As an aspiring performer in NYC, I realized very early-on how uninformed I was about Tap dance history and culture.
I couldn’t hold a basic conversation with anyone about a dance form that I had studied for YEARS. There were times when I was around Tap dance “greats” & had no clue who they really were. I felt a kind of quiet, but very real embarrassment inside. I knew so little, AND I didn’t know what I didn’t know.
It just felt OFF, very “out-of-alignment”.
This definitely affected my teaching. In my early days as an educator, I taught very little history I’m sad to say. I didn’t know what to tell my students about Tap dance history. On top of that, I was a novice Tap teacher who didn’t have the skills to teach technique & clean routines efficiently, so there wasn’t even TIME for history. So in those ways, many of my students were short-changed.
Over time, I gradually gained more knowledge....
Stop making this crucial mistake, by using this ONE WORD that can take our Tap students from reluctant to resilient. Check out this week's "vlog" to find out what that word is.
We all know the sayings, don't we?
Practice makes progress! Practice makes perfect!
But is it really true?
In a word: SOMETIMES.
We all loooooove to say “Again! One more time!” in our classes. So HOW we use repetition in our Tap classes is an important topic, especially when it comes to our Tap class lesson plans, and how we manage each class as our students are working to make progress on any exercise or piece of choreography.
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I remember an aspiring professional dancer taking my open Tap class at Broadway Dance Center in NYC, and saying:
“I tried for like 10 years at my home studio, but I still can’t do wings. Can you help me? I have a big audition coming up and I need to be ready.”
So this dancer practiced wings for YEARS.
Rep after rep. Week after week. Year after year.
Years of reps.
Years of practicing that didn’t work.
We all know of situations like this,...
In your Tap class, are you telling your Tap students what’s “right” and what’s “wrong”?
If you are…are you absolutely sure that YOU’RE correct?
Is “right/wrong” the ideal way to keep your students clear on the standards of Tap, and open to new ideas and approaches?
As you consider ways to support students who are struggling to get used to the way you teach,
I want you to consider a wider range of vocabulary, beyond “right/wrong”, as you introduce new things, so that when that new student is stuck on “their” way of doing things, you have more language you can use that can validate their past experience, while also opening them up to the new approach you're offering.
Here’s what I mean.
Inside my training program The Tap Teachers’ Lounge:...
You got new Tap students…yay!!
But right away you realize that they have some habits from their past teacher(s) that you find questionable or problematic. Tight ankles, wonky rhythms, straight legs…oh my!
This can happen within a studio/program with multiple Tap teachers and their individual approaches, when you start teaching at a new studio, or it can happen when students join your program after studying elsewhere.
No matter which way, this can feel like quite the pickle, right?
The situation can get even more awkward if the students insist on their way over yours.
Arms folded. Confused faces. Awkward silence. Yikes.
I know I’ve been stumped by this in the past.
A few things that I encourage fellow Tap Teachers to do are
We've all gotten these Qs. NOW, be prepared to anticipate & answer with clarity & confidence that truly supports your students!!
(looking for online tap teacher training? click here for info)
Instead of feeling caught off-guard or anxiously dreading the questions (like I used to), start the season off with proactive communication about your Tap program’s class levels, standards & goals!
Answer the questions before they're even asked! Be the "go-to" guide for your awesome Tap students and their families by providing the clarity they want and deserve.
Need help putting your thoughts together?
This video is for you (captions available if you want to watch on mute).
(looking for online tap teacher training? click here for info)
Question: How can we help students to understand how valuable, how awesome, how FUN Tap dance can be??
Short answer: We tell them & we show them!
This article will focus largely on what we say. (What we SHOW/DO is a whole ‘nother big topic.)
So…What EXACTLY do we tell them?
Imagine that 5-year-old Jalen and his mother Jackie have come to your Open House and said that the kid wants to do Hip-Hop.
You offer a combo class that is ½ Hip Hop & ½ Tap, but Jackie isn’t sure that Jalen will like the Tap part of the class.
How can you get them excited about Tap dance?
Let’s play out a couple of scenarios.
You say:
“In Tap class, Jalen will get to make noise/sounds/rhythms with his feet! Lots of fun!”
OK. This is true…but what real value or benefit does this actually convey? Does this tell...
August 10, 2022
Zoom in on this post screen shot...
There are just waaaaaay too many stories like this one, aren't there?
This is a story fresh from the community of Tap teachers I’m working with inside my Tap Teachers’ Lounge online training program.
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"L "is a new Tap teacher at this studio.
She has inherited students with ineffective Tap technique, so she is focusing on rhythm & rudiment fundamentals, as we are in the Lounge.
And within a few weeks of the start of the season, here is a very negative response. It’s only one parent, but you know how loud that small minority of negative responses can be.
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Now, sometimes in dance teacher groups we might advise that, at this point, it’s simplest to maintain our boundaries by showing this parent the door. (I don’t know this parent, so...
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