Intermediate

Feedback

Intermediate Level

Going deeper — techniques and nuances for experienced dancers

Constructive information about your dancing from instructors, partners, or video — the accelerant that turns practice into progress.

Intermediate focus

Expand your feedback sources. Ask trusted practice partners for honest observations. Take workshops with different instructors for fresh perspectives. Film yourself at socials (with permission) and review. When receiving feedback, resist the urge to explain or defend — just listen, try it, and assess for yourself.

Tips

  • The best feedback request is specific: 'How does my frame feel during turns?' gives you better information than 'How was that?'
  • Video is the most honest feedback tool. Film yourself regularly and review without judgment — just observe.
  • After receiving feedback, don't try to fix everything at once. Pick one thing, drill it for a week, then move to the next.

Common mistakes

  • Giving unsolicited feedback on the social floor — this is universally unwelcome
  • Taking all feedback as criticism instead of information
  • Only accepting feedback from people 'above' your level — useful observations come from anywhere

Practice drill

Film yourself dancing one full song at your next social or practice session. Watch it twice: once at normal speed to get the overall impression, once at half speed to spot specific technical issues. Write down the three most important things you notice. Pick one to work on this week.

Related terms