It's All Relative

EP 47: Letting Great Technique Go

17 min · 2 jun 2026
aflevering EP 47: Letting Great Technique Go artwork

Beschrijving

Are your dancers losing months of progress every summer? This episode explores how to preserve dance technique, maintain dancer growth, and start the new season stronger than ever. In this episode of It’s All Relative, Cara tackles a challenge every dance teacher and studio owner knows well: watching dancers reach their highest level of technique at the end of the season, only to spend the first months of the next season rebuilding what was lost. Drawing a powerful comparison between traditional schooling and dance training, Cara explores why dancers often lose momentum during breaks and how studios can create intentional summer dance training strategies that support both recovery and continued growth. This conversation is packed with insights on dance technique retention, summer dance programs, cross-training for dancers, and building a plan that helps dancers maintain strength, turnout, alignment, and technical consistency without increasing the risk of burnout or injury. Cara talked about: * Why dancers often lose technique over the summer and spend the beginning of the season relearning skills they once mastered * The balance between rest, recovery, and maintaining dance technique during off-season training * How strategic summer dance training can prevent setbacks and accelerate dancer progress * Why every studio needs a customized summer training plan based on dancer goals, timelines, and technique gaps * How teachers can use the summer months to prepare dancers for stronger results during the "golden months" of the upcoming season 3 Summer Strategy Tips from Cara: 1. Identify the specific techniques and skills most likely to decline during the break and prioritize maintaining them throughout the summer. 2. Create a focused training strategy instead of trying to improve everything at once during summer classes and intensives. 3. Use cross-training, restorative movement, strength training, and targeted technique work to maintain progress while allowing the body to recover. This episode is a reminder that summer does not have to be a season of lost progress. With the right strategy, dancers can maintain the technique, strength, and body awareness they've worked so hard to build throughout the year. Rather than spending the fall rebuilding old skills, teachers can help dancers arrive prepared, confident, and ready to reach new levels of growth from day one. — Connect with us! 🎧 Relative Motion: https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/ [https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/]Youtube Relative Motion: https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion [https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion]

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Alle afleveringen

51 afleveringen

aflevering Ep 50: Amplifying Your Impact: The Influence You Don't Realize You're Having artwork

Ep 50: Amplifying Your Impact: The Influence You Don't Realize You're Having

Your dancers may forget your corrections, but they'll never forget the example you set. In this episode, I'm diving into a powerful truth that every dance teacher, studio owner, and leader needs to hear: your greatest influence has very little to do with the combinations you teach or the corrections you give. As teachers, we often focus on technique, training, and performance outcomes. But dancers are learning just as much, if not more, from the way we handle stress, speak about ourselves, respond to challenges, and treat the people around us. This conversation is a reminder that our impact extends far beyond dance training. Every day, we're shaping mindsets, habits, beliefs, and culture. The question is: what are we teaching when we're not teaching? Cara talked about: * Why dancers learn more from who we are than from the technical skills we teach * How our attitudes, habits, and responses become examples dancers naturally adopt * The impact of our language and why words can shape a dancer's identity * How studio culture is built through the behaviors we allow, model, and reinforce * Why the strongest studios develop standards that continue even when the teacher isn't in the room Key Tips: * Model the behaviors and mindset you want your dancers to develop * Replace labels with language that promotes ownership and growth * Be mindful of how you talk about your body, challenges, mistakes, and success * Create a culture where accountability, positivity, and commitment become the norm * Evaluate the environments, leaders, and influences surrounding your dancers Long after dancers forget the choreography, they'll remember how you made them feel. They'll remember your energy. Your standards. Your example. The way you handled challenges. The way you treated people. Your greatest legacy won't be the technique you taught. It will be the person your dancers become because they spent time learning from you. — Connect with us! 🎧 Relative Motion: https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/ [https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/]Youtube Relative Motion: https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion [https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion]

