Demo & Practice
Intermediate Level
Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers
The class format where the instructor demonstrates a technique or pattern, then students practice it with partners — the backbone of every bachata class.
Intermediate focus
Watch the demo with analytical eyes: where is the connection point? What's the timing? Where does the leader initiate? During practice, give yourself permission to fail and try again. If a movement isn't working, don't just repeat the broken version — stop, discuss with your partner, and troubleshoot. Use practice time as real practice, not performance.
Tips
- •Position yourself where you can see both the front and the mirror during demos. Different angles reveal different details.
- •During practice, do the movement at half speed first. Speed is the last thing you add, not the first.
- •If the instructor is circulating and you're struggling, raise your hand or make eye contact. Don't suffer in silence.
Common mistakes
- •Talking during the demo and missing key details
- •Practicing at full speed before understanding the movement at slow tempo
- •Not switching partners when the instructor calls for rotation
Practice drill
In your next class, try this: during each demo, identify the single most important element (the connection point, the timing, the weight shift). During practice, focus only on that one element until it clicks, then add the rest. This focused approach builds stronger skills than trying to replicate everything at once.