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Could ballet help kids learn maths, and prevent obesity?

One school says its kids love learning ballet.

ballet kids gif 2

JUMPING, GALLOPING, LEAPING around the room. Pretending they’re frogs, making diamond shapes and holding a long neck.

The sprightly First Class pupils of Dublin’s St Phillip’s the Apostle national school look like they’re having the time of their lives as they practice ballet in Dublin’s Dance House.

It might not look quite like the traditional version of ballet at all, but their deputy principal Geraldine O’Sullivan says that it has huge benefits for them. It helps them focus, improves their maths, and increases their physical fitness.

The children are learning with Ballet Ireland, and the pupils we meet are only on their second class, but are clearly loving the time out of the classroom.

Surprise benefits

“Because we had seen it in another school and the staff there were so enthusiastic about it, we thought this could be good for our children too,” recalls O’Sullivan of how they decided to bring ballet to St Phillip’s.

Stephen Brennan is the man charged with teaching the children the dance moves, and O’Sullivan describes him as a “fantastic teacher”.

“That’s very important, that the person who is representing Ballet Ireland is a good instructor, and the children love him.”

She says Brennan challenges the children and “takes no nonsense from them”. “They have to concentrate and listen to him, and respond to what he tells them.”

For O’Sullivan, the benefits of ballet for the pupils are far-reaching. Brennan is all about encouraging the children to try new things.

He’ll do a series of movements and then he’ll have a child compose a little dance, and the others will copy that – and that gives them a great sense of achievement and confidence.

Then there are the physical benefits, which is pertinent at a time when child obesity is on the rise.

“The physical exercise is wonderful – it’s great for their mobility, and the whole thing of crossing over the body is very good for their mental thinking, logic and all of that. It increases their concentration, their listening skills, their coordination, rhythm, movement to music.”

[image alt="ballet gif 3" src="http://cdn.thejournal.ie/media/2014/10/ballet-gif-3.gif" width="607" height="317" title="" class="alignnone" /end]

“The more physical activity we can have them engaged in in school is beneficial. The fact they enjoy it so much means they could go on and take dance or sport,” suggested O’Sullivan.

There are also some surprise benefits. “It also helps mathematically, because they’re counting, they’re thinking. They’re thinking in sets of jumps: three and three. He’ll tell them to do four gallops and three claps.”

They don’t even know that it’s a lesson, they know it’s ballet but the whole thing of the listening skills, the concentration, the responding to the verbal messages he gives them, the strength, stamina.

“They’re standing upright and it’s something we would try to achieve with our children so when they go out in the world they are tall, straight [standing], confident people and I think the ballet is helping with that.”

But the big thing, O’Sullivan says, is the enjoyment the children get out of attending the classes.

The students attend the classes for 12 weeks, then get to show their skills off to their parents at the end.

And if any of the children want to go on to become dancers in the future? “That would be great”.

Meet the apprentice

ballet gif 4

“I know it’s a cliché but it’s very hard work. People often think that’s great, they can go up on their toes, but there’s a lot of work behind that. But also, it’s very rewarding. It is so difficult but there’s always something work on.” – Kate Haughton

Kate Haughton (21) is an apprentice with Ballet Ireland – a role that didn’t exist until this year.

With a mum and granny who were ballet teachers, it’s no surprise that she went on to study ballet at the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland. After three years, it was time to enter the professional world – but that wasn’t as easy as you might imagine.

“They want people with experience,” explains Haughton – and that’s hard to come by when you’re fresh out of college.

She auditioned for Ballet Ireland not realising there was an apprenticeship scheme, but the company told her they could prepare her for the professional world.

Haughton and her fellow apprentice are part of the company. “We do the morning class with them all and we do the rehearsals with them and we’re in the shows with them”.

Their mentor, a longtime Ballet Ireland dancer, takes the two apprentices for private coaching. “But she’s also there as a support.”

Haughton says that apprenticeships are becoming more popular, due to the realisation that “you go from training where you have these people telling you exactly what to do 24/7 and you have all these classes, and then it’s straight into the professional world where you’ve very much on your own.”

With apprenticeship, they have a helping hand to guide them.

