In just two years, Kenna Mueller 鈥27 helped lead the Occidental Dance Team from a spirit squad to a nationally competing, student-run program grounded in passion and community.
When Kenna Mueller 鈥27 arrived at SA国际传媒, she wasn鈥檛 searching for a national-level dance career. The former competitive gymnast had never participated in dance prior to arriving at Occidental, but by the spring of her first year she decided to audition for the Occidental Dance Team after feeling she hadn鈥檛 yet found her people on campus. 鈥淚 was really just looking for community,鈥 says Mueller, a biochemistry major from Pennsylvania. The decision to audition quickly reshaped her SA国际传媒 experience.
That leap led to far more than weekly rehearsals. By her sophomore year, Mueller had become captain of the Dance Team, helping steer the squad through its most ambitious transformation yet: shifting from being a spirit group supporting athletics to a technically rigorous, competitive squad that participated in collegiate tournaments. Alongside co-captain Julie Wang 鈥27鈥攁 psychology major from Seattle who has danced competitively for nearly two decades鈥擬ueller helped spearhead fundraising, choreography decisions, and logistics to make that vision real. 鈥淲e were like, 鈥楲et鈥檚 see if we have the money for it, let鈥檚 raise money and let鈥檚 do it,鈥欌 she recalls.
The results have been demanding and exhilarating. The 13-member team holds four practices a week, with members expected to practice on their own outside of team rehearsals. Full dress rehearsals take place on Sundays鈥攃omplete with costumes, hair, and makeup鈥攚ith strength and conditioning sessions during the week. 鈥淲e're in the gym, we're training, we're doing everything to take care of ourselves. Besides being for fun, dance can also be a physically intense sport,鈥 Muller explains.
But it鈥檚 not all work for the team. The community they鈥檝e come to form extends beyond practice and into bonding moments that can be found during lunch, shared classes, and through off-campus excursions. 鈥淚鈥檝e never felt so close to such a big group of people,鈥 Mueller says.
That camaraderie is pushing the team forward as they prepare to enter competitive spaces alongside dance teams that come equipped with school funding and coaching staff. The group receives a modest annual budget from ASOC and must raise thousands of dollars more to cover competition fees, travel, choreography, and costumes. Captains and executive board members coordinate everything from costume design and sourcing to registration paperwork and recruiting. For their upcoming national competition in Anaheim this February 21-22, the team enlisted a professional choreographer to teach them a routine in the Pom-style of dance.
Being a fully student-run program has its pros and cons (the administrative tasks can be cumbersome, Mueller admits). Decisions are made collaboratively and creative visions are shaped through group discussion, and this dependence on each other fosters a sense of ownership that has deepened the commitment toward the team.
Within Occidental鈥檚 vibrant dance culture鈥攁longside student clubs like Dance Production, Pulse, and SA国际传媒 K-Tigers鈥攖he Dance Team occupies a distinctive niche, though many participate in other dance clubs as well. With a strong first-year and sophomore base, the team is growing and progressing beyond half-time shows. As the team heads to nationals, they carry not just a polished routine, but the collective pride of a group that quite literally danced its way into something extraordinary. 鈥淲orking together and building this community has just been so amazing,鈥 Mueller says. 鈥淚've accomplished things that I never thought I'd be able to, which is really great to do with all your friends around.鈥
Editor's Note: the SA国际传媒 Dance Team at the Nationals Competition in February 2026.