OMG. The twenty-first century is seriously out of control.

Jun 14, 2008 12:25

This year SP wanted to take ballet classes instead of the kiddie music-and-movement classes she took last year and the year before. Being a total newbie to the scene, I enrolled her in a "junior dance" class at the dance studio downstairs from us, reasoning that it would be easy to get to, etc. It was pretty expensive ($650 for the year, plus a $70 ( Read more... )

rants, kid stories, ontario is weird

Leave a comment

pernwebgoddess June 15 2008, 01:40:42 UTC
that just pisses me off. One of my inlaws' nieces is a dance instructor, and another of my friends is one... kids are supposed to ENJOY dance, especially at that age.

Reply

elizabeth_welsh June 15 2008, 03:08:01 UTC
Poor SP, though I think I must tell you that it isn't just the 21st century. Years ago when I was taking piano lessons rather than teaching, there was a little boy who was going to the same teacher. His lesson was on Saturday right before mine. I went on Saturday because it was a fifty mile drive one way. He did because it was the only day he could squeeze it in. His mother was one of those "stage mothers" and if he had lived in California, he probably would have been doing television. He was in ballet, tap, sunshine generation, acting lessons, karate, singing lessons, and piano. That poor kid was beyond stressed. And a couple of times, we'd chat in that brief interim while his mother talked to the teacher before my lesson started. He HATED all the crap he had to do and none of it more than the dance lessons, which were given by a man he referred to as the "dance nazi". When he was twelve, Jonathan ran away from home. I've always thought that illustrated why children should not be forced into lessons and why teachers like that should ( ... )

Reply

sylvia_rachel June 15 2008, 19:55:06 UTC
Yeah, I had a friend when I was a kid whose schedule was like that. She did ballet, piano and flute lessons, speech arts, and I don't know what all, and she was never able to tell her parents that she didn't want to do any of it, she just wanted to draw and paint (which she was really, really good at -- not that she wasn't good at the other stuff as well). But she was an anomaly among my friends, as were the few kids I knew who were "hothoused" in particular areas, mostly on musical instruments. There have always been "stage mothers" (and fathers) and probably always will be ( ... )

Reply

sylvia_rachel June 18 2008, 18:16:44 UTC
So, yeah, that's not gonna work. T, it transpires, has an older sister who also takes classes at this dance school, and their mom is right into the whole thing. So never mind.

Aside from all the sitting around, the "stage rehearsal" (it was a tech rehearsal, sure enough) wasn't all that bad. And the kids are cute, and nobody cried or got upset. But I'm still looking for someplace else for next year.

Reply

sylvia_rachel June 15 2008, 19:46:18 UTC
Exactly. I can't think of a better way to turn them off the whole concept.

SP claims that J (the teacher) has never yelled at her, "because I'm always good and I always do the right things." I'm not specially worried that she's going to be damaged by this experience, but I want to get her out of there before she starts to think that the yelling is OK...

Reply


Leave a comment

Up