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Beginner

Check

Beginner Level

The foundation — what every new dancer needs to know

A check is a sudden stop-and-redirect that says 'not that way — THIS way' — the exclamation point of partner communication.

Beginner focus

Start alone: step forward with your right foot, but don't transfer your weight fully. Instead, catch yourself on that step and push back to your left foot. Feel the 'bounce' quality — forward and immediately back. The key is keeping your core engaged so your whole body stops, not just your feet. Now try this side to side: step right, check, step left, check.

Tips

  • Think of a check like pressing the brake in a car — firm but smooth. You don't want to slam the brakes; you want decisive deceleration.
  • Practice checks with music off, then add music. Feel the mechanical quality first, then apply it to musical accents.
  • Film yourself doing checks from the side. The sharpest checks show zero forward drift after the stop point.

Common mistakes

  • Making the check too soft — it should be crisp and decisive, not a gradual slowdown
  • Losing balance on the check because the core isn't engaged to handle the direction change
  • Checking too hard with the partner, creating an uncomfortable jolt instead of a clean redirect

Practice drill

Dance a basic step and add one check every 8 counts on a different count each time. Check on 1, then on 2, then on 3, and so on. This trains you to place checks at any point in the musical phrase. With a partner, play 'check conversation': the leader checks, the follower responds with their own check. Back and forth like a rhythmic dialogue.

Related terms