. feet of classroom space. It has won architectural awards and was the model for the school Alan Dollar built in California.
Inflation and property values being what they are, the economic realties of the situation do not allow for teaching for the "love of the art and no money at all." Taxes and insurance do not come cheaply on a million dollar facility.
In order to maintain the quality and consistency of instruction over time, Sensei Martin has a small, select staff of full time martial arts professionals who are paid well for their services and provided with a range of benefits.
Young and capable men and women instructors deserve a home life, too, and the capacity to provide for a spouse and family. You can't achieve that if your staff has to work five or six evenings a week for free.
At the end of the day ... the student body of nearly 400 students feel they receive value for the tuition they pay. Our students reflect the diversity of the community ... Hispanic, Afro-American and Asian as well as caucasians from six to seventy. We're not geared to a college student body or suburban neighborhood. We got lawyers and roofers, cops and mechanics ... hard working folks who want quality martial arts for themselves and their family.
We have numerous families, a mom and dad and two or three kids, who pay $500 a month in tuition who are just as happy as Ben.
