Understanding the Skating System

A clear, practical guide to how dance competition results are actually put together. Across six short modules you will learn what the Skating System is, who does what on the day, how recalls and finals work, how a result is worked out by majority rather than by adding marks up, and how to read a result sheet and explain an outcome to pupils and parents with confidence.
A course for dance teachers

Understanding the Skating System

How dance competition results are compiled, and how to explain them.

6 modulesAbout 2 hoursFinal quiz and certificate

A clear, practical guide to how dance competition results are actually put together. Across six short modules you will learn what the Skating System is, who does what on the day, how recalls and finals work, how a result is worked out by majority rather than by adding the marks up, and how to read a result sheet and explain an outcome to pupils and parents with confidence.

What you will learn
  • Describe the Skating System fairly and accurately, in plain words.
  • Follow how a result is compiled, from the judges’ marks to the final order.
  • Work a single-dance final by hand using majority logic.
  • Read a result sheet and explain what it does, and does not, show.
  • Explain a disappointing result to a pupil or parent with warmth and accuracy.
  • Know where your explaining stops, and when to check the rulebook or a scrutineer.

The six modules

1
What the Skating System is, and is not
A clean, neutral definition, and the key correction: it compiles placings, it is not a score of dance quality.
12 to 15 min
2
Who does what in a competition result
Adjudicator, scrutineer, chairperson and organiser. Why the scrutineer compiles a result rather than choosing it.
10 to 12 min
3
Recalls, finals, and crosses versus placings
How a competition narrows through its rounds, and why a strong recall does not promise a win.
15 to 18 min
4
Single-dance finals and majority logic
The heart of the course, worked by hand: a majority for first, then place-or-better logic. Why totals mislead.
25 to 30 min
5
Ties and multi-dance results
Why ties happen, how they are broken, how an aggregate is built, and when to defer to a qualified scrutineer.
25 to 30 min
6
Reading results and explaining outcomes
Reading a sheet, explaining disappointment kindly, and handling the rare result that genuinely looks wrong.
15 to 20 min

Who it is for

Written for dance teachers across Ballroom, Latin, solo and street, whatever your competition background. You do not need any maths or scrutineering experience to follow it. If you have ever struggled to explain a result to a disappointed pupil or a frustrated parent, this course is for you.

Knowledge checks, a final quiz, and your certificate
6modules
20 to 25final questions
80%to pass

Each module has a quick knowledge check as you go, with instant feedback and nothing recorded. At the end, a short final quiz earns your certificate, issued once you have completed all six modules and passed. There is no penalty for a retake, so you can review and try again if you need to.

A note on scope: this course helps you understand and explain results. It does not qualify you as a scrutineer or an adjudicator, and the exact rules vary by event and governing body. When the detail matters, check the rulebook and conditions for the competition you are attending. The worked examples throughout are original teaching examples.
Ready to begin? Start with Module 1: what the Skating System is, and is not.
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Course Includes

  • 6 Lessons