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Lifeafterballet

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Everything posted by Lifeafterballet

  1. My daughter graduated with a Level 6 Trinity Diploma and 2 A levels and had DaDa funding. She is now in her 3rd year of her University Degree with funding for tuition fees and a maintenance. So the answer is yes. Good luck šŸ˜Š
  2. Dar Danse, Wellsaway. I believe that Francesca Filpi moved her teaching to Cadiz in Spain. Not sure if itā€™s still running. Dar Danse in Morocco was amazing šŸ¤©
  3. My husband refused to pay when Dd got a place and it was Ā£550 then. He said it was a very expensive audition šŸ¤£ Save your money, you will need it for all the auditions later.
  4. Estonian National Ballet run a summer intensive for Professional and pre professional and have just added a youth section too. There is accommodation provided and the classes are held in the opera house studios where the company train. We havenā€™t done it personally but Iā€™m sure someone else can give feedback.
  5. So so pleased that your daughter is loving life after ballet. I totally get the part that she harbours no bitterness or regret for her time at BS. My daughter was also physically and mentally damaged by ballet and it has taken time for her to reflect and heal but she too holds no bitterness. Itā€™s a wonderful quality to just let it go. But as you say itā€™s more difficult for us parents. Iā€™m not bitter, I just wish I had done some things differently.
  6. My inbox might be full. Iā€™ll change that šŸ˜Š Bear with ā€¦
  7. We were told by my daughters ballet school that the DaDa is a totally separate pot of money from student finance and that she would not be limited in her choice of degree subjects because of it. This was one of the reasons she opted to stay on at that particular school for 6th form and not go to a degree one. She didnā€™t want dance to be the only degree she ever had as it was always her intention to change pathway completely. My son is currently a professional ballet dancer in Europe with the same qualifications and was DaDa funded too. In the country he is in, degrees are free to all EU passport holders and for those that are not they average about Ā£3000 a year for tuition fees. Thatā€™s a third cheaper than the debt his sister is running up šŸ¤£ He not coming back to the U.K. to study.
  8. She had an MDS for lower school and DaDa for Upper. I know lots of children who graduated and went on to study at University with funding. The DaDa doesnā€™t affect eligibility for a funded degree. My belief is that if you have gone on to study the second part of the Trinity Diploma that turns it into a degree then it does.
  9. BSc in Sport Rehabilitation. Itā€™s not classed as Healthcare and she doesnā€™t get the Ā£5,000 per year bursary that the Physiotherapy, Nursing etc students get. She always talked of wanting to go to University post ballet and Covid just made it happen quicker. It proved to be a god send really and letting ballet go was the best decision she ever made.
  10. My daughter is currently in her final year of her BSc after graduating from a ballet school with 2 A levels and a Level 6 Trinity Diploma in Professional Dance. She was DaDa funded and she also had no trouble accessing a student loan for tuition fees and a maintenance grant šŸ˜Š
  11. I wonder if this is the same teacher that was at YBSS and only acknowledged the pupils from her school šŸ¤”
  12. Luke Jennings described ballet as a ā€œcultā€ and I am in total agreement. Its not only the child that gets pulled into that world but the parents too. And, in my experience and the mum of two children who attended a school in the Panorama program, the more successful your child is deemed to be, the more blinded you are to the reality of what is happening and you start trying to justify and defend behaviours that are hurtful and damaging. Itā€™s only when you and your child leave that world that the fog clears and you acknowledge the failings. But by then itā€™s too late to address the issues and you walk either bitterly away or quietly make peace with it. The Panorama program for us brought a lot of buried feelings to the surface as Iā€™m sure it did for many past pupils and parents.
  13. It does all depend on the Degree that the student with only 2 A levels is applying for. My daughter, and others in her year group, were very successful with University offers after A levels. Itā€™s hard work to manage 2 A Levels, a Trinity Diploma and full time vocational ballet training. I canā€™t really see how you could do 3 šŸ˜… Something would have to give.
  14. Body shaming from teachers / adults is unacceptable and damaging but more prevalent from a childā€™s peers in my experience. Ballet students are not only under intense scrutiny of the teachers and themselves but from each other. Being judged, gossiped about, isolated and shunned is devastating. Snide comments about weight, your peers not wanting to stand next to you at the bar or in the centre or go to lunch with you. Their fear that you will ā€˜triggerā€™ them. Being the ā€˜thinnestā€™ girl, the one who the teacher singles out that they can have a donut and will stand a better chance of getting a contract, isnā€™t all itā€™s cracked up to be. Itā€™s lonely šŸ˜ž Im sad that wasnā€™t talked about in the documentary.
  15. Elmhurst employed a Registered Mental Health Nurse in one of these young ladies graduating year. So only one ex student on this documentary had access to that kind of support and by then it would have been too late. Prior to that the Medical Centre was run by a General Nurse.
  16. Not at all. The first time we went to YAGP Paris was on a scholarship that was offered at the Cecchetti International Ballet Competition which my daughter was entered into by her vocational school. They werenā€™t very happy about it but we went. Then when she made NY Finals there was nothing, no support, advise, coaching, help with costumes etc. The opportunities she was offered there and went too were classed originally as unauthorised leave until we took it up with the principal. Already being on the naughty list šŸ¤£ we went again in graduate year, we love Paris, and got some fabulous footage of her solos which she used for her company applications. At the time the school offered no help at all with filming. The students did it all themselves in the studio at the weekends with an iPhone and tripod. But that wasnā€™t allowed either šŸ˜ due to health and safety. Travelling to different countries and meeting new people are the happiest memories we have of her vocational school time.
  17. She also did 2 weeks at Houston Ballet Academy. Invitation from YAGP. This was during their term time. She stayed with the full time students in the accommodation which is in the same building as the studios. She found it very restrictive being inside 24/7. It wasnā€™t for her. Again though she made some lovely friends, 3 of which she met up with recently when she visited her brother at his ballet company in Europe. Itā€™s a small world really šŸ˜Š
  18. My daughter did a summer intensive at The Harid Conservatory in Boca Raton, Florida. She won a scholarship to attend at YAGP finals in New York. A couple of days after she had flown home we received an email offering her a year round place with a scholarship. It would have worked out considerably cheaper than her DaDa in the U.K. but we gave her the choice and she decided to stay at her ballet school. Good job she did as the A levels she took came in very handy when Covid hit in her graduate year and she decided to go to University. She made some wonderful friends and got an insight into training abroad. Harid select a lot of their students through their intensive.
  19. Most probably as a result of her poor diet, she developed hormone problems and did not menstruate until a doctor intervened and put her on the pill at age 24. The pill is not the answer sadly šŸ˜ž Missing those teenage development milestones is hugely detrimental to bone density and fertility. All the bone health supplements in the world wonā€™t repair the damage, just hopefully stop it getting any worse. Just like with this dancer, Covid saved my daughter from continuing to harm her body and start on her recovery journey. This should be taught and talked about openly in our vocational schools.
  20. Most U.K. upper schools offer the Trinity Diploma in Professional Dance level 6. It is completed over the duration of the 3 years and is 18 months of a degree that can be topped up later. Both my children did it. It sounds better than it is. The dissertation they submitted in 6:3 didnā€™t even have to be referenced šŸ˜³ Now Dd is at University we realise that it wasnā€™t particularly of a high standard. Thatā€™s just our opinion, others may disagree šŸ˜Š
  21. Ā£500 entry fee šŸ«Ø Then travel and accommodation in London šŸ˜¢
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