Anonymous wrote:Yes. A million pay for play “competitions” with dubious awards for basically everyone. How is it possible that multiple of my friends’s kids have won the super diamond platinum award or whatever at “nationals”? lol. Pressure to be at the studio a minimum of [way too many] hours a week? The girls seem like fine dancers but it is absolutely a money-making enterprise with little concern about anything else.
And all the parents swear their snowflake is a stud athlete when they’re just a dime a dozen above average player. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these activities (including travel soccer) are a scam if you are doing it for anything other than current enjoyment and building life skills. If you think there is some financial payoff or elite status at the end of this, then it is a total scam.
This is such a great perspective and a rare one on DCUM. There's usually one side screaming "kids are overscheduled" and another screaming "but your kid will never be a D1 recruit." This is the sensible middle ground - do it because your kid loves it and is learning life skills from it.
Anonymous wrote:You are a judgy b about the outfits and cheerleaders are athletes. You could not do 1 150th of what a cheerleader can do. Very different from dance.
A lot of studios, the clothes and the dances have input from the dancers. I've seen a very fun tap scene done with overalls and neckerchiefs, with non-revealing moves. There's going to be a mix. And dance is about seeing the human body. Stop making it into something shameful
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these activities (including travel soccer) are a scam if you are doing it for anything other than current enjoyment and building life skills. If you think there is some financial payoff or elite status at the end of this, then it is a total scam.
This is such a great perspective and a rare one on DCUM. There's usually one side screaming "kids are overscheduled" and another screaming "but your kid will never be a D1 recruit." This is the sensible middle ground - do it because your kid loves it and is learning life skills from it.
None of these activities are teaching time management skills or how to set appropriate priorities, that's for sure. Look at how many people in these activities are homeschooled because the activity is too intense to be compatible with 30+ hours of regular school per week. If you're looking at a competitive dance studio or travel team and half the kids are homeschooled in some fashion, run.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure what OP is getting at. Her gripes don't describe a scam.
The one way that competitive dance feels a little more scam-ish to me than travel sports is that the studios sort of inflate the competitiveness of "competitive" dance. Like, you try out, but all you are really competing for is where you will stand during the numbers. Or you go to these competitions and every team seems to be winning several awards of some sort. With sports there are more cuts and winners and losers.
This is the same as travel sports. Every club will happily put most any played on a travel team, they just have different levels based on talent. But they're not turning anyone away (I know this as a the parent of a very mediocre soccer player and every season the coach pushes us to join the more intense, year round, and expensive travel teams). Of course he wouldn't make the best travel team but they happily make a travel level for the mediocre players too
Dance studios are the same - they have different levels based on talent
Anonymous wrote:Yes. A million pay for play “competitions” with dubious awards for basically everyone. How is it possible that multiple of my friends’s kids have won the super diamond platinum award or whatever at “nationals”? lol. Pressure to be at the studio a minimum of [way too many] hours a week? The girls seem like fine dancers but it is absolutely a money-making enterprise with little concern about anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All these activities (including travel soccer) are a scam if you are doing it for anything other than current enjoyment and building life skills. If you think there is some financial payoff or elite status at the end of this, then it is a total scam.
This is such a great perspective and a rare one on DCUM. There's usually one side screaming "kids are overscheduled" and another screaming "but your kid will never be a D1 recruit." This is the sensible middle ground - do it because your kid loves it and is learning life skills from it.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure what OP is getting at. Her gripes don't describe a scam.
The one way that competitive dance feels a little more scam-ish to me than travel sports is that the studios sort of inflate the competitiveness of "competitive" dance. Like, you try out, but all you are really competing for is where you will stand during the numbers. Or you go to these competitions and every team seems to be winning several awards of some sort. With sports there are more cuts and winners and losers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are a judgy b about the outfits and cheerleaders are athletes. You could not do 1 150th of what a cheerleader can do. Very different from dance.
A lot of studios, the clothes and the dances have input from the dancers. I've seen a very fun tap scene done with overalls and neckerchiefs, with non-revealing moves. There's going to be a mix. And dance is about seeing the human body. Stop making it into something shameful
Get that head checked loon
+1