Dance HistoryIce Dance & SkatingSynchronized Skating

Synchronized Skating

Also known as: Synchro, Precision skating

OriginUnited States
Era1956Present
RhythmSet by chosen music
TempoVaries by program
CharacterUnison, geometric, ensemble

History & Cultural Context

Synchronized skating, originally called 'precision skating,' was founded by Dr. Richard Porter in Ann Arbor, Michigan in the late 1950s. A team of usually eight to sixteen skaters moves as a single body through formations—blocks, circles, wheels, lines, and intersections—prizing unison, speed, and accuracy. It is the newest branch of competitive skating, with ISU World Championships held since 2000, and is an ensemble dance form in the truest sense: its expressive content lives in collective shape-making rather than solo virtuosity.

Cultural Significance

The team/ensemble expression of figure skating; long campaigned for Olympic inclusion.

Characteristic Movement & Technique

Formation skating—blocks, circles, wheels, intersections—executed in tight unison at speed.

Partnering Dynamics

Whole-team ensemble; skaters often linked in holds.

Competitive Context

ISU World Championships since 2000; not yet an Olympic event.

Regional Variations

Strong in Finland, Sweden, Canada, Russia, and the United States.

Common Misconceptions

It is a full ISU competitive discipline with World Championships, not merely a group show number.

Signature Figures

  • Richard Porter

Notable Codifiers

  • International Skating Union

Dance Lineage

Track Your Synchronized Skating Progress

Practice Synchronized Skating figures between lessons with Figure Focus — step-by-step breakdowns, floor diagrams, and progress tracking. Free to use.

Create Your Free Account

Sources & Further Reading

Cultural & Historical Context

Synchronized Skating emerged from United States during the 1956s—present day. Understanding the cultural roots, musical traditions, and social circumstances of this era enriches appreciation for the dance's characteristics and significance.

Formative Influences

Codifiers & Standardizers:

International Skating Union

Signature Movement Vocabulary:

Richard Porter

Primary Source Documents

The Library of Dance contains public-domain primary sources for dance history. Copyrighted modern syllabi are indexed with purchase links to their respective copyright owners. Search by dance name or codifier to discover primary source documents.

Last reviewed: June 2026 — This dance profile synthesizes historical research, cultural documentation, and contemporary practice knowledge to provide authoritative context.