Sending a child to a dance class for the first time can feel disproportionately stressful for parents. We see it weekly — anxious mums and dads at the studio door, trying to read whether their 5-year-old is going to love it or melt down.

This is what to actually expect, what to bring, and how to make the first class go well.
What happens in a typical first class
Warm-up (10 minutes). The coach gets everyone moving — stretches, basic movement to music, getting bodies ready. New students join the back and just follow along. No one is put on the spot.
Foundation skills (20-25 minutes). The coach introduces basic technique appropriate to the age and style. For a 5-year-old in a Creative Movement class, that might be locomotor skills (skipping, jumping, gallop). For an 8-year-old in beginner hip-hop, it might be basic isolations and a short combination.
Combination / routine (15-20 minutes). Students learn or revise a short piece of choreography.
Cool-down + free expression (5 minutes). Stretching plus a moment for kids to dance freely to a chosen song.
Total class length: 45-60 minutes for younger kids; 60-75 minutes for older kids and teens.
What to wear
For younger kids (4-7): Comfortable t-shirt and leggings or shorts. Hair tied back. No jewellery. Bare feet for most styles (we’ll tell you when shoes are needed).
For older kids (8+): Same, but the style sometimes calls for specific shoes — jazz shoes, ballet shoes, sneakers for hip-hop. Most studios let you start with bare feet or socks for the first class and tell you what to buy after.
For teens / adult-style classes: Whatever your daughter feels comfortable moving in. Hair tied. No bulky jewellery.
What to bring
- A reusable water bottle (with name)
- A small towel
- A change of clothes for after, especially in our climate
That’s it. Don’t overprepare. Don’t bring a “dance bag” full of equipment.
How to handle a nervous child
Most kids are nervous in their first dance class. Here’s what works in our experience:
- Walk in with confidence yourself. Kids read parental anxiety. If you’re tense, they will be too.
- Don’t promise it’ll be fun. That sets an expectation that, if not met, feels like a failure. Instead say: “Let’s go see what it’s like. We’ll talk about it after.”
- Stay for the first 5 minutes if the studio allows. Wave goodbye visibly. Don’t sneak out.
- Wait outside the room, not in it. Most kids do better when parents aren’t watching every move.
- Pick her up with curiosity, not pressure. Don’t lead with “did you love it?” Instead: “Tell me what you learned.”
The first class is not the test
Don’t make a final decision based on one class. Most kids need 2-3 sessions to figure out if they like a class — the first one is just orientation. We recommend a trial block of 3-4 classes before deciding whether to commit.
How we make first classes feel safer
At EV Dance, we built our “comforting first class” approach because we kept seeing kids quit dance after a single bad first experience. Every first-time student:
- Gets paired with a buddy in the class
- Is never put in the spotlight in the first session
- Gets the studio’s Dance Journal as a welcome gift — a place to draw, reflect, and feel part of the community from day one
- Has a coach who checks in with them quietly during the class
If your child is on the more anxious end, come visit our studio first before booking a class. We’re happy to do a quiet 10-minute walkthrough.