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Moore, Michael – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2007
In past years, teachers without professional training in the arts have often been able to avail themselves of summer institutes that introduced them to specific works of art and followed up with artists in the classroom, performance, or trips to an art museum. But what happens when such support is no longer available and teachers have to function…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Aesthetics, Art Appreciation
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Risner, Doug – Arts Education Policy Review, 2007
From an administrative perspective, this article investigates equity issues in dance education, and current challenges and opportunities for leadership in postsecondary dance programs involved in teacher education and certification. Although dance education is varied in content and environment, much is shared in terms of common goals for gender…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
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Chappell, Kerry – Research in Dance Education, 2007
This paper represents the final layer of analysis carried out in a study investigating the conceptions of and approaches to creativity of three expert specialist dance teachers within late primary age dance education in the UK. This research journeyed through a number of phases culminating in an analysis of the pedagogical dilemmas encountered by…
Descriptors: Creativity, Dance Education, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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Redfern, Betty – Research in Dance Education, 2007
Western aesthetics tends to maintain its long-standing preoccupation with the visual arts, music and literature. The dance, along with the arts of radio and television drama, has not yet received the attention that would seem commensurate with the cultural importance of these forms and the widespread influence they undoubtedly exert. To come upon…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Aesthetics, Educational Change, Dance Education
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Block, Betty A. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (JOPERD), 2008
Today's "Net Generation" is used to instant access to information that is wireless and mobile. There is so much information that students can access on their own that class time can be saved for things technology cannot teach, such as personal interactions, dance etiquette, and partnering. Technology should not be a substitute for personal and…
Descriptors: Cues, Access to Information, Internet, Teaching Methods
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Hunter, Mary Ann – Research in Drama Education, 2008
Performance-making and peace-building are processes predicated on the production of safe space. But what is "safe space"? In performance-making, what is it that makes space safe without losing the creative potential of tension? What role is there for risk? And, once achieved, how does safe space become meaningful beyond its immediate…
Descriptors: Social Change, Teaching Experience, Classroom Environment, Theater Arts
Gewertz, Catherine – Education Week, 2007
Bitter experience has shown Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, that if students are going to leave school, they are most likely to do it between the 8th and 9th grades. To combat that problem, the school district has launched a full-on campaign to get its rising freshmen into high school and keep them there. Two weeks before school opened, the district…
Descriptors: Grade 9, School Activities, High School Freshmen, Recreational Activities
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Gard, Michael – Sport, Education and Society, 2006
This paper examines the meaning of ability in the context of dance education, in part, via the lens of aesthetic education, a reasonably well-developed body of ideas, and asks what it means to be "aesthetically able". While aesthetic education tends to focus on aesthetic appreciation, it does also deal with a person's capacity to respond…
Descriptors: Ability, Aesthetics, Dance Education, Aesthetic Education
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Katz, Mira-Lisa – Afterschool Matters, 2008
This article highlights the perspectives of young women who have participated in dance for many years. Their viewpoints reveal the unique multimodal nature of embodied learning; in dance classes, teachers and learners communicate through a variety of modes: visual, auditory, kinesthetic, spatial, musical, tactile, gestural, and linguistic. The…
Descriptors: After School Programs, Dance Education, Females, High School Students
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Ebenstein, Barbara J. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 1986
Doctoral programs in dance are offered at six universities. Each program is briefly described. A listing of people to contact at each university is included. (MT)
Descriptors: Dance Education, Doctoral Programs, Higher Education
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Lopez y. Royo, Alessandra – Research in Dance Education, 2002
The paper proposes that existing methodologies for dance studies can be extended through consideration of recently developing methodologies from social archaeology. It is first argued that an archaeological perspective on dance is enriching for archaeology, whose recent interest in dance as a focus of investigation can be seen as an attempt to…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Figurative Language, Archaeology, Dance
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Oliver, Wendy; Sprague, Marty – Journal of Dance Education, 2007
Rhode Island has recently mandated a new kind of arts requirement for high school graduation that involves proving proficiency in one of four art forms: music, visual art, theater, or dance. How the state came to mandate this law, how proficiency is currently defined and assessed in dance, and what effects the cuts in arts education funding will…
Descriptors: Pilot Projects, Art Education, Art, Dance Education
Langton, Terence W. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (JOPERD), 2007
This article recommends raising the bar in elementary physical education by using Laban's movement framework to develop curriculum content in the areas of games, gymnastics, and dance (with physical fitness concepts blended in) in order to help students achieve the NASPE content standards. The movement framework can permeate and unify an…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Physical Education, Physical Fitness, Elementary Education
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Johnson, Ingrid – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2008
It is common to begin a physical education class by having students run laps. Many teachers find that doing the same running warm-up day after day leads to boredom and a lack of interest in their students. This article provides teachers with developmentally appropriate warm-up activities that will not only motivate students, but also keep them…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Health Education, Dance Education, National Standards
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Parrish, Mila – Journal for Learning through the Arts, 2009
This article reports the findings of a study exploring the effects of using videoconferencing (VC) to deliver dance instruction to rural communities. The context of the study is a university community partnership run through blended live and VC instruction with elementary and middle school students in Eloy, Arizona. This research is part of a…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Videoconferencing, Distance Education, Rural Areas
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