Your comments have centered on the habits of teachers who lack the skills to get into any better part of the dance world, and so are stuck in the unfortunate abuse-of-pro/am part. These people are not going to be of any more help to amateur couples than they are to pro/am students.
Again, you're trying to put words in my mouth. This description of pro/am instructors is yours, not mine.
I'll tell you a secret though - the lazy pros don't do lots of pro/am - because it's TOO MUCH WORK. Why drag lots of bad students around for a living, if you have the skills to direct good ones with your voice, and then take one or two rich, skilled students into a minimum number of entries at a premium price and pay your bills that way? The reason everybody doesn't do this is that they lack the dance skills to earn a living that way.
Oh, right, like you know any secrets.
Lazy pros do not, in fact, "drag lots of bad students around." They perform with students who have all learned to do the same routine with them. To accommodate this practice, pro/am competitions do not have, for example, one level of silver; they have several (using various qualifications).
"Your argument that only poor teachers abuse pro/am is nonsense. Teachers of all ability levels can get dollar signs in their eyes."
But what you are ignoring is the economics of it - it's more lucrative to do a few entries at a premium price with one or two good students (which means not abusing pro/am, but making the best of it), than it is to wear out your body doing hundreds of entries with bad students. Most pros who are serious about their own competitive career attend a competition with only one, or at most two, pro/am students - and often of course they take none.
What you are ignoring is the fact of the cash rewards given at pro/am competition, rewards which can run into thousands of dollars. These rewards are based on the number of entries that the pro gets his students to buy. As I pointed out above, these pros are just doing the same routine over and over; they're on cruise control. They aren't wearing out anything except the soles of their shoes.
If you were actually following the amateur dance world, you would know exactly which recent example of someone leapfrogging many amateur levels I am thinking about. But you aren't following it, so you are ignorant of this.
First, at amateur competitions, competitors can enter any level that they want so they can jump from bronze in one competition to pre-champ in the next. They make look foolish doing their bronze routine in open competition but there are no rules that prohibit them from doing so.
Of course, you mean the amateur competition at the kind of events which you attend. We've already dealt with the judging racket in past threads.
Second, your statement is just ridiculous on its face. No amateur is going to improve his or her ability to dance with an amateur partner by dancing with a pro.
"On the other hand, you clearly spend your time solely in pro/am - you don't have an amateur partner"
Ignorance.
I've already exposed your ignorance in this post and I'll show some more.
I find it odd that someone would so strenuously avoid answering a question about his actual status. What possible reason could you have for refusing to disclose whether or not you have an amateur partner? I already know that you don't but I'd like to hear your reasons for trying to keep your situation a secret.
"And before you make your tired whine about assumptions"
As long as you prefer to post things you have no means of knowing, I'll continue to call you on it.
I notice that you failed to respond to my point about your own assumptions. Also, your answers - the ones that you give as well as those that you don't - are my "means of knowing." I take it that English is not your first language.
Then you had better give up, because no method is complete.
Again, another statement which shows that you do not work with an amateur partner. An amateur couple working with a pro on a floor with other couples practicing and taking their own lessons is a complete method because all of the elements of Ballroom are there.
-response continued-