Great question and solid answers from others already.
Don't feel guilty about not giving them a tougher role....they know you are new and don't expect you to win. They want you to progress, enjoy your training, ask questions, build camaraderie, etc. If they are training for competition, a fight, etc. and need to 'train up' it's their responsibility, not yours, to choose training partners accordingly or to adjust their game to work defense.
I enjoy training with new students. Helps my coaching/teaching stay sharp, and when rolling they often do really bizarre, unconventional things that are unpredictable and break me out of the regular attack/defend/counter cycle. There are days I have tougher rolls against white/blue/purple belts than I do against brown/black belts, which is great.
My advice for training with upper belts is A) Train with them as often as you can and B) When rolling as a white/blue belt, don't pull guard and don't go for foot/ankle locks against brown/black belts. White/blue is for learning passing/defense....and pulling guard or going for foot locks against upper belts will just result in getting passed/submitted and not developing a top game.
Don't feel guilty about not giving them a tougher role....they know you are new and don't expect you to win. They want you to progress, enjoy your training, ask questions, build camaraderie, etc. If they are training for competition, a fight, etc. and need to 'train up' it's their responsibility, not yours, to choose training partners accordingly or to adjust their game to work defense.
I enjoy training with new students. Helps my coaching/teaching stay sharp, and when rolling they often do really bizarre, unconventional things that are unpredictable and break me out of the regular attack/defend/counter cycle. There are days I have tougher rolls against white/blue/purple belts than I do against brown/black belts, which is great.
My advice for training with upper belts is A) Train with them as often as you can and B) When rolling as a white/blue belt, don't pull guard and don't go for foot/ankle locks against brown/black belts. White/blue is for learning passing/defense....and pulling guard or going for foot locks against upper belts will just result in getting passed/submitted and not developing a top game.
Consistency: It's only a virtue if you're not a screw-up.