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Mulcahy, Lisa – Teaching Theatre, 2001
Describes how a director-choreographer and teacher can help novice dancers present a polished performance with some encouragement, a little creativity and psychology, and some easy, solid stagecraft. Presents a four-step approach beginning with determining skill levels during auditions, planning choreography for rehearsals, holding a cast meeting,…
Descriptors: Dance, Dance Education, Instructional Innovation, Secondary Education
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Aronld, Peter J. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2005
This paper is concerned with two related purposes. The first is to explicate what dance as an art form should comprise if it to be taught as a distinctive aspect of education in the curriculum. The second is to argue that dance, if taught in accordance with what is outlined, is not only an efficacious means in the development, understanding and…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Aesthetics, Art Education, Art Expression
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Gilbert, Anne Green – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (JOPERD), 2005
Margaret H'Doubler brought the magic of dance to the 20th century, yet the 21st century has yet to find a person to rekindle the same public desire for dance education. Consequently, the future of dance education in the next century is hard to predict. Based on an informal survey of fellow advisory board members of Dance and the Child…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Dance Education, Foreign Countries, Preservice Teacher Education
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Griss, Susan – Teaching Artist Journal, 2004
In this article, the author shares how she created a mini international conference of like-minded peers. Many freelance Teaching Artists feel isolated from a lack of peer contact in their work. That feeling was relieved last spring when the author received two similar e-mails sent, respectively, from 3,000 miles away to the east and to the west.…
Descriptors: Artists, Dance Education, Art Teachers, Conferences (Gatherings)
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West, Colleen N. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (JOPERD), 2005
Rhythm tap is sweeping the nation as an outlet for self-expression. Also known as "jazz tap" or "percussive tap," this art form's dominant focus is musicality, improvisation, simple-to-complex rhythms, and new styles. It reaches beyond technique and serves as an outlet for self-expression, independence, and spontaneity. Rhythm tap incorporates an…
Descriptors: Dance, Creative Activities, Physical Education, Dance Education
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Brodie, Julie; Lobel, Elin – Journal of Dance Education, 2004
Integrating somatic practices into the dance technique class by bringing awareness to the bodily processes of breathing, sensing, connecting, and initiating can help students reconnect the mind with the body within the context of the classroom environment. Dance educators do not always have the resources to implement separate somatics courses…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Classroom Environment, Dance, Movement Education
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MacBean, Arianne – Journal of Dance Education, 2004
Site-specific dance, which is often defined as dance that occurs outside of the conventional theater space, challenges choreographers to look at, listen to, feel, and think about the space in which the dance is performed. It also asks audiences to be active participants in the performance experience. The dances have to be informed by the space and…
Descriptors: Audiences, Interpersonal Competence, Dance, Dance Education
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Fortin, Sylvie; Girard, Fernande – Journal of Dance Education, 2005
This qualitative study describes the experience of professional contemporary dancers studying and applying the Alexander Technique to their dancing. This study was motivated by: 1. years of teaching both dance and somatics, 2. a strong desire to better understand how the Alexander Technique can be applied by dancers, and 3. a gap that the…
Descriptors: Dance, Dance Education, Researchers, Teaching Methods
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Debenham, Pat; Lee, Mary Ann – Journal of Dance Education, 2005
Good teaching, at its core, is an intuitive practice. It is an art and craft in which, through vision, objectives, and planning, a teacher prepares for the teaching moment. Experienced teachers know that lesson plans and pre-planning though, no matter how finely crafted, only point the teacher and the student in a direction. As artist-educators…
Descriptors: Creativity, Dance, Teaching Methods, Reflection
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Norris, Virginia – Research in Dance Education, 2003
This paper represents an attempt to document some of the methods and processes involved in creating a new dance work. I observed, over a 5-week period, the making of a contemporary dance piece with a group of 19 3rd-year BA dance students at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts. The choreographer was Melbourne-based Dianne Reid, who…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Dance, Higher Education, College Students
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Carter, Alexandra – Research in Dance Education, 2004
Dance history is studied at all levels of the curriculum, whether as a named course or part of other domains of enquiry. Debates drawn from the philosophy of history and historiographic practice can impact on the teaching and learning of dance history in order to produce a more imaginative and personal engagement with the field. These debates are…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Teaching Methods, Educational Philosophy, Postmodernism
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Sacha, Tori J.; Russ, Sandra W. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2006
Play is important in child development and learning. The intent of this study was to assess the effects of play, using physical movement and pretend imagery, on learning dance. Four preschool dance classes, encompassing 32 children ages 3-6, were randomly divided into pretend imagery groups and traditional teaching groups. The classes were…
Descriptors: Play, Dance Education, Preschool Children, Child Development
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Haines, Susan E. – Journal of Dance Education, 2006
Choreographers working in an educational setting often use student dancers as the instruments of their art. The inherent power dynamic of this relationship generates ethical issues that can affect the choreography and the learning experience of the student. At what point do choreographic decisions infringe upon goals for a moral, student-centered…
Descriptors: Drama, Learning Experience, Ethics, Aesthetics
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Ross, Jim – Teaching Elementary Physical Education, 2006
This article illustrates the author's discovery that the key to any successful dance unit is finding ways for students to make connections and want to dance. While reflecting on the purpose of dance in the curriculum, the author identified important skills and concepts he wanted his students to master, such as rhythm, balance, and…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Physical Fitness, Skill Development, Motor Development
Mooney, Paul – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
In this article, the author introduces the Beijing Contemporary Music Institute where more than 3,000 undergraduates study music and dance. In a country where most music departments and conservatories are dedicated to teaching classical Chinese and Western music, the institute is breaking new ground. The college, which opened in 1993 with just 100…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Colleges, Music Education, Dance Education
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