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Pia M. Vinken – Research in Dance Education, 2024
Specific aesthetic features of the object and observer's expertise seem to be related to the perception of motion aesthetics. How differing kinematic motion characteristics and their manifestation are related to the perception of motion aesthetics and how this relates to the observer's expertise is still investigated. It is hypothesized that…
Descriptors: Dance, Motion, Dance Education, Aesthetics
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Artur Fredyk; Agata Bara; Anna Brachman; Grzegorz Sobota; Bogdan Bacik – Research in Dance Education, 2024
One of the basic skills of a dancer is the ability to keep the body balance ("aplomb") while performing various dance figures. These movements are often performed with limited vision control due to dynamic motion or environmental conditions. Our aim was to verify whether the exercises with eyes closed of the ballet school students would…
Descriptors: Dance, Psychomotor Skills, Dance Education, Human Posture
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Muscat, Luke – Journal of Dance Education, 2023
Parent-Toddler Movement Class (PTMC) is a structured dance curriculum that introduces movement to toddlers and caregivers. Using a qualitative methodological approach, the present study investigated how PTMCs supported the attachment of 27 caregiver-toddler dyads. The children ranged in age from two- to three-years-old and were students enrolled…
Descriptors: Parents, Toddlers, Dance Education, Attachment Behavior
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Sandlos, Lisa – Journal of Dance Education, 2023
In many dance competitions in North America, performances of sexualized choreography have become normalized. One result is that bodies of girl dancers are increasingly constructed as sexual objects. Sexual objectification is highly problematic for the development of girls' self-identities, body image, psychological health, and overall wellbeing.…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Females, Sexuality, Human Body
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Wallman-Jones, Amie; Mölders, Claudia; Schmidt, Mirko; Schärli, Andrea – Journal of Dance Education, 2023
The Feldenkrais Method® (FM) is a form of somatic education aiming to increase brain-body communication, reportedly via interoceptive mechanisms. Although empirically proven to improve perceived interoceptive ability and psychological well-being in adults, feasibility in adolescents remains unclear. We therefore used a combined randomized…
Descriptors: Dance, Well Being, Adolescents, Females
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Prinsloo, Tarryn-Tanille; Munro, Marth; Broodryk, Chris – Research in Dance Education, 2019
This article forms part of a larger qualitative, conceptual project that investigates the ways in which Laban Movement Analysis (LMA) can contribute to the larger field of dance research and education with reference to dance, new technologies and particularly notions of space in screendance. Screendance refers to a dance that is specifically made…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Motion, Human Body, Observation
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Cruz Banks, Ojeya – Journal of Dance Education, 2020
Somatic memoirs from the author's participation at dance intensives with acclaimed dancer-choreographer Moustapha Bangoura in the West African Republic of Guinea reveal how solo dance experiences can test acoustic literacy, promote music interaction, and foster an aptitude for movement invention. These skills are fundamental to West African dance…
Descriptors: Dance, African Culture, Foreign Countries, Music
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Savrami, Katia – Research in Dance Education, 2017
Dance Improvisation is an essential skill and tool for dancers. It is grounded in the kinesthetic experience and its constantly changing dynamic qualities through self-movement. It requires a spontaneous kinesthetic response in a spatiotemporal vigorous qualitative dynamic happening of affect and movement; a momentum that allows dancers to perform…
Descriptors: Dance, Creativity, Kinesthetic Perception, Brain
Lin, Chia-Wei; Chen, Shing-Jye; Su, Fong-Chin; Wu, Hong-Wen; Lin, Cheng-Feng – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2014
Purpose: This study investigated the different postural control strategies exhibited by experienced and novice dancers in ballet turns ("pirouettes"). Method: Thirteen novice and 13 experienced dancers performed ballet turns with dominant-leg support. The peak push force was measured in the double-leg support phase. The inclination…
Descriptors: Dance, Dance Education, Human Body, Comparative Analysis
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Egan, Candice J.; Quigley, Mark C. – Research in Dance Education, 2015
The 2010-2012 Christchurch (Canterbury) earthquakes in New Zealand caused loss of life and psychological distress in residents throughout the region. In 2011, student dancers of the Hagley Dance Company and dance professionals choreographed the performance "Move: A Seismic Journey" for the Christchurch Body Festival that explored…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Natural Disasters, Dance, Dance Education
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Roche, Jenny – Research in Dance Education, 2011
In this article, I argue for an acknowledgement of the significance of the dancer's role in the creation of independent contemporary dance. I propose the term "moving identity" to outline the independent contemporary dancer's "way of moving" which could be perceived as the accumulation of various factors including training approaches,…
Descriptors: Dance, Motion, Identification, Dance Education
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Becker, Kelly Mancini – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2013
The necessity for engaging the body in learning, the need for students to move throughout the school day, and the positive effects that dance has on students' development are all good reasons for dance to be included in the elementary curriculum. There are many ways for teachers to integrate movement into the school day, using math, science,…
Descriptors: Dance, Dance Education, Integrated Curriculum, Self Esteem
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Gervasio, Amy Herstein – Research in Dance Education, 2012
This paper applies contemporary principles in cognitive and social psychology to understand how Western ballet and modern dance is imbued with emotional and narrative meaning by an audience. These include nine Gestalt concepts of visual form perception as well as cognitive heuristics of representativeness and availability in concept formation and…
Descriptors: Dance, Social Psychology, Cognitive Psychology, Audience Response
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Dow, Connie Bergstein – Young Children, 2010
Children move the instant they are born and the moment they wake up every morning. Moving is one of the first and most important ways infants and toddlers explore and learn about the world, and this process continues as they grow and develop. Research shows that movement and exercise can spark the growth of new brain cells and facilitate learning…
Descriptors: Dance, Young Children, Movement Education, Creativity
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Umino, Bin; Longstaff, Jeffrey Scott; Soga, Asako – Research in Dance Education, 2009
This paper reports on "Web3D dance composer" for ballet e-learning. Elementary "petit allegro" ballet steps were enumerated in collaboration with ballet teachers, digitally acquired through 3D motion capture systems, and categorised into families and sub-families. Digital data was manipulated into virtual reality modelling language (VRML) and fit…
Descriptors: Feasibility Studies, Dance, Females, Computer Simulation
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