Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MBT can be fun and easy to make friends. But young age ballet classes through 10-11 are taught very slowly.
If you are a recent dancer, I can understand why you might have this impression, but I think it is temporary due to the pandemic. The studio has a gap where dancers would have progressed more quickly had the pandemic not interrupted in-studio classes. I don't think there is any actual slow-down in the curriculum, but the dancers are still catching up. At least from academic levels 7-9, the pace has been good and my dancer has improved significantly. Also, younger levels have not yet weeded out kids that aren't willing to work as hard.
Anonymous wrote:Just a parent making sure to defend my daughters happy place with honest feedback. Best of luck to you and your business.
Anonymous wrote:t's very clear there is someone with an ulterior agenda on Bella Ballet's posts. Looks like a competitor which is sad to go that low verses put time into your own business.
At Bella, it is mind-blowing the vocabulary that my child was able to show her grandparents at just three years old. Having a fairytale atmosphere taps into the imagery of a child but does not mean they aren't learning and growing into strong dancers-- it's just age-appropriate and exciting for them.
I now have a technically sound 12 year old who has taken many different styles of dance at Bella and absolutely loves herself, her craft, and the teachers.
To the parent with a four year old, have your child come and try a free class and you will see for yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:MBT can be fun and easy to make friends. But young age ballet classes through 10-11 are taught very slowly.
If you are a recent dancer, I can understand why you might have this impression, but I think it is temporary due to the pandemic. The studio has a gap where dancers would have progressed more quickly had the pandemic not interrupted in-studio classes. I don't think there is any actual slow-down in the curriculum, but the dancers are still catching up. At least from academic levels 7-9, the pace has been good and my dancer has improved significantly. Also, younger levels have not yet weeded out kids that aren't willing to work as hard.
Anonymous wrote:MBT can be fun and easy to make friends. But young age ballet classes through 10-11 are taught very slowly.
Anonymous wrote:I have narrowed down to Metropolitan Ballet Theatre in Gaithersburg or District Dance in Gaithersburg for my 4 year old girl. She loves to dance with music on. I don't even know if she likes ballet or dance, but it seems like it does not matter for that young age. Anyone has reviews on these two dance studios?
We are thinking for long term (like committed for at least 1-2 years) which one should we go since we are certain that she really loves dancing with other little girls even though I don't see any talent yet. One thing is that she is not shy, and she has gone up to stage to dance in the public event by herself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, neither. We travel into Bethesda for a better school. I want my child to love to dance and move, make friends, and have a positive experience. Districtvis slightly better then MBT in the joy department. MBT was just old school mean. District was ok, not great, but not mean.
What do you mean by old school mean for MBT? And how about bella ballet in kentland?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, neither. We travel into Bethesda for a better school. I want my child to love to dance and move, make friends, and have a positive experience. Districtvis slightly better then MBT in the joy department. MBT was just old school mean. District was ok, not great, but not mean.
What do you mean by old school mean for MBT? And how about bella ballet in kentland?
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, neither. We travel into Bethesda for a better school. I want my child to love to dance and move, make friends, and have a positive experience. Districtvis slightly better then MBT in the joy department. MBT was just old school mean. District was ok, not great, but not mean.