Around age 9-11, many dance students in Singapore hit a fork in the road. The studio offers a “competitive” or “advanced” or “performance team” track alongside the regular classes. Parents face a decision they often don’t have great information for.

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Here’s the honest read from coaching kids on both tracks at EV Dance for 17 years.

What “competitive track” actually means

In Singapore studio context, “competitive track” usually means: – 2-3 additional weekly classes beyond regular recreational classes – Compulsory weekend rehearsals during competition prep periods – Travel for competitions (mostly local, sometimes regional) – Higher fees (S$200-500/month above standard) – Competition costumes, hair, makeup costs – Coach selection of who’s in vs out for each performance

What it doesn’t always mean: meaningful technical advancement. Some studios use “competitive track” as an upsell for keen families without delivering proportionally better coaching. Ask specifically what’s different about the coaching, not just the schedule.

What “recreational track” actually means

Standard term enrolment. Weekly class. Year-end recital. Lower time commitment, lower cost. Some studios have term-end mini-performances; others don’t.

This is the right place for ~70% of dance students. Truly. It’s not a lesser path — it’s the right path for kids whose primary relationship with dance is “I love coming to class,” not “I need to compete.”

When recreational track is the right call

Stay on recreational if:

A recreational dancer who stays for 8 years gets enormous developmental benefit. She doesn’t need to compete to “be a real dancer.”

When competitive track makes sense

Move to competitive if:

The right indicator is her sustained pull toward more, not your wish for her to want more.

What schools care about

For DSA-Dance applications, schools want to see: – Sustained CCA participation – SYF / competition exposure (not necessarily winning — just having shown up) – A clean audition piece

Competitive track helps with the second one — but only if it’s a track that actually performs and competes, not just trains.

For non-DSA paths, recreational track is fully sufficient. No top school refuses a candidate because she “only” did recreational dance.

How to switch tracks later

Studios will (or should) let kids: – Move up to competitive if they show readiness – Move down to recreational if competitive isn’t working

If a studio resists a downward move (“but she’s so promising!”), that’s about studio retention, not your kid. Push back.

What we do at EV Dance

Our recreational track and competitive track (“EV Elites”) share faculty — same coaches, same studios, different intensity. Kids can: – Start recreational, move into Elites at 10-12 if they want – Drop from Elites back to recreational without drama if it stops working – Be in Elites for one style and recreational for another

We deliberately don’t pressure recreational families to upgrade. We’d rather have a happy 8-year recreational dancer than an unhappy 2-year competitive one.

A specific anti-pattern to avoid

If your daughter is doing well at recreational and the studio coach starts hinting your daughter “could do so much more” if she joined competitive — that’s a sales pitch, not always sound advice. Ask: 1. What specifically would she gain? 2. Is the additional 4-6 hours/week realistic for our family? 3. Would she still enjoy dance with that intensity? 4. Can we trial competitive track for one term before committing?

Good studios welcome these questions. Bad studios deflect them.

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Talk to us about your daughter’s specific situation.