Anonymous wrote:I would tell my kid that she can major in dance but she needs a back-up plan. Graduate school in physical therapy is a terrific back-up plan for people who have strong kinesthetic intelligence. Nursing or medicine is also a good back up plan.
To prepare for that back up plan, she needs two years of chemistry, a year of anatomy and physiology, and a year of physics. That's one science class per semester, which is completely doable.
Anonymous wrote:I would not allow it. I'd let her minor in dance, or double major in dance and some more lucrative major like accounting.
Anonymous wrote:I would tell my kid that she can major in dance but she needs a back-up plan. Graduate school in physical therapy is a terrific back-up plan for people who have strong kinesthetic intelligence. Nursing or medicine is also a good back up plan.
To prepare for that back up plan, she needs two years of chemistry, a year of anatomy and physiology, and a year of physics. That's one science class per semester, which is completely doable.
Anonymous wrote:New to the conversation which is quite timely since DD who has been passionate about ballet since age 2 is a HS senior this year and deciding about how to pursue a possible professional ballet career. She, as most ballet dancers are, takes a challenging school load and is quite bright. She plans on college but wants a gap year and thinks a BFA isn't worth the debt load. She attends top summer programs and has done Suzanne Farrell etc. so is very well-trained.
I use Ballet Talk for Dancers and DanceMoms forums to gather information. Here's what I gleaned - don't pursue a BFA unless you can graduate without any debt or very little. Most ballet companies hire 19+ now unless you are a prodigy or a well-developed male. Aside from grads from IU or being a male in a top 3 college ballet program, you will most likely not get hired at a top company - perhaps at a regional company for the corps. Unless you are an award winning female dancer with amazing stage presence and technique at age 16-18, you will not be hired until you have another 2-3 years as a trainee/apprentice - where you pay tuition/shoes or maybe get a stipend for shoes.
The dance world has figured out parents are the cash cow and they can now string dancers along for years as tuition paying students while parents also pay for living expenses in another city. Dancers have no extra time for part-time jobs - as they are often used as free labor in the corp for company performances.
Frankly it's so depressing and hard to figure out what to advise DD in this situation. Salaries are unsustainable in the smaller companies - if there is a pit orchestra, they are paid way more than those dancers on stage! It's pretty crazy.
Anonymous wrote:New to the conversation which is quite timely since DD who has been passionate about ballet since age 2 is a HS senior this year and deciding about how to pursue a possible professional ballet career. She, as most ballet dancers are, takes a challenging school load and is quite bright. She plans on college but wants a gap year and thinks a BFA isn't worth the debt load. She attends top summer programs and has done Suzanne Farrell etc. so is very well-trained.
I use Ballet Talk for Dancers and DanceMoms forums to gather information. Here's what I gleaned - don't pursue a BFA unless you can graduate without any debt or very little. Most ballet companies hire 19+ now unless you are a prodigy or a well-developed male. Aside from grads from IU or being a male in a top 3 college ballet program, you will most likely not get hired at a top company - perhaps at a regional company for the corps. Unless you are an award winning female dancer with amazing stage presence and technique at age 16-18, you will not be hired until you have another 2-3 years as a trainee/apprentice - where you pay tuition/shoes or maybe get a stipend for shoes.
The dance world has figured out parents are the cash cow and they can now string dancers along for years as tuition paying students while parents also pay for living expenses in another city. Dancers have no extra time for part-time jobs - as they are often used as free labor in the corp for company performances.
Frankly it's so depressing and hard to figure out what to advise DD in this situation. Salaries are unsustainable in the smaller companies - if there is a pit orchestra, they are paid way more than those dancers on stage! It's pretty crazy.
Anonymous wrote:I was a dance major and have been supporting myself since graduating 14 years ago. Right now I have a full time job teaching dance and work in fitness part time and am living very comfortably. I do not regret my decision to major in dance at all and never have. It's what I have loved since I was a child and I'm one of the only people I know that wakes up every day and genuinely enjoys going to work and doing my job. I consider myself so lucky to have my passion also be my career, if I had a daughter with something she truly loved, I would absolutely encourage her to major in it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not allow it. I'd let her minor in dance, or double major in dance and some more lucrative major like accounting.
You "would not allow it"?? That's one sure fire way to loose your DD. I went to art school. Have a BFA from a top school and MFA from the top program in my field. My parents were definitely worried about my ability to find a job after graduation but I'm doing just fine now. DH also has a BFA from same art school and we both work in our fields of study (he more so than I) and our HHI is over $200k (since that seems to be important to you, OP).
Like a pp said, a lot can change. Also, if she's really good, and motivated, she'll be fine. Also agree that the school you go to is VERY important. So NYU, yes. Towson, no.
Yes, I would not allow it. Some choices are allowed to be made by my children. Some are not. They are not allowed to pursue any career that puts their life on the line (military, police, firefighter) and not allowed to pursue a career that burns out their body (sports). If they had chosen to do that, they would not have my support.. You are free to disagree and parent your children the way you think is best. But you will not change my mind. I have four, two of whom have graduated from college. So I'm comfortable with the track I'm on in regards to this.
Anonymous wrote:HAHAHAHAH! Sorry. I was a professional ballet dancer. By 16 you should be established as a n apprentice through summer programs. By 18 you have accepted to a company. If your daughter is truly interested in making her way in this particular world then the must give us dreams of college until she ages out of ballet due to injuries 28/30.