Seven Virtual-Learning Victories Worth Bringing Back to the Classroom
November 25, 2020

Zoom classes have created a host of challenges to overcome, but this new way of learning has also had some surprising perks. Students and educators are becoming more adaptable. Creativity is blossoming even amid space constraints. Dancers have been able to broaden their horizons without ever leaving home.

In short, in a year filled with setbacks, there is still a lot to celebrate. Dance Teacher spoke to four teachers about the virtual victories they’ve seen thus far and how they hope to keep the momentum going back in the classroom.


1. Respecting the Basics

Like many ballet instructors, Kate Crews Linsley, academy principal at the School of Nashville Ballet, designed her remote classes to home in on foundational elements like stance, alignment and connection of the eyes to the port de bras. Now that her dancers have returned to the studio, they’re reaping the benefits of spending so much time focused on these details.

Linsley says there’s also been a mindset shift: an increased willingness to pause and figure something out before moving forward. “On Zoom, because we couldn’t do all of center, we could take our time at barre,” she says. “The kids saw that it’s great to ask questions—to make sure that they really understand the principles of each movement. Everything in ballet builds into something else. Going back to basics is not going backwards.”

2. Fostering Creativity

“Since the start of the pandemic, my class content has been driven toward imagination,” says Dana Wilson, who teaches jazz for New York City Dance Alliance, among other organizations. For example, she might ask students to picture themselves dancing on a beach. “We’re all tired of our living rooms,” she jokes—but the exercise is about more than an escape from reality. “Taking ownership of the element of imagination helps you develop a creative identity and makes you intrinsically more interesting to watch,” Wilson says. “I want imagination to be a baseline, no matter the style.” When dancing at home instead of in a room full of peers, students can feel safer experimenting. Then, the next time they’re asked to call on their creativity in person, they’ll be ready to shine.

3. No Hiding in the Back

For choreographer Al Blackstone, who teaches theater dance at Broadway Dance Center and Steps on Broadway in addition to working with young students at Downtown Dance Factory in Tribeca, one benefit of Zoom is that it puts every dancer on equal display. “Kids that tended to hide in the back of the room suddenly weren’t able to do that,” he says. From the start of virtual classes, Blackstone made it a point to frequently call out names and give specific feedback, so everyone felt seen. As the months passed, “I saw progress in leaps and bounds,” he says. His DDF students have returned to the studio, and while he admits they aren’t all rushing to the front row, “they are making bolder choices,” he says. “They’re more willing to stand out. Dancers who were meeker are more confident, and that’s a blessing.”

4. Committing to Conditioning

As Linsley and her staff were tweaking their curriculum for Zoom last spring, they built in extra cross-training: yoga, Pilates, floor barre, even high-intensity interval training for stamina. “We wanted to make sure that their fitness was still there when we came back to the studio,” Linsley says, “but we didn’t want kids to do it on their own.” Thanks to this strategy, teachers were able to smoothly guide students back into the rigors of in-person classes, despite the new roadblock of dancing in a mask. Stretch and conditioning offerings will be a permanent part of the School of Nashville Ballet academy’s syllabus going forward.

5. Dancing On Camera

Dance films have become a mainstay during the shutdown months, but even in normal times, dancers can benefit from camera training. That’s why Wilson has been using her Zoom sessions to teach film terminology and to get dancers comfortable with performing for a camera rather than an audience. “I’ll say ‘camera right’ instead of ‘stage left,'” she explains. “I’ll ask them to have only their head and shoulders in the frame by this eight-count. You have to think from the device’s perspective instead of your own, which takes some rewiring.” The Zoom grid allows dancers to see whether they’re hitting their marks correctly in real time. For students who hope to go pro, especially in the commercial realm, this aspect of virtual class is a major bright side—and proves there’s a market for dedicated dance-for-camera classes in the future.

6. Increasing Access and Opportunity

When anyone can log on from anywhere, training with big-name teachers is much more accessible. But that’s just the tip of the digital iceberg. At Center Stage Performing Arts Studio in Orem, Utah, students came back in person before many of their coaches were able to travel. So, the school has hosted virtual master classes as well as virtual private coaching on site. “We have a big movie screen,” says Kim DelGrosso, Center Stage’s artistic director. “It’s almost like the teacher is in the room.”

At the School of Nashville Ballet, students have been able to Zoom-chat with luminaries like Kathryn Morgan and Marianela Nuñez, and Linsley hopes to schedule more virtual conversations with pros. “To have someone at a top level sit down and share their story—that’s a connection we shouldn’t let go of,” Linsley says. “It’s one thing to watch someone dance, but to get to ask them questions and hear their struggles is precious.”

7. Encouraging Discipline and Drive

Without hands-on instruction, “dancers have to take ownership of their own training,” says DelGrosso. “They have to self-correct. It’s their responsibility not to cheat the movement.” That sense of discipline will serve them well—if they can hold on to it. Luckily, Linsley points out, the dancers who stuck with remote learning despite it being less than ideal tended to be extremely driven. “So many of our students said, ‘I don’t care where it is or what’s happening, I’ll show up. I want to perfect this tendu because it’s important to me,'” she says.

Blackstone feels that pushing through Zoom’s technical difficulties may have also helped dancers come to appreciate their art form even more. “Anyone who’s still taking class at home by themselves has to ask ‘Do I really want to do this?'” he says. “The people who’ve kept at it have found a renewed sense of purpose. They do it because they truly love it.”