Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why dance is a major. If dance can be a major, why can’t football or baseball be a major? Cheerleading?
Honestly my thoughts also. College athletes at least have a proper major to fall back on. Dancer majors don’t. It’s a disservice to the students.
Dance is sn art. Football is a game.
Except not really. Dancers are at risk of the same injuries as college athletes and have shortened career prospects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why dance is a major. If dance can be a major, why can’t football or baseball be a major? Cheerleading?
Honestly my thoughts also. College athletes at least have a proper major to fall back on. Dancer majors don’t. It’s a disservice to the students.
Dance is sn art. Football is a game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why dance is a major. If dance can be a major, why can’t football or baseball be a major? Cheerleading?
Honestly my thoughts also. College athletes at least have a proper major to fall back on. Dancer majors don’t. It’s a disservice to the students.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why dance is a major. If dance can be a major, why can’t football or baseball be a major? Cheerleading?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why dance is a major. If dance can be a major, why can’t football or baseball be a major? Cheerleading?
Anonymous wrote:As a studio owner, I love when my competitors hire out of UMD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applying as a dance major can be a great strategy for a great dancer with less than stellar stats. At many schools it's easy to change your major once you're there.
It's not a "great strategy' because "great dancers" get nothing out of colllege. They are too old. They should be in dance companies by then.
You’re showing your age and I hope you’re not in any position to advise dancers coming up now. This may have been true for ballet dancers 20 years ago, but even ballet companies these days are partnering with colleges to train their recruits and some companies have started their own undergrad programs to hone talent that won’t flame out early. In modern dance the options are even more plentiful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as she stays away from UMD she should be ok. UMD grads are unemployable.
Nonsense. I’m a local choreographer and I’ve hired several UMD dance grads over the years. True, these were the top dancers (scholarship recipients) and they were well trained and smart movers.
Are you hiring for ballet positions? UMD is a modern program.
Agree that that was a weird statement. I'm in theatre, and one of the biggest triple threats in the area came out of UMD (Journalism, even). She just finished a Bway run and a National tour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as she stays away from UMD she should be ok. UMD grads are unemployable.
Nonsense. I’m a local choreographer and I’ve hired several UMD dance grads over the years. True, these were the top dancers (scholarship recipients) and they were well trained and smart movers.
Are you hiring for ballet positions? UMD is a modern program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Applying as a dance major can be a great strategy for a great dancer with less than stellar stats. At many schools it's easy to change your major once you're there.
It's not a "great strategy' because "great dancers" get nothing out of colllege. They are too old. They should be in dance companies by then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as she stays away from UMD she should be ok. UMD grads are unemployable.
Nonsense. I’m a local choreographer and I’ve hired several UMD dance grads over the years. True, these were the top dancers (scholarship recipients) and they were well trained and smart movers.
Are you hiring for ballet positions? UMD is a modern program.
Anonymous wrote:As long as she stays away from UMD she should be ok. UMD grads are unemployable.