I trained with this studio for three and a half years during high school, and I continue to return whenever I am in the DC area. Let me make something clear: this is the best martial arts studio I have ever experienced. Here are a short list of reasons why.
One: The instructors are superb at both martial arts and instruction. These are some of the best martial artists I've ever seen, and they genuinely want to teach you how to equal or exceed them. They will give you one-on-one advice and help you with problems in the techniques. Overall, the instructors are very supportive and friendly. However, they are tough and there's no doubting who's in charge.
Two: The demands of this school are extremely high. They have to be. They want precise technique, excellent footwork, strong attacks and defenses. The only way to ensure that is to demand the best from their students. Here's what that means: the instructors are not going to flatter you. If there's a problem with your techniques, they will tell you so. They're not going to praise you for doing average work. However, if they praise you, you will know that you earned it by doing a truly exceptional job. That is a good feeling. The constant push from the instructors will also force you to work hard, get in shape, and become an excellent martial artist. That is why you're here, right?
Three: class specialization. Unlike most other martial arts studios that I've seen, Yong Studios divides classes into beginner, intermediate, and advanced classes. That means two things: white belts won't spend half the class sitting in the back watching higher belts do their material, and high belts can spend the whole class working on their techniques. Much more efficient. Further, Yong Studios holds three specialty classes a week, one sparing and two forms classes. Those classes allow students and instructors to focus on a single subject, rather then spending the hour doing four different things. It's a much more efficient setup.
Four: the customer loyalty at this place is great. I'm at college for most of the year, so I terminated my membership, but Master Kim still lets me train at Yong Studios when I'm in town, and the instructors all know me and are eager to help me relearn what I forget. I don't think I could possibly find that level of flexibility elsewhere.
Five: the payment scheme is very flexible. You pay for a month's instruction at a time. If you want to stop, you simply tell Master Kim so. Next month, no payment. Simple as that. If you need to skip a month, same story. They'll take you right back next month, no questions asked. Also, the monthly fee covers an unlimited number of classes that month.
As for some of the complaints posed by others, here are some thoughts:
Prices: they are high, but you get what you pay for. This is a full-time martial arts studio, open six days a week and through most federal holidays. Since the fee covers an unlimited number of classes, you could easily train here six days a week. Suddenly $170 a month doesn't look so expensive, especially considering the quality of the instruction. Plus, classes are rigorous enough that this counts as a gym workout.
Tracking system: it's dead easy, and your fees won't change one cent. The only purpose is to keep track of how many classes the student attends. That way, the instructors have an idea of how much material the student should know, and thus how close they are to testing.
Cleanliness: it's a Tae Kwon Do studio. We practice martial arts in our bare feet. But, the instructors clean regularly, and I've never seen the place really dirty. There's always dust and such, but really, to prevent that the instructors would have to spend all their time cleaning and none teaching. Let's be realistic, folks.
Discipline: I've never had a problem with discipline here. The children's classes tend to be a bit chaotic, but, um...try taking care of fifteen six-year-olds at once. They do a remarkably good job, in my opinion. The kids know what they're supposed to do, and by and large they do it. If the kid fails to obey instructions, they will be called out for it. How else should the studio tell them what to do? The instructors are the boss in the class, there's no doubting that, even if they are quite friendly about it.
Material: I learned a lot here. Christine H claims that her child learned nothing during his two months. There are two points to be made here:
1) How long someone is enrolled matters a lot less than how many classes they attend.
2) For the first four months or so, you'll be learning white belt basics (front punch, back punch, front kick, side kick, round kick). These are the foundation of the rest of the material. It may seem like you're not learning anything new during those four months, but practicing these kicks and punches now saves a lot of trouble down the road. It's not the quantity, it's the quality. read more