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You've Got To Have Faith

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Teacher article

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None

Believe in your corrections, believe in your teacher, now repeat it again and again! It should be a chant that all students over the age of 8 say as they go into class.

Don't you love it when a student you teach comes to tell you about some revelation they have just experienced in another class that they have just taken? It was a correction that you have said only five thousand times! Finally they get it and hear it. Don't lose faith in yourself. You know what you are doing and that you are a good teacher. They will learn and you have the key.

 It's all about the faith. No, I am not going to get religious on you now! It's about showing the students to have trust in you as a teacher and an understanding that you are there to guide them to a higher level. If they are there just for recreation it is important to point out to them that part of recreation is to have fun.

In dance the real fun begins when you start to have a knowledge or vocabulary of steps. To master these steps, corrections will be given and if applied will lead to greater joy and self expression. I like to give the analogy that if you have a piano and you sit down at it and play "chop sticks", how long will it take before you get bored with playing that? You need to learn and get better and broaden your knowledge.

The key is to get the students to have faith in what we are saying and know that if they can understand the correction they will get better.

So how do we do it? How can we get the students to have faith in what we say and love to hear any bit of information we impart to them? How do we go beyond a correction other than to verbalize, demonstrate and then have them do? Go that extra mile to show them that you care. I know in some ways that may sound a bit corny but we have found that it works like a charm every time. Students don't care about how much you know until they know how much you care, especially about them! Eye to eye contact and a smile will go a long way. Sometimes the most challenging students only want to know that someone really does care about them even if they have a funny way of showing it. They are the ones that will really pull our focus and energy. The key is not to let them have it all. Sometimes just having a student have a time out in class will do the trick. If a student has decided that they want to be a problem for the day I will have them in the middle of the class go and sit down and watch for some or all of the class. This sends a pretty strong message and usually is very effective.

No matter what happens I always try to let the student know in some way that I have their best interest in mind. I will not, however, let them get away with behavior that is detrimental to the rest of the class. I will constantly tell my class that they are there to learn, recreational or not! I am there to teach, coach and give constructive criticism. I know some parents just want their child to have fun and don't care about any thing else.

We need to educate these parents to understand that we are teaching more than dance. If a student can learn how to believe in a correction that can be used to help them solve a problem, how many times in their lives will that be used? Promoting coping skills, Halleluiah!

Author

Steve Sirico

Steve Sirico

Originally from Norwalk, Ct, Steve excelled in track and football. He attended the University of Tennessee at Martin on a sports scholarship. Deciding to switch and make his career in the world of dance, he studied initially with Mikki Williams and then in New York with Charles Kelley and Frank Hatchett. He appeared in a number of theatre productions such as Damn Yankees, Guys and Dolls and Mame in New York and around the country and in industrials and television shows. He was contracted to appear as the lead dancer in the Valerie Peters Special a television show filmed in Tampa, Florida. After meeting Angela DValda during the filming they formed the Adagio act of DValda & Sirico appearing in theatres, clubs and on television shows such as David Letterman, Star Search and the Jerry Lewis Telethon. In 1982 they were contracted to Europe and appeared in a variety of shows in Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and Italy before going to London, England where they appeared as Guest Artists for Wayne Sleep (formerly of the Royal Ballet) in his show Dash at the Dominium Theatre. Steve and Angela have owned and directed their dance studio in Fairfield, CT for the past twenty two years and in 2005 added music and vocal classes to their curriculum. Author of his Jazz Dance syllabus and co-author of a Partner syllabus both of which are used for teacher training by Dance Educators of America, Steve continues to adjudicate and teach for major dance organizations. Recently taught at the Interdanz conference in San Jose, Costa Rica, He choreographs for theatres, television and conventions and DValda & Sirico are currently in production choreographing the opening to the National Speakers Association convention on Broadway at the Marriott Marquis for August of 2008. Steve is co-owner and director with his wife, Angela, of the website Dance Teacher Web designed as an online resource for teachers worldwide.

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