AcademyDance Floor CultureDrillIntermediate
Intermediate

Drill

Intermediate Level

Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers

A focused, repetitive exercise designed to train a specific skill until it becomes automatic — the bridge between learning a move and owning it.

Intermediate focus

Your drills should now target specific weaknesses. Can't lead a smooth turn? Drill the hand signal in isolation, then add the step, then add the follower. Struggling with body waves? Break it into chest, core, hips — drill each section separately, then chain them. Record yourself and compare to instructors for form check.

Tips

  • Set a timer. Five minutes of focused drilling is better than thirty minutes of distracted half-practice.
  • The best drill for any movement is the simplest version that isolates the skill. Strip away everything except the core element.
  • Drill in front of a mirror when working on movement quality. Drill without a mirror when working on feel and internal awareness.

Common mistakes

  • Drilling at full speed before the movement is correct at slow speed — you're just practicing mistakes faster
  • Skipping drills because they're not as fun as dancing — they're the most efficient use of practice time
  • Drilling the same thing you're already good at instead of targeting your actual weaknesses

Practice drill

Choose your weakest technique in bachata right now. Create a 3-minute drill that isolates just that element. Do it daily for one week. At the end of the week, test it in a social dance context. You'll be surprised how much changes with focused repetition.

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