No clue about other majors. As a dance major it is considered weak. The weakest. Below CLI Conservatory. If she is not planning to work in dance then who cares. |
SMU is a really good program, as well. Oh, and don’t forget TCU-they also have a lovely ballet program |
Not likely employable for a dance company. |
| Pointe Park? |
Indiana is in a category of its own. It is respected in the professional dance world in a way the others are not. The program is in the highly respected Jacobs School of Music and provides amazing opportunities to their dancers while in college and many get hired into professional companies when they graduate. Majors can also double major at the Kelley School of Business, which sets them up really well for their longer term future. |
This is a conservatory experience. Hard to double. |
Fine, but the others aren’t rubbish |
CLI is not respected, huh? What about Steps, Peridance or TAPS? |
How about strong schools that offer dance minors and/or strong companies - Princeton, W&M, Wesleyan, Vassar? Or other schools offering BA dance degrees like GW, AU, or Connecticut College? |
Pretty solid options. Even Harvard has a dance major. The current group of GW and AU students are doing well in the working world. |
| Pair it withbudiness classesand she can open a studio after her performance careeer |
| Related question for those whose kids majored in dance and graduated, where are they now? What are they doing? |
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She graduated from Towson and runs a dance studio in Jersey and is very successful.
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| Muhlenberg College in PA is worth a look. Strong arts, including dance. Students can major or minor in dance and it’s a liberal arts school so many other majors to choose from. |
Are you the PP who says UMD grads are unemployable? Because some of these programs don’t audition either. How are these grads more employable than UMD’s - in dance? |