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Showing 181 to 195 of 567 results Save | Export
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Mabingo, Alfdaniels – Research Studies in Music Education, 2020
The subject of the inseparability of music and dance in African artistic experiences has preoccupied scholars and researchers in the field of ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology, and musicology. Commonly, music is conceptualized as an accompaniment to dance. Moreover, the existing literary perspectives frame the inseparability of music and dance in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Music, Teaching Methods, Dance Education
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Karin, Janet; Nordin-Bates, Sanna M. – Journal of Dance Education, 2020
Ballet training is designed to develop creative, expressive artists. However, an explicit approach to technical instruction may not assist in the development of individual creativity and may encourage counterproductive perfectionistic goals. This paper describes a five-day intervention designed to enhance creativity in thirteen adolescent…
Descriptors: Dance, Dance Education, Learning Strategies, Intervention
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Lewis, Janine; Ziady, Jeannette – Africa Education Review, 2021
The dance world is dominated by instilling technique and discipline in the dance training. Technique and discipline have been inculcated through training regimes that are dogmatically transferred through the generations -- from teacher to dancer --and who in turn perpetuate technique and discipline in their teaching. Within a multicultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dance Education, Vocational Education, Power Structure
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Chatzopoulos, Dimitris; Doganis, George; Kollias, Iraklis – Early Child Development and Care, 2019
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of creative dance on proprioception, rhythm and static balance in preschool children. The treatment group consisted of 32 preschool children which took part in a creative dance programme that lasted 2 months (twice a week), while the control group (30 preschool children) participated in an…
Descriptors: Creativity, Preschool Children, Dance Education, Psychomotor Skills
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Taeao, Sinapi; Averill, Robin – set: Research Information for Teachers, 2020
Teaching Pasifika learners effectively to improve their educational outcomes is an education priority in New Zealand. New ways to maximise learning are needed. This article shows how dance, a cultural experience of many Pasifika learners, offers strong opportunities for enhancing learning across the curriculum while impacting positively on…
Descriptors: Culturally Relevant Education, Pacific Islanders, Foreign Countries, Learner Engagement
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Wang, Yang; Liu, Qingtang – International Journal of Game-Based Learning, 2020
The article explored the effects of game-based teaching on primary student dance teaching and learning. Two semesters of dance teaching and learning conducted by the same teacher were analyzed. In the first semester, the teacher taught dance in a traditional way. In the second semester, the teacher taught dance with a serious game in the teaching…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Educational Games, Elementary School Students, Dance Education
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Bayyat, Manal – Turkish Online Journal of Distance Education, 2020
This study aims to investigate and compare the effect of the Blended Learning (BL) approach to Face to Face (FTF) teaching method on students' level of performance and sport participation motivation level. It is a qualitative study using the quasi-experimental method and applying the pre-test/post-test two-groups design model. The participants of…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Undergraduate Students, Dance Education, Synchronous Communication
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Vincent, Lauren; Timmons, W.; Mulholland, R. – Research in Dance Education, 2021
Whilst the fight for the inclusion of dance in schools has been an ongoing struggle, current government directives and educational policies present an even greater threat to the future of quality dance education in schools and this needs to be addressed. This paper begins to explore the certificated dance education currently on offer in the United…
Descriptors: Barriers, Educational Quality, Dance Education, Educational Policy
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Cuellar-Moreno, Maria; Caballero-Juliá, Daniel – Research in Dance Education, 2019
The spectrum of Teaching Styles (TS) provides a solid theoretical foundation for teaching Physical Education. It is common for teachers to use directive styles that do not meet program requirements. This is further accentuated in the case of dance, to the detriment of the development of emotional and cognitive factors. This study investigates the…
Descriptors: Teaching Styles, Teaching Methods, Physical Education, Dance Education
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Hermans, Carolien – Journal of Dance Education, 2019
In this article we take a social, embodied stance towards autism that includes both the celebrating of difference as well as the notion of vulnerabilities. The hypothesis of Hanne de Jaegher (2013) serves as the main starting point of present research study. This hypothesis states that children with autism have a different embodiment and as a…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Young Children, Males, Autism
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Sanger, Andrew – Research in Dance Education, 2019
This article explores the dynamics of Gaga, a contemporary movement practice developed by Israeli choreographer Ohad Naharin, as an emergent methodology for embodied research. Deploying Gaga as a case study, this article argues for the relevance of knowledge generated through lived, felt experience as well as ways of knowing grounded on bodily…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Movement Education, Case Studies, Human Body
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Phelan, Helen; Nunan, Mary – Journal of Research Practice, 2018
One of the most contested areas of arts practice research concerns the nature and role of writing. For many artist-scholars, research predicated on artistic practice does not require written contextualization. For those who engage in writing, questions as to the nature, mode, register, and purpose of writing abound. The growing body of…
Descriptors: Role, Writing (Composition), Artists, Ethnography
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Warburton, Edward C. – Journal of Dance Education, 2017
Diplomacy is the art of relationships: the ability to work with individual to international-level concerns in a sensitive way. Like the diplomat, dance artists and educators know that success requires sensitivity to rapidly changing situational demands. A growing body of research suggests that the nonverbal art form of dance can be an effective…
Descriptors: International Relations, International Educational Exchange, Dance Education, Intercultural Communication
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Pentz, Julie L. – Childhood Education, 2017
Tap to Togetherness is a unique program designed to build and enhance family relationships through tap dance steps. Kansas State University researchers from the School of Music, Theatre and Dance and the College of Human Ecology, led by Julie L. Pentz, Associate Professor of Dance, Director of the K-State Dance Program, developed the program.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Programs, Family Relationship, Dance Education
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Clegg, Helen; Owton, Helen; Allen-Collinson, Jacquelyn – Journal of Dance Education, 2019
Dance provides both psychological and physical benefits, and yet many boys miss out due to societal perceptions surrounding the feminization of dance. These perceptions can lead to the bullying of boys who dance. Because dance teachers are in a unique position to engage boys in dance, it is important to investigate their perceptions. This article…
Descriptors: Males, Dance, Dance Education, Foreign Countries
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