From chatter to chassés: DTW Founder Steve Sirico unveils strategies to reclaim focus in modern dance classroom

As dance educators worldwide grapple with a shifting landscape of student behavior and attention spans, Steve Sirico, Founder of Dance Teacher Web and a 38-year industry veteran, is speaking out with a new approach to classroom management.
Dance Teacher Web has just released a featured expert guide titled, “Stop the Chatter: 5 Ways to Reclaim Focus in Your Dance Class,” offering a roadmap to connecting with today’s “digital native” dancers. The guide addresses a growing sentiment among instructors: the traditional “tough love” methods of the past are increasingly ineffective with a generation raised on instant gratification and constant stimulation. Instead of fighting the noise, the guide suggests an evolution toward collaborative teaching that empowers students rather than simply directing them.
“Today’s dancers bring heightened anxieties and sensitivities into the studio,” says Sirico, a veteran studio owner with nearly four decades of experience. “If we want them to stop talking and start dancing, we have to change the narrative. We aren’t just quieting a room; we are meeting students where they are to help them take true ownership of their training.”
The press release highlights five transformative strategies featured in the guide, along with a bonus pro tip:
#1. Structured socialization: Scheduling “60-second shares” to satisfy the student’s need for peer connection without disrupting the flow of class.
#2. Eliminating idle time: The “unrelenting pace” method using pre-set playlists and cold-choreography to ensure there is zero downtime for distractions.
#3. Reframing corrections as gifts: Introducing the “Thank You” habit, a verbal practice that shifts a student’s mindset from defensiveness to receptivity.
#4. Interactive learning: Moving away from “talking at” students and instead using peer-to-peer feedback and analytical questioning.
#5. Student agency: Shifting responsibility to the dancer through self-evaluation and vocalized goals.
*Pro Tip – Stand Proud, Stand Tall: Encourage dancers to physically embody confidence. By prompting them to correct their posture and stand tall, instructors can help them naturally shift their mindset toward focus and discipline, stopping the chatter before it starts.
The guide emphasizes that maintaining high standards does not require an authoritarian style. By validating student feelings and keeping energy high, instructors can transform passive participants into focused, dedicated artists.
“The goal is to turn the studio into a space where students feel seen and respected,” Sirico adds. “When they feel like stakeholders in their own progress, the chatter naturally turns back into chassés.”
The full guide, providing in-depth tactical advice for dance educators and studio owners, is now available on Dance Teacher Web. Read the full guide here for practical, ready-to-use strategies: www.danceteacherweb.com/articles/blog/2026/3/31/How-to-Stop-the-Chatter-Reclaim-Focus-in-Dance-Class
About Dance Teacher Web: Dance Teacher Web is a leading resource for dance educators worldwide, providing innovative teaching tools, business strategies, and pedagogical insights to help studio owners and teachers excel in the ever-evolving world of dance.
The post From chatter to chassés: DTW Founder Steve Sirico unveils strategies to reclaim focus in modern dance classroom appeared first on Dance Informa Magazine.
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