23 jun 202621 min
aflevering EP 49: The Cost of Criticism artwork

EP 49: The Cost of Criticism

Could criticism be the very thing holding your dancers back? This episode explores how the way we give feedback can either build belief or create barriers to growth. In Episode 49 of It's All Relative, Cara Dixon explores The Cost of Criticism and how the way we communicate with dancers directly impacts confidence, growth, motivation, and studio culture. From social media commentary to in-studio corrections, Cara examines how criticism in dance education can either inspire growth or create barriers that hold dancers back from reaching their full potential. This episode is packed with insights on constructive feedback, positive dance teaching, dance teacher communication, and creating an environment where dancers feel challenged, encouraged, and empowered to grow. Cara talked about: * How criticism and personal bias can impact dancer confidence and studio culture * The difference between objective truth and personal perspective when evaluating dancers * Why social media criticism is influencing the way feedback is delivered in dance education * How focusing on dancer potential creates stronger growth than focusing on dancer limitations * The role of encouragement, belief, and intentional cueing in effective dance teaching 3 Key Takeaways from Cara: 1. Separate your perspective from the dancer's reality and avoid turning assumptions into facts. 2. Replace criticism with specific, actionable feedback that helps dancers understand how to improve. 3. Focus on identifying and developing potential rather than labeling dancers by their current struggles. If this conversation resonated with you and you're ready to elevate your teaching, join us at RM Live 2026, where dance educators from around the world come together to learn, grow, and transform the way they teach. Learn more at www.therelativemotionexperience.com/rmlive2026 [http://www.therelativemotionexperience.com/rmlive2026]. — Connect with us! 🎧 Relative Motion: https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/ [https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/]Youtube Relative Motion: https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion [https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion]

16 jun 202619 min
aflevering EP 48: The Magic Happens When Teachers Gather Together artwork

EP 48: The Magic Happens When Teachers Gather Together

What if a few small shifts in your teaching could dramatically increase student growth, confidence, and engagement? This episode introduces a groundbreaking tool designed to help dance teachers teach for transformation. In this episode of It’s All Relative, Cara welcomes back mindset coach, dance educator, author, and former professional dancer Gina Pero for an inspiring conversation about leadership, coaching, and the future of dance education. As a featured presenter at RM Live, Gina shares insights from her groundbreaking Teaching for Transformation (TFT) Assessment, a tool designed to help dance teachers identify their strengths, uncover growth opportunities, and create a greater impact in the classroom. Together, Cara and Gina explore how dance teacher development, student growth, mindset coaching, and transformational teaching can help educators move beyond simply teaching dance technique and begin truly transforming lives. Cara and Gina talked about: * The difference between teaching dance steps and teaching for transformation * How the Teaching for Transformation (TFT) Assessment helps teachers improve their impact and effectiveness * Why coaching skills, active listening, and teacher presence are essential in dance education * How celebrating student growth increases confidence, motivation, and long-term retention * The importance of in-person learning, mentorship, and professional development for dance teachers 3 Key Takeaways from Gina: 1. Small shifts in communication and teaching style can create powerful transformations in student confidence and learning. 2. Teachers grow faster when they have clear feedback, measurable goals, and practical action steps they can implement immediately. 3. Students thrive when teachers intentionally create environments that foster awareness, growth, connection, and success. This episode is a powerful reminder that great dance teachers do more than teach technique. They create experiences that inspire growth, build confidence, and help students discover what they're truly capable of. By combining strong teaching practices with transformational coaching principles, educators can create lasting impact both inside and outside the studio. Connect with Gina: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ginajpero?utm_source=qr [https://www.instagram.com/ginajpero?utm_source=qr]Website: Www.ginapero.com [http://www.ginapero.com]Www.5678coachingacademy.com For Inquiries to be in touch with Gina : https://book.ginapero.com/connection?utm_source=ig&utm_medium=social&utm_content=link_in_bio — Connect with us! 🎧 Relative Motion: https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/ [https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/]Youtube Relative Motion: https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion [https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion]

