Podium (Jun 2022)

Systematic self-defense training at the Naval High School/Entrenamiento sistemático de defensa personal en la Escuela Superior Naval

  • Byron Iván Carriel Izquierdo,
  • Santiago Calero Morales

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 2
pp. 501 – 512

Abstract

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Self-defense in the Naval Force is one of the fundamental competencies of the military professional, the improvement of the mastery process in mixed martial arts requires systematic diagnoses, evidence of scope and limitations and, therefore, making the right decisions to improve the process. In this sense, it was proposed as the purpose of the research: to diagnose needs in the systematic self-defense of the Higher Naval School. The research is exploratory with a descriptive-explanatory and correlational approach; selection is made under an intentional sampling of 20 naval officers. These respond to closed surveys that will justify the prospective design of a future intervention process. The self-assessment of the specialists shows that 40% have a Good rating in mastering karate-do, boxing and judo techniques and 30% a Bad rating. These values indicate that they are similar during the correct application of karate-do techniques (45%: Good; 15%: Bad), Boxing (65%: Good; 0%: Bad) and Judo (40%: Good; 25%: Bad), while the indicators Relevance (4.30 points), Feasibility (3.40 points), Priority (4.55 points) and Comprehensiveness. (4.40 points). These values justified the need to implement an intervention process to improve self-defense in sailors. In the study, an acceptable concordance prevails among the specialists (0.526). Consultation with specialists shows the need to implement a systematic self-defense training process at the Naval High School. The indicators of relevance, feasibility, priority and comprehensiveness are presented as positive in the design of a prospective process to provide professional improvement to Ecuadorian naval personnel in the aspect of self-defense.

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