32 Years
Parent Guide to Ballet Training in Keller TX
The Parent Guide to Proper Ballet Training
How to Evaluate Training, Pointe Readiness, and Ballet Schools

If your child is taking multiple ballet classes each week and not progressing, this guide will help you understand why.
Choosing ballet training for your child is about more than finding an open class on the schedule.
It is about finding a school that understands progression, protects development, and trains dancers with care, structure, and long-term purpose.
At North Central Ballet, we believe parents deserve clear, honest information about how ballet training works, what safe progression looks like, and what questions to ask when evaluating a program.
If you are ready to begin, you may schedule a placement class here

Why North Central Ballet
For over 30 years, North Central Ballet has provided classical ballet training for children, teens, adults, and pre-professional dancers throughout Northeast Tarrant County.
Families from Keller, Southlake, Roanoke, Trophy Club, Haslet, Grapevine, Colleyville, Hurst, North Richland Hills, Watauga, and Fort Worth choose North Central Ballet for serious classical training rooted in structure, progression, and long-term development.
Founded in 1993 by Leslie M. Jordan III, North Central Ballet and the North Central Ballet Company enrich the community through education, performance, and dance-related activities. Mr. Jordan is the recipient of multiple civic and national honors for outstanding service to the arts.
Classes are available for students ages 3 through pre-professional, as well as adults.
Learn more about North Central Ballet

Proven Training and Outcomes
The North Central Ballet is committed to providing the finest dance lessons available in the Northeast Tarrant County Area. Students from the North Central Ballet have been awarded scholarships to study with major professional ballet company schools throughout the United States including:
- School of American Ballet (New York)
- Joffrey Ballet (New York)
- North Carolina School of the Arts
- Boston Ballet
- Hartford Ballet
- Exploring Ballet with Suzanne Farrell
- Kennedy Center
- Ballet Austin
- Colorado Ballet
as well as major university dance departments. In addition, several of our former students are now performing with professional dance companies around the world. Professional ballet instruction is the basis of our student’s success.
Many of North Central Ballet’s current students were accepted into summer intensive programs including:
- Joffrey Ballet New York, Los Angeles and Miami
- Orlando Ballet
- Kansas City Ballet
- American Ballet Theatre
- The Long Beach Ballet’s Ambassadors to China
- Pacific Northwest Ballet
- Pittsburgh Ballet and many others
Former students have also been accepted to American Ballet Theatre’s National Training Scholar Program as well as represented the school as a finalist for the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts Presidential Scholar program. Former students have represented the United States of America at the 2002 International Ballet Competition in Jackson, Mississippi.

Start Here: Ballet School vs. Dance Studio
Not every program is built with the same purpose. Understanding this difference is the first step in evaluating your child’s training.
Read: Ballet School vs. Dance Studio

Understanding Proper Ballet Training
What Families Can Expect From a Professional Ballet Training Environment
Read: What Families Can Expect From a Professional Ballet Training Environment
Why Professional Ballet Training Matters
Read: Why Professional Ballet Training Matters

Pointe Work and Readiness
The Road to Pointe: Ballet Training and Readiness

Summer Training Matters
Summer can either move a dancer forward—or simply keep them busy.
Visit Inside Summer Ballet Training
Why This Matters
A child may be hardworking, eager, and full of potential—and still be placed in the wrong environment.
When dancers are advanced too quickly, placed on pointe too soon, or trained without a strong technical foundation, they are not being helped. They are being rushed.
Proper ballet training is cumulative. Each level prepares the dancer for the next.
At North Central Ballet, placement decisions are made carefully and responsibly, always with the dancer’s long-term growth in mind.
Common Questions Parents Ask
- How do I know if my child is truly ready for pointe?
- Why would a dancer be moved to a lower level after a placement class?
- Why might a child take several ballet classes a week and still lack technical foundation?
- What should a real summer ballet program include?
- What is the difference between keeping a dancer busy and actually helping that dancer progress?

Inside Ballet Training: Educational Video Series for Parents
Watch the Inside Ballet Training Series

Begin with a Placement Class
If your child is taking multiple ballet classes each week and not progressing, this is the next step.
At North Central Ballet, every student begins with a placement class.
This allows us to evaluate technique, strength, alignment, and readiness so we can place each dancer in the level where they will receive the most benefit and make the most progress.
We do not place by age or prior enrollment. We place based on training.
If you are considering summer or fall ballet training, the first step is to schedule a placement class.

Interested in Training at North Central Ballet?
We offer structured classical ballet training with placement based on readiness rather than age or assumption.






