Joffrey Ballet Partnering With City Colleges To Create Dance Degree
By Kate McGee

Joffrey Ballet Partnering With City Colleges To Create Dance Degree
By Kate McGeeStudents enrolling at Harold Washington College this fall can now also add ballet and hip hop to their class schedule.
The City Colleges of Chicago is adding an associate’s degree in dance this year, one of a just a few colleges to offer this degree in dance across the state and the only program in Chicago.
Jennifer Hasso, the school’s dance program coordinator, says she wanted to expand the school’s fine arts offerings to create a broader range of classes for students and provide an affordable pathway into a career in performing arts.
“Dance, you know, has a history of being very homogenous in terms of who enters that career force or who you see on stage,” Hasso said. “If a student’s takeaway is, ‘I’m more passionate about dance, or my body, or movement or feel more comfortable going to a professional program, we’ve already succeeded.”
The school is partnering with the Joffrey Ballet, the professional dance company, to develop the courses and teach them at their headquarters a few blocks away from Harold Washington in the Loop. This fall, they’ll offer five introductory courses in ballet, modern, jazz, world and hip hop dance. Those classes are open to all students. The program builds on the college’s dance appreciation class, which started during the spring semester. Harold Washington plans to offer more advanced dance classes during the spring 2019 semester.
“We are thrilled to be partnering with a performing arts organization of such stellar quality, reputation, history and commitment to the arts,” said Juan Salgado, Chancellor of City Colleges, in a statement. “This collaboration will help students develop a diverse set of skills, including artistry, creativity, discipline, and confidence, while drawing on the Joffrey Ballet’s legacy of innovation.”
City Colleges had to approve the syllabi and coursework. The curriculum was also approved by the Illinois Articulation Initiative, the body that ensures course credit can transfer between schools in the state, and the Illinois Community College Board to make sure the courses could transfer to other institutions.
College representatives say they’re also working with four-year arts colleges in Chicago, including Columbia College Chicago, to create transfer agreements so students can easily take their classes and continue studying toward a bachelor’s in dance.
“College education is expensive no matter where you go,” Hasso said. “So the idea is being able to fund some of your foundational courses and general requirements at City Colleges and then take them elsewhere is very exciting to students and faculty to be able to offer that.”