White Belt

White Belt

Belong: Where Every Journey Starts

Students develop confidence participating in the learning community and begin building alongside their peers.

Belt Identity

What It Means to Belong

The white belt is where every student begins. Not because they are the least experienced, but because belonging is the foundation everything else is built on. Before a student can contribute, create, or lead, they need to feel safe in the space, comfortable with their peers, and willing to try. That is what the white belt is for.

At this stage, students are learning what it means to be part of a learning community. They follow along with guided builds, cheer for their teammates, and discover that making mistakes is part of the process. The white belt is not a waiting room. It is the beginning of a real journey, and the character habits students build here carry them through every belt that follows.

Coaches at this stage focus on creating a welcoming environment where every student feels seen, included, and capable. The goal is not perfection. The goal is participation. A student who raises their hand, tries something new, and encourages a teammate is already growing.

I Belong. I Try. I Build.

White Belt Motto
Character Development

The Traits Students Practice

Relationships

Teamwork

White belt students practice working alongside peers, sharing materials, and contributing to a shared experience. At this stage, simply showing up and participating together is the foundation.

Relationships

Harmony

Students learn to create a welcoming environment for themselves and others. Coaches observe how students respond to peers who are struggling, and whether they help others feel included.

Relationships

Sportsmanship

White belts begin developing the habit of responding to wins and setbacks with respect. Whether a build works on the first try or the fifth, how students carry themselves is what coaches are watching.

Builder Skills

What Students Build

Core Project

White belt students complete a step-by-step guided build with full instructor support. The project is designed to create early success, introduce foundational skills, and give students something tangible to be proud of. Completing the build and explaining how it works are both part of demonstrating readiness.

Application Project

Students participate in a collaborative partner activity that applies their guided build skills in a new context. This may include a simple modification, a shared challenge, or a joint creation. The focus is on experiencing early collaboration and discovering what it feels like to build alongside someone else.

Following Instructions Building with Support Asking for Help Peer Collaboration
Advancement

What Promotion Requires

White belt promotion is about belonging, not technical mastery. Coaches look for students who have settled into the learning community, shown a willingness to try, and demonstrated the early character habits that make the whole journey possible. A single great session is not enough. Coaches observe these signals across multiple classes and different types of activities before recommending advancement.

1

Shows comfort and confidence participating in class activities without hesitation.

2

Encourages at least one teammate during a challenge or setback.

3

Completes a guided build with confidence and can explain how it works.

4

Accepts feedback and tries again without shutting down or giving up.

5

Contributes during class discussion and demonstrates awareness of peers.

Character starts with belonging. Students earn promotion when they show they belong here.

Ready to Start the Journey?

Every black belt started at white. The journey begins with belonging.