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Fifth Grade Dance Curriculum

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Title: Fifth Grade Dance Curriculum


1
Fifth Grade Dance Curriculum
  • Amber Rhyne
  • Masters Defense
  • May 6, 2009

2
Introduction
  • The following is a model dance curriculum for a
    one year public school dance education program
    for fifth grade students.
  • Purpose To be used as a model for Washington
    County Public Schools.
  • The curriculum lessons are designed for an encore
    dance class receiving dance once a week for 50
    minutes.

3
Introduction
  • This curriculum is also aligned with
  • The Maryland Fine Arts Standards in Dance
  • The American Association of Physical Education,
    Health, Recreation, and Dance
  • National Dance Education Organization
  • 5 units of study within the curriculum
  • Elements of dance, Multicultural Dance, Balance
    and Acrobatic Dance, Ballet, and Social Dance

4
Related Research
  • Dance education is vital to a well rounded public
    education system.
  • Dance Education is
  • Art Appreciation
  • Differentiated Instruction/Multiple Intelligences
  • Physical Education
  • Self-Esteem
  • Brain Development
  • Academic Achievement

5
Related Research Art Appreciation
  • The art of emotion and universal expression
  • Provides a connection between the audience and
    the artist
  • Art Education encourages students to take risks,
    think creatively, and fosters cultural
    understanding, sensitivity, and diversity.

6
Related Research Physical Education
  • Aerobic dancers showed
  • Higher mood benefits
  • Decreased BMI
  • Decreased heart rate
  • Decreased body weight
  • Increased positive attitude towards health
  • Increased self-esteem and emotional stability

7
Related ResearchBrain Development
  • The brain learns the fastest between ages 4-12
  • Balance, coordination, and muscle movement are
    stored in the cerebellum as well as cognition,
    higher order thinking, emotions, and long-term
    memory.
  • The most significant learning happens when the
    brain is learning something with novelty,
    repetition, brain stimulation, or emotional
    connection.

8
Related Research Academic Achievement
  • Performing arts challenge students to
  • use reasoning skills
  • Think critically
  • Formulate ideas
  • Draw conclusions
  • Gain ownership of work
  • Correlations with movement arts and
  • Higher college entrance scores
  • Singapore pre-schools descriptive writing
  • Balance and motor development and reading skills

9
Rationale
  • Dance education is a form of personal expression
    and development through active problem-based
    learning.
  • This curriculum includes important concepts of
    exploration, dance technique, learning
    appropriate vocabulary, and creating
    choreography.
  • Dance education students formulate an image or
    opinion of the world and how the individual
    relates to this world culturally, socially, and
    personally.

10
Curriculum Design
  • arhyne.wikispaces.com/DNC550-mastersproject
  • Scope and Sequence
  • Unit Map
  • Lesson Plans, activities, assessments

11
(No Transcript)
12
Unit 1 Elements of Dance and Creative Movement
  • Overview
  • Exploring dance concepts and the elements of
    dance and creative movement movement, body,
    time, space, force
  • Communicating thoughts or ideas through
    choreographic choices by using the elements of
    dance within choreography.
  • Enduring idea that dance has meaning.

13
Unit 1 Elements of Dance and Creative Movement
  • Explore movement vocabulary
  • Communicate ideas using force
  • Creating aesthetic movements
  • Kaleidoscope choreography
  • Graphic organizer and videotaping for evaluation

14
Unit 2 Elements of Dance and Multicultural Dance
  • Overview
  • Learning three multicultural dances and comparing
    similarities and differences between their
    elements of dance.
  • German Plattle Dance
  • Native American Rain Dance
  • Highlife Dance from Ghana
  • Creating a minimum of five adaptations to one
    dance learned.
  • Presenting adaptations to the class through an
    instructional pamphlet, teaching the class,
    performing, or drawing an illustration.

15
Unit 3 Balance and Acrobatic Dance
  • Overview
  • A skill-specific unit that involves balance and
    acrobatic dance strategies.
  • Skills
  • Weight, weight transfer, balance point, center of
    gravity
  • Break dancing
  • Yoga
  • Rolls, handstands, cartwheels, etc
  • Self-Evaluation Checklist

16
Unit 4 Ballet
  • Overview
  • Students will learn basic ballet vocabulary and
    technique.
  • Students will memorize ballet movement phrases
  • Identify sports movements that best represent
    ballet movements
  • Written assessment
  • Create ballet stories to perform behind a shadow
    screen

17
Ballet in Sports
18
Unit 5 Social Dance
  • Social dance is any dance where you are dancing
    in a large group, small group, or with a partner.
  • Social Dances performed in this unit were square
    dances, Virginia Reel, and ballroom dances
    including Tango, Swing, and Chacha.
  • Social Dance Card

19
Reflection
  • Time is always a factor in a public school with
    school events, testing, etc.
  • Opportunities to gain time with students by using
    flexible groupings which allowed for individual
    group conferencing and re-teaching.
  • Consider the order of the units within the school
    year. What would the effect be if certain dance
    units were placed elsewhere in the year.

20
Reflection
  • Scope and Sequence Revisited
  • There was a strong emphasis in perceiving and
    responding to dance requiring students to view
    and analyze dance through various media.
  • Due to the fact that there is no formal
    performance, standards that addressed performance
    qualities such as projection, execution,
    memorization, and the affects of choreographic
    choices were less represented.

21
Everything has rhythm, everything dances Maya
Angelou
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