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Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Stories from the studio with Megan

 #TuesdayTip

A dance performance requires collaboration and clear communication among many different people. Veterinarians also have to work effectively with people AND animals. JCWK Dance Lab artist Megan shares some of the ways dance has influenced her role as a veterinarian. 






Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Stories from the studio with Cady

#TuesdayTip

Embodying a feeling or idea for a performance develops empathy. JCWK Dance Lab artist Cady shares some of the ways dance has helped her in her role as a mental health therapist. 

How has dance training benefited you outside of the studio? 



Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Auditions and Interviews: "Selling" your story

 "People buy the emotion (of a product)."

Business coaches report that "Stories sell". 

"Selling" always sounded short-sighted to me. But, storytelling - that's fun, engaging, and develops long-term relationships.  

Stories are ways that dancers can demonstrate the ways that our/ their training has prepared us/them for skills necessary in most any job market. Here are a few examples. Modify them to YOUR personal experience. Tell your next employer that the time you've spent in the studio and on the stage sets the groundwork for your success. 

Transferrable Skill 5: Flexibility 

Transferrable Skil 6: Creative Thinking

Transferrable Skill 7: Individual Time Management

Transferrable Skill 8: Attention to Detail


Stories connect the dots. The skills dancers gain in the studio and on stage are not always apparent from a line on a resume. We - dancers, educators, and parents - need to advocate for the benefits of dance training and make clear how dance transfers to an employable skill. 


Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Performance Practice: 4 Wins for your next Employer

 "What are you going to do with that?

Dancers and parents of dancers, has this question ever made you stop short or feel defensive? Have you paused in reflection of all the time and energy you spent on dance training? 

Have you, as a non-dancer, asked this question to someone?

If so, READ ON!

There are documented physical, mental, and social benefits to taking dance classes. But this post is not about them. 

Training in dance has direct, employable benefits for job seekers. Here are four ways dance training is marketable outside of the studio. I use the term "transferrable skill" to build the bridge from dance training to other professional endeavors. 


Transferrable Skill 1: Ability to learn quickly and apply feedback. 

Dance students must immediately repeat physical and artistic movement phrases demonstrated by their instructor. This prepares the brain to take in, apply, and adjust given material quickly. In a job setting, dancers can transfer this competency to the skills of a specific profession. The employer benefits from a dancer's previous training: the dancer is already effective at learning which reduces job-specific training/ comprehension time and increases time focused on the employer's output. 


Transferrable Skill 2: Demonstrated presentation skills.

Dancers train to perform in front of an audience. Dancers are adept at being seen and appearing confident in front of other people. Performance practice and proficiency prepares dancers to address a group of people from center-stage or the center of a conference room. 


Transferrable Skill 3: Collaboration and cooperation to complete a project. 

Even when a dancer is preparing a solo, there is collaboration between the choreographer and dancer. Both need to work together to create the dance, or, in business terms, the final product or project. This is further demonstrated when a dancer is working within a group. The "product" is the performance with a specific process to completion and deadline. The success or completion of the performance provides immediate feedback to the dancers and choreographers. This feedback is then applied to the next product/ performance (see Transferrable Skill 1). 


Transferrable Skill 4: Interpersonal Effectiveness

Beyond just working together is working together well. Psychologists call this "interpersonal effectiveness." It is the ability to build and sustain positive relationships while maintaining a sense of self-awareness and emotional balance. Performance practice teaches dancers to "read a room" and adjust their energetic output accordingly. Slightly harder to describe than Transferrable Skills 1-3, interpersonal effectiveness is a skill that allows dancers to adapt and adjust to a variety of situations with a professional demeanor. 


Hiring a dancer means an organization is getting more than someone who can execute a series of steps. The company is employing someone with years of demonstrated success learning and applying new information, presenting, collaborating, and working well in a group. 

Dancers, parents, and educators can advocate for dance performance practice as valuable, work-ready training.  

So, next time someone asks "what are you going to do with dance?" You can proudly respond, "Anything!" 


Performance practice provides dancers with employable skills.
Alvernia University Dance Company performs my choreography at A Winter Concert, 2024. 


Students in my "Ballet for Athletes" at Alvernia report that dance practice and performance make them more aware of the people around them.