Anonymous wrote:OP please let us know where your daughter lands and especially how you end up managing the commute/early school dismissal issues.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you all for the input. It sounds like there are a lot of good choices, and I’m relieved to hear that schools are likely to do early release. It’s so much for them to juggle.
DD asked to audition for Metropolitan, but their school is online and I’m not sure that I’m okay with that. But I am also concerned that doing NoVa academics and a pre-professional ballet program is too much to ask of a child, so I may need to keep an open mind.
We’re going to visit and hopefully take some classes to make sure she gets a good fit for ballet then look for schools nearby too. We lived in the area once before and I definitely want to avoid long commutes. She was much younger though - class was only an hour and homework wasn’t an issue.
Anonymous wrote:WB has an excellent program for boys. I would encourage you to talk to the faculty about the training offered for boys.
Anonymous wrote:WB has an excellent program for boys. I would encourage you to talk to the faculty about the training offered for boys.
Anonymous wrote:For those of you that claiming MYB or TWSB are the best ballet programs around this area because of their exmission statistics (placing graduates to elite companies and summer intensives), can you commend on whether these successful graduates are products of the programs since young (lifers), or were they transfer students from other studios or even international recruits? I wasn't impressed with TWSB for the younger classes with higher students to teacher ratio and DD didn't learn much from 5-7 years old when she was there. I switched her to a smaller studio after we moved and she has to catch up and re-learn everything from scratch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you decide on MYB (and maybe TWSB although to a lesser extent) definitely think hard about the choice to live in VA. Bethesda would make such a difference in your quality of life, and give you more options for back-ups if MYB doesn’t work out. You could think of the tax difference as the price you, the parent or whomever is doing all of that driving, is paying for the ability to have a family life outside of ballet.
Thank you. I do still hope DH and I can reach an agreement on this. I thought I was only looking at a 30 minute commute since it would be on either end of rush hour but if it’s more than that, it would be too much.
To the poster who mentioned Principal Ballet, thank you. Looks like Mrs Redick’s daughter runs it. I’ll look into it.
The American Legion Bridge is notorious for backing up at any time of day, unfortunately. Otherwise, yes you’d theoretically be okay with those times. Would you drive to MYB and stay there waiting for her until 8pm every single day? It’s the going home and coming back part that would be a bear, and also getting her to any rehearsals in addition to classes. I’m sure people who have no other choices for where to live drive much longer, but it would be hard and it would limit the possibilities of setting up carpools to take the pressure off you/the driver. TWSB would be more reasonable from VA, although you may have the same issue with getting stuck in traffic after you dropped her off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here. We’re looking at a similar decision next year, albeit for a boy, at slightly above intermediate level. Any insights on TWSB vs. MYB in terms of caliber of faculty, placement into pre-pro programs, etc. ? My impression is that a TWSB is going through a difficult period and has lost many good dancers and teachers, while MYB seems to be on the way up. TIA for any insights!
There was a thread on DCUM in the past year or less about TWSB and changes there, I think. Might want to check that out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Sorry, but in the DC area, only MYB and WB are at the top. You want a pre-professional studio that sends students to corps de ballet type jobs, at minimum. You want a history of successful trainees at that location.
And you want to live close by. No amount of tax difference warrants wasting one's life in traffic. Seriously.
+1
If your DD is truly serious, these are the only two you should be considering. Both are in a state of change, however. MYB just changed directors and the program will be changing slightly (to the PP with a male dancer, I would look here). WB has been in a state of change ever since Septime Webre left and Julie Kent came though rumor has it that that may change soon as well.
Some factors for your DD: Who does she want to learn from? Teaching styles are different at each of these. How much and what type of performance opportunities does she want? They are different at each of these studios, personal decision. What kind of SI experience does she want? MYB encourages going elsewhere, WB encourages staying there.
For the parents: commuting from VA to either of these studios on a daily basis would be a nightmare -- lots of unpredictability in the traffic with commutes ranging to over an hour. Car pooling helps, but it really eats into dinner and homework time. Add on rehearsals and performances and you could easily be doing this 6-7 days/week. MD public schools have an abbreviated day option and will work with your DD to be sure she can accomplish all academic and extracurricular goals. I know many dancers from many high schools in most of the surrounding counties who have had no issues at all and carpooling is easy right from the high school. IN addition, for the parents, I would also consider the economics of each studio -- both how it affects the experience your DD would have as well as how it affects your bottom line (tuition + donations).
Good luck.
A high school dancer can be serious at other schools also. OP, if your daughter wants to go professional and that is her only goal, look at these ^^^. If not, some of the other schools mentioned in this thread (such as BalletNova and CBT in VA) also have dancers who are "serious" and teachers who are just as well-trained. You'd be surprised how many teachers will teach at more than one school around here too. It's a small area, as far as ballet is concerned.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. We’re looking at a similar decision next year, albeit for a boy, at slightly above intermediate level. Any insights on TWSB vs. MYB in terms of caliber of faculty, placement into pre-pro programs, etc. ? My impression is that a TWSB is going through a difficult period and has lost many good dancers and teachers, while MYB seems to be on the way up. TIA for any insights!