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Balletmummy18

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  1. As others have said , you know your child best and in my dd year some thrived and loved WL and others did not ( including my dd.) I’ll just add on the toilet issue the memorable day when the toilet fell down on my dd friend in year 9! Luckily she caught it with super strength only ballet dancers seem to have 🤣. I believe the toilets have been updated since …
  2. Yes that was indeed the case - she gained full turnout as she went up the school. She is not hyper mobile and nor did she have banana feet or sway backs when she gained her place … she did and does have extraordinary strength and very long Achilles’ tendons.
  3. My dd did not have 180 turnout when she got a place in yr 7 at WL.
  4. Yep there is wifi and they get a password etc to use it.. but it does depend on where u r in school for strength( toilets always worked!!) so would top up account to be on safe side .
  5. Well it’s a long time ago since my dd was there but she also started at level 1 …& it was her first taste of anything associate.. it was a real shock on the first Saturday how along the ballet class was and she did do the rep class too..newer parents can tell you if it’s changed …. It was quite strict and old fashioned but The progress she made in a a year was astounding and she very quickly got used to the long day.It was totally the best prep for WL in terms class teacher attitude compared with other associate schemes ( including JAs)and 6 years on she really values her experience there- said one of best things she did- funny enough 3 of her WL year came from there.She also made some good friends there too!Hope your child enjoys it too.
  6. There’s no guarantee that an Aub Jensen contract will lead to full artist contract… in these hard times as graduate if you have the choice between full artist and an apprentice - you def choose the artist contract … especially if the choice is between RB and BRB.
  7. Last year’s performance was filmed and then only parents were allowed access to it afterwards as it was a ‘Covid ‘year and only year 11 from WL appeared alongside the upper school . Perhaps the school wish to do the same this year ? Certainly at ENBS performance this year was also filmed but only staff will be allowed to view.
  8. Sarah has been amazing for my dd throughout her journey at WL and now at ENBS and can only endorse her as a very, very special teacher. Her exceptional teaching is matched by her wonderful sense of humour and her experience of the ballet world both at vocational level and in company - can’t sing praises too highly as she literally saved my dd sanity during her WL years . She also has marvellous sense of perspective about this industry - we consider ourselves very lucky to have found her ( through this forum many years ago!) 🤣
  9. This Definitely happened with my dd in yr 7 etc at WL -and yep very very glad she escaped by ‘ failing ‘ to get into upper school to a far more nurturing environment in ENBS where she loves again to dance and has a chance to heal the long term damage . It’s funny lots of people used to tell me that her experience would toughen her up for the ‘real world of ballet ‘- suffice to say I cannot wait until she leaves the ballet world ….
  10. Judging the academics of school especially a ballet school is fraught with danger purely because the context can change so much from year to year . In my dd case she went to WL for 5 years …the GSCE choice was limited and devoting several hours each day to dance meant of course that the quantity of academic hours suffered . But at the time she had some amazing teachers who expected students to the same amount of work as ‘ normal’ secondary school . She completed GSCE Further Maths in the evening taught voluntarily by the Maths teacher on prep duty Completing numerous weekly assessments /mocks last year due to Covid to prove her attainment for her GSCEs whilst rehearsing long hours for her end of year performance was very challenging . WL is a ballet school first and academic school second .and we knew that when she went there in Year 7. Yet small classes and outstanding teaching at the time meant she left with the highest GCSE grades in all her subjects. Btw She was a hard worker rather than an academic natural Ironically she had a horrendous time artistically and yet ,when we look back at her 5 years there, her academic achievement is something we felt she would not have achieved in her old school . But ( and it’s a big but) most of her academic teachers have moved on so just a year later I now have no idea of the standards there so would hesitate to judge academics now - even as a secondary school teacher . I would also add that the academic requirement at upper schools is still quite rigorous… ( something that we barely thought about whilst dd was at lower school ) …a foundation degree / diploma in ballet with the associated academic work can be very challenging for a 16 year old straight from GCSEs…
  11. Thankyou -the AD meant by 'no performance opportunities' that she was put at the back by the wings or not chosen for some dances . It caused some problems as she would by chosen by the teacher or choreographer to perform a solo /be at the front and then would be removed when the AD watched. I naively thought as a Year 7 parent , that if she was was disliked by the AD Or not the right fit for the image of the school , she would simply be asked to leave at the end of year 9 . The trauma from her experience, being 'the football 'in a staff politics during year 10 and 11 has had long term effect on her self esteem, confidence and mental health - I would not wish that on any child or family.
  12. As a parent of dd who was told at the and of yr 9 that the AD felt she had no future in classical ballet and would not go on to upper school at the end of year 11 but she was not being assessed out .( it transpired the rest of the assessment panel strongly disagreed with this opinion) We were given 1 week to decide whether she wanted to stay on as she was told she would be given little / no performance opportunities- I just wanted to say that the assessing out process/ end of programme is not as straightforward as it appears .There was no indication 3 years ago that it was a new start for a new phase in 10/11 and the AD was true to his word regarding lack of opportunities and upper school . It was hugely traumatic for my dd at 13 to hear his opinion and confusing for her to be allowed to stay on after the assessment…she felt like a total failure especially given the naturally competitive environment of the school. I hope this is a unique experience - no other person in her year had this meeting and I desperately hope that the new programme will be transparent and accountable to stop this from ever happening again. (incidentally she chose to stay and gained a place at another prestigious upper school at the end of year 11)
  13. Ah brings back happy memories of watching it at Milton Keynes with Adam Maskell as Carabosse etc with friends in the front row along with my 8 year old dd. We had no idea about the content as not really dance/ ballet fans then… just remember my friends quietly putting her hand over my daughters eyes at certain points 😬😂🤣… it certainly had an impact as 3 years later daughter went off to WL! She’s now in1 st year at ENBS ..and yes I have been given strict instructions to get tickets for Sadler Wells in December….😂
  14. I found this topic quite interesting as my dd was told to start pointe at 9 - horrified , I changed dance schools for her … only to be approached by her associate teacher of a very well known respected programme ,demanding to know why she wasn’t on pointe yet! She went on pointe at just 10…. That was 6 years ago …( btw my dd wasn’t some kind of dancing prodigy just a typical associate) .
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