User:Karel Jeřabina

Dance school



Dance school is a course where different types or styles of dance are taught. Instructors are led by dance masters who perform dance artists. Most of the courses are organized by a dance school, which also leads couples for sports dance. Apart from the dance master, lectures are also attended by assistants and assistants - most often racing dancers of the given school or graduates of higher levels of dance. It also includes social behavior education, food and etiquette.

They are mostly organized for high school students, there are also courses for adults and seniors. Pre-Dance and Social Education courses are held for 8th and 9th grade students. Applicants take a basic course (usually in autumn) for advanced (continuation) lessons and other levels (specials, super specials, experimentalks- speciálky, super speciálky, experimentálky- in czech) to discuss more complex figures, techniques, leadership and more demanding dances. While basic courses are mass events and dance couples alternate several times within an hour, stable couples are already dancing at higher levels.

In addition to regular lessons, the course also includes social evenings with extended names and wreaths (half columns and slides). In the final lesson, the girls are dressed in white formal dresses that refer to the historical tradition of debutants when the young lady was introduced to society at her first ball. At all other lessons, participants are dressed in casual formal attire. The course fee is paid.

The accompanying girls of girls (mostly mothers) are labeled as gardeams, hence the name of their garden card. For extended and final lessons it is possible (often necessary) to buy tickets and they are open to the public. The culmination of basic dance courses is traditionally dancing with parents at the final lesson.

Dance courses have been held in the Czech lands since 1830. This tradition persists in the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Poland. Partly also in Austria, Germany, where it is no longer an event for the general public. Courses are developing, in addition to standard dances, also offer modern and unconventional, somewhere for boys do not require white gloves. In 2009, 35% of the population attended courses, while in 2013 it was 41%. Dance graduation is appropriate with regard to the related tradition of graduation ball. In the European environment, at least basic dance skills are taken as part of general education and, of course, in the middle and upper classes.

Lessons taught include mazurka, polka, waltz, tango, blues,cha-cha, jive, foxtrot, rumba, samba, letkis and also rock and roll