The Pre-Pointe Year February 12, 2018 Pre-pointe is one of my favorite classes to teach. In part because I enjoy the age of most of the students (11-13 year olds), but also because the excitement of what is about to come is bubbling everywhere. The… Read More The Pre-Pointe Year
Three Fundamentals of Safe Pointe Work January 29, 2018 Above all, we prioritize safety. While we want our dancers whipping out strings of fouetté turns and series of hops en pointe, what we want more than that is for our dancers to have longevity and undamaged bodies.Pointe training is… Read More Three Fundamentals of Safe Pointe Work
Ready for Pointe? January 15, 2018 When will I be ready for pointe? It’s a question ballet teachers hear often. Especially if you teach in a school that doesn’t have clear policies in place regarding this topic. But even with clear policies we still encounter this… Read More Ready for Pointe?
Five Tips for Transitioning Back to Work January 8, 2018 Teaching is hard.It is a selfless act requiring enormous amounts of patience and passion. It is no wonder that, after months of work, teachers feel as though they have transformed into zombies—crawling towards whatever break is on the horizon, grabbing… Read More Five Tips for Transitioning Back to Work
Four Tips For Building Reversing Skills December 11, 2017 I willingly admit to being a reverse junkie. If there was time enough, I would have my students reverse everything. I find the puzzle of reversing enthralling and always come away from it feeling a little more the wiser for… Read More Four Tips For Building Reversing Skills
Starting Promenades December 5, 2017 You know those ballet nightmare experiences? The ones where, in the moment, your entire ballet soul is being crushed by the weight of your hideous dancing? The ones where even years later you look back and still groan in pain… Read More Starting Promenades
Mixing Up Port de Bras November 27, 2017 NOTE: This is geared specifically for teachers of more advanced students. Lower leveled students do require consistency with port de bras so they can remain focused primarily on technique. Once technique is established with any given step, then the world… Read More Mixing Up Port de Bras
5 Ways to Ensure Safe Stretching November 20, 2017 First, a little story . . .I was teaching a group of students who were new to me. I had them on their backs doing a stretch that would help them feel where their external rotators exist. While the stretch… Read More 5 Ways to Ensure Safe Stretching
A Choreography Project November 13, 2017 Looking for a productive way to switch up the pace of class? Perhaps your students are interested in choreography and you want a simple way to introduce them to basic composition concepts? Maybe your students need some assistance being a… Read More A Choreography Project
The Introverted Ballet Teacher October 30, 2017 Truth be told, I am not one for placing labels on people. When someone attempts to apply one to me, I instinctively pull back in horror. However, there is one label that applies to me without a doubt. I take… Read More The Introverted Ballet Teacher
Demi Pointe and the Adult Beginner October 23, 2017 I have written about the importance of teaching the proper use of demi pointe before. In that article, I mention how often I find myself “screaming” about it over and over and over again because it is crucial for… Read More Demi Pointe and the Adult Beginner
Water Bottle Escapades October 16, 2017 With all the issues and challenges we ballet teachers face, it might seem rather tedious to devote an entire article to water bottles. However, teaching our students to be—and remain—hydrated throughout class is part of our job. Because, like all… Read More Water Bottle Escapades
A Fun Vocabulary Test October 9, 2017 Ballet vocabulary. We want our students to have it. To understand how to speak the language. To be informed dancers. So we do any of the following things:Randomly ask them what any given ballet word means.Consistently reinforce the definitions before… Read More A Fun Vocabulary Test
The One Thing I Prioritize in Pirouettes September 26, 2017 There are turners and then there are . . . well, people like me.Who are people like me?We are the ones who are brilliant at showing just how hard pirouetting is. We fall. We flail. We flounder. But eventually it… Read More The One Thing I Prioritize in Pirouettes
What About the Bathroom? September 11, 2017 It’s a thing, isn’t it? The bathroom.Everyone always having to go to the bathroom. Well, maybe not with kids older than eight or nine. But the younger ones? Seems every time I turn around someone is saying they need to… Read More What About the Bathroom?
Addressing Parents September 11, 2017 Go to any ballet teacher forum and you will find a slew of threads discussing the topic of parents. Teachers willingly pour hours of work into their students and still have energy left over to go home and choreograph until… Read More Addressing Parents
Create Effective Yearly Goals September 4, 2017 Goals have the potential to be . . .MotivatingCounterproductiveSmartOverwhelmingAccessibleUnattainableUnwaveringFluidRestrictiveFreeingManipulativeOrganicAnd a host of other things . . .Basically, goals are complex. This makes them rather intimidating. Or rather, it makes setting goals intimidating.As teachers, we often find ourselves encouraging our… Read More Create Effective Yearly Goals
Separation Anxiety August 28, 2017 I am a mom of three kids. But when I began my ballet teaching career I was not a mom of three kids. I was not a mom at all. I was basically a kid who knew nothing and did… Read More Separation Anxiety
Three Floor Exercises to Improve Technique August 21, 2017 A while back, I wrote about how beneficial floor work can be for students. From correcting alignment and repairing pirouettes, to cleaning battu and refining port de bras—taking your students’ training down to the floor holds so much potential… Read More Three Floor Exercises to Improve Technique
The Rut War August 7, 2017 It is no news flash that ballet class is at high risk of falling into a rut. We speak about creating a structure that develops discipline and focus, but we all know that very structure can be the demise of… Read More The Rut War
Helping Teacher Assistants Be Successful August 1, 2017 Like most teachers, I began my career in teaching as an assistant to the lead instructor. It was an aggravating time for me. More than anything, I knew I wanted to teach ballet, but I felt held back in a… Read More Helping Teacher Assistants Be Successful
Lessons in Ballet History July 20, 2017 I am thoroughly convinced there is never enough time in ballet class to teach everything we wish to teach. One year, I taught a three hour ballet class once a week to advanced dancers who were already taking many other… Read More Lessons in Ballet History
The Beginnings of Frappé July 14, 2017 Frappé is, and always has been, one of my favorite steps to do. The sharp attack and speed of the step drew me in from the start.Teaching frappé has not, however, been my favorite. It felt a bit on the… Read More The Beginnings of Frappé
Teaching Waltz Turn July 3, 2017 When I was 11 years old, I had my first encounter with waltz turns. I can look back at the situation and laugh now, but in the moment it was terrifying and slightly traumatizing. I won’t go into the story… Read More Teaching Waltz Turn
Choosing Which Correction To Give June 29, 2017 I had a teacher oh so many years ago who was helping me learn how to teach. She observed me giving class one day and afterwards we had a little chat:“So, Robyn. Well done. However, I noticed you didn’t correct… Read More Choosing Which Correction To Give