9 jun 202627 min
aflevering EP 47: Letting Great Technique Go artwork

EP 47: Letting Great Technique Go

Are your dancers losing months of progress every summer? This episode explores how to preserve dance technique, maintain dancer growth, and start the new season stronger than ever. In this episode of It’s All Relative, Cara tackles a challenge every dance teacher and studio owner knows well: watching dancers reach their highest level of technique at the end of the season, only to spend the first months of the next season rebuilding what was lost. Drawing a powerful comparison between traditional schooling and dance training, Cara explores why dancers often lose momentum during breaks and how studios can create intentional summer dance training strategies that support both recovery and continued growth. This conversation is packed with insights on dance technique retention, summer dance programs, cross-training for dancers, and building a plan that helps dancers maintain strength, turnout, alignment, and technical consistency without increasing the risk of burnout or injury. Cara talked about: * Why dancers often lose technique over the summer and spend the beginning of the season relearning skills they once mastered * The balance between rest, recovery, and maintaining dance technique during off-season training * How strategic summer dance training can prevent setbacks and accelerate dancer progress * Why every studio needs a customized summer training plan based on dancer goals, timelines, and technique gaps * How teachers can use the summer months to prepare dancers for stronger results during the "golden months" of the upcoming season 3 Summer Strategy Tips from Cara: 1. Identify the specific techniques and skills most likely to decline during the break and prioritize maintaining them throughout the summer. 2. Create a focused training strategy instead of trying to improve everything at once during summer classes and intensives. 3. Use cross-training, restorative movement, strength training, and targeted technique work to maintain progress while allowing the body to recover. This episode is a reminder that summer does not have to be a season of lost progress. With the right strategy, dancers can maintain the technique, strength, and body awareness they've worked so hard to build throughout the year. Rather than spending the fall rebuilding old skills, teachers can help dancers arrive prepared, confident, and ready to reach new levels of growth from day one. — Connect with us! 🎧 Relative Motion: https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/ [https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/]Youtube Relative Motion: https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion [https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion]

2 jun 202617 min
aflevering Ep 46: What Teachers Are Missing When They Cue Alignment artwork

Ep 46: What Teachers Are Missing When They Cue Alignment

Why do alignment corrections still fall flat even when dancers are trying their hardest? This episode uncovers what teachers are missing when cueing alignment in dance training. In this episode of It’s All Relative, Cara Dixon dives deep into one of the biggest struggles in dance education and dance technique training: why dancers continue to miss alignment corrections even after hearing them repeatedly. From “engage your core” to “lift up” and “square your hips,” Cara explains why broad corrections often create frustration instead of transformation. This episode breaks down how alignment in dance is not just a shape, but a full coordination system involving stabilization, muscular initiation, weight transfer, and body awareness. Cara shares how visual anatomy, directional cueing, and movement coordination can dramatically improve dancer understanding, retention, and technical consistency. Whether you’re a dance teacher, studio owner, or competitive dancer, this episode will change the way you approach dance corrections and alignment training. Cara talked about: * Why generic dance corrections create generic dance training results * How dancers interpret alignment cues differently without visual and anatomical understanding * Why alignment is a coordination system, not just a final shape or position * The role of muscular coordination, stabilization, and weight transfer in strong dance technique * How visual learning and anatomy-based dance training improve correction retention and dancer confidence 3 Key Takeaways from Cara: 1. Replace broad dance corrections with specific, directional language that helps dancers truly feel the movement 2. Ask dancers to identify their own compensations so they build stronger body awareness and technical understanding 3. Use visual references whenever possible to help dancers connect corrections to their own body and movement patterns This episode is a reminder that dancers cannot apply corrections they do not fully understand. When teachers shift from broad cues to visual, anatomical, and coordination-based training, dancers gain clarity, confidence, and consistency in their technique. Strong alignment is not about forcing a shape, it’s about creating coordinated movement patterns that dancers can repeat with control, awareness, and strength. — Connect with us! 🎧 Relative Motion: https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/ [https://www.instagram.com/relativemotiondance/]Youtube Relative Motion: https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion [https://www.youtube.com/@relative_motion]

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