In Part Two of their conversation on competition culture, Stacey Morgan and Rhee Gold continue exploring how studio owners and teachers can create healthier, more inspiring competition experiences for their dancers.
Building on the themes of mentor, leader, and teacher, this episode focuses on the role teachers play during competition weekends — from the way they speak to their dancers, to the choreography choices they make, to how they react to results.
Rhee and Stacey discuss the importance of professionalism, emotional leadership, and thoughtful choreography that showcases dancers’ strengths rather than exposing their weaknesses. They also address common competition pitfalls, including over-rehearsing in hallways, negative commentary about judges or events, and social media reactions that can damage studio culture.
This conversation is a reminder that competition weekends are about far more than trophies or scores. They are opportunities for dancers to grow, build confidence, and experience the joy of performing — and teachers play a critical role in shaping that experience.
In this episode, Stacey and Rhee discuss:
Why competition weekend should never become a high-stress rehearsal environment
The importance of teachers modeling professionalism and emotional control
How choreography should highlight what dancers do well rather than what they cannot yet execute
The role of language in the classroom and how it impacts dancers’ confidence
Why teachers must be mindful of how they react to judges, results, and competition logistics
The dangers of venting frustrations on social media after a competition weekend
Understanding the subjective nature of dance judging and competition scoring
Why exposing dancers to strong competition ultimately helps them grow
How competition weekends should reinforce community, mentorship, and joy
Rhee closes the episode with a powerful reminder: many teachers once dreamed of sitting in the audience watching their students perform at competitions. The key is remembering that dream and approaching every competition weekend with gratitude, professionalism, and perspective.
Because in the long run, dancers rarely remember the trophies — but they will always remember the mentors who believed in them.

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