Article | : | TORONTO, Dec. 5 /CNW/ - The dancers enrolled in the Ballroom Dance Teachers Training Program all share the same dream: to make ballroom dancing their life.
"So many people spend their lives working in careers that they hate," says Jones. "Becoming a ballroom dance teacher is a viable option for people at every age. It is a wonderful profession that engages your body, your mind, and your heart. You don't have to spend every day doing something you hate," she smiles, "you can become a ballroom dance teacher and truly live your joy."
Some of these future teachers are fresh out of high school or college and have been dancing all their lives. But there are also dancers who come to the training classes after spending most of their professional lives somewhere else. They've been lawyers, or engineers, or dentists, or rocket scientists. Now they are learning to teach the box step in the Waltz, and loving every minute of it.
"I want people to know that it is possible to become a ballroom dance instructor at every stage in their life," says Jennifer Jones, artistic director at the Joy of Dance Centre. "It's never too late," Jones adds. "You can be in your 40's, your 50's, your 60's, or your 70's and you will be welcome in our training classes."
The program is also ideal for dancers who really want to progress in their dancing by understanding both the leader and the followers part. "Some of our students don't want to be teachers, just really great dancers," adds Jones.
The only prerequisite to enrollment is a love of dance and a desire to help others experience that joy. Are you ever too old to consider a career in ballroom dancing? "Never," says Jones, adding that one of the most thoughtful and engaging teacher trainees she has ever known was in her 70's when he began the program.
Ballroom dancing differs from other dance professions in that it is possible to have a successful career even if you begin dancing as an adult. If you want to be a principal ballerina, you must have that early training in your physical development. But if you want to help a wedding couple learn the Foxtrot, it's more important that you are an enthusiastic, supportive and knowledgeable teacher who understands the dance figures and knows how to communicate this understanding to people with a variety of learning styles.
This is what the future teachers learn in the Ballroom Dance Teachers College. The program is rigorous. Graduates must master the formal technical elements of each dance. They learn musicality and partnership skills and have regular presentation exams.
Joy of Dance's Ballroom Dance Teachers College is the premier ballroom teacher training program in the country, and by the time the graduates have gone through the program, they are teaching at a national level of professional excellence. "No matter what your age when you begin," Jones says, "you will be a great teacher when you are done."
Still, Jones adds, not everyone is destined to become a ballroom champion. Many of the graduates are teaching in schools, in senior centres, and in community recreation programs, sharing the love of ballroom dancing with people who may never have had an opportunity to take formal dance classes. Most importantly, these dance teachers are doing what they love to do.
The Joy of Dance Centre & Teachers College offers a part-time training program designed to prepare students for ballroom teacher certification. The Joy of Dance is a premier dance centre located on the Danforth in downtown Toronto. The centre has four studios and offers recreational dance classes and private lessons in almost every dance form. www.joyofdance.ca
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Refer to our website for more information: www.joyofdance.ca; Jennifer L. Jones Artistic director & partner Joy of Dance Centre & Teachers College 95 Danforth Ave Third Floor Toronto Ontario (416) 406-3262 or (416) 659-9617 cell
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