Read: Think ballet can’t be badass? This ad will prove you wrong>

Read: VIDEO: The secrets behind the scenes at the ballet>

Read: A kettle, a hammer, an Ouch Pouch: the painful secrets of making a ballet shoe fit>

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8 Comments
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    Mute HonDeDeise
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    Dec 7th 2020, 2:48 PM

    Is there a link to a more detailed breakdown of the plan? It’s going to affect more than just hauliers…

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    Mute Harry Comber
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    Dec 7th 2020, 3:17 PM

    Is there any chance that Irish Ferries would reverse their decision to end the Rosslare to Cherbourg route? It would relieve some pressure at Dublin.

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    Mute Paul Furey
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    Dec 7th 2020, 3:48 PM

    @Harry Comber: there’s a new Rosslare Dunkirk service starting up.

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    Mute Fabio Dillon
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    Dec 7th 2020, 11:29 PM

    @Harry Comber: IF management are completely useless

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    Mute snotser
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    Dec 7th 2020, 4:29 PM

    Its the governments fault for cramming everything into dublin,it’s a two tier economy.half of irelands GDP comes from dublin alone,totally unsustainable.meanwhile Waterford cork limerick and Galway were starved.the planning in this country is a disgrace

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    Mute Fred the Muss...
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    Dec 7th 2020, 9:52 PM

    @snotser: When you see who has represented Waterford politically in the past, you’ll understand why nothing has happened there.

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    Mute The world outside the M50
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    Dec 7th 2020, 4:32 PM

    Ireland is too Dublin centric.

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    Mute Paul Furey
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    Dec 7th 2020, 6:48 PM

    @The world outside the M50: break it into 4?

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    Mute GClare
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    Dec 7th 2020, 3:49 PM

    And is making Beach/Strand Road in Sandymount one way out of town supposed to help deal with this traffic congestion?

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    Mute Fi Wyse
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    Dec 7th 2020, 6:09 PM

    @GClare: oh yes I had forgotten about that ridiculous plan

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    Mute Shane Cormican
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    Dec 7th 2020, 6:20 PM

    @Fi Wyse: isn’t that “parked” now?!?

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    Mute OnlyHereForTheComments
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    Dec 7th 2020, 7:03 PM

    @GClare: I’m not sure how allowing people to drive towards town on the beach road in Sandymount would somehow alleviate traffic at Dublin port?

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    Mute GClare
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    Dec 7th 2020, 9:33 PM

    @Shane Cormican: starting in January apparently

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    Mute GClare
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    Dec 7th 2020, 9:39 PM

    @OnlyHereForTheComments: it will cause backlog on all the Merrion Road and all through Ringsend, Irishtown and Pearce Street, which will lead to backlog all over the area

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    Mute OnlyHereForTheComments
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    Dec 8th 2020, 1:36 AM

    @GClare: Allowing less traffic to drive from the beach road into irishtown and ringsend will cause backlog all through irishtown and ringsend? I don’t think you’ve thought this complaint through.

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    Mute Type17
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    Dec 8th 2020, 8:21 AM

    @GClare: No port-traffic HGVs use Strand Road, the Port Tunnel was built to direct them away from there, and from the Liffey Quays. The trucks on Strand Road are local traffic, not (directly) affected by Brexit.

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    Mute Jacqueline McCabe
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    Dec 7th 2020, 3:08 PM

    Will affect anyone living or working around the IFSC/docks area or living near/using the M50 or any other motorway near any of the ports.

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    Mute Fred the Muss...
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    Dec 7th 2020, 9:54 PM

    @Jacqueline McCabe: If you live in the area I’d recommend you stockpile bread, johnnies and jax roll.

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    Mute Emmett Currie
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    Dec 7th 2020, 7:54 PM

    Going to be fun with driving hours and tacograph rules

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    Mute cill123
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    Dec 7th 2020, 7:04 PM

    Say there’ll be a few smart drivers avoiding the M1 and hitting the likes of the malahide road and Fairview to make the boat on time

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    Mute #1 Fifth wheel
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    Dec 7th 2020, 9:44 PM

    Just pull the plug on the UK and when they sink which they will, then we can sail right across to continental Europe in a straight line, any port, just pick one, there’s lots to choose from….. A friend was just sayin’.. ehh!! Just sayin’.

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    Mute DReynolds
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    Dec 7th 2020, 8:05 PM

    Just a suggestion, but I think we’ll see an increase in UK haulage through Ireland via Northern Ireland as they try to circumvent tariffs so would it be realistic to suggest that Irish haulage takes precedence over Uk haulage or is that too unreasonable?

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