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Chan, J. C. P.; Leung, H.; Tang, J. K. T.; Komura, T. – IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2011
In this paper, a new dance training system based on the motion capture and virtual reality (VR) technologies is proposed. Our system is inspired by the traditional way to learn new movements-imitating the teacher's movements and listening to the teacher's feedback. A prototype of our proposed system is implemented, in which a student can imitate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Control Groups
Arkansas State Dept. of Education, Little Rock. – 1995
This framework for dance contains three instructional strands. Each strand has content standards and cumulative student learning expectations for grades K-4, grades 5-8, and grades 9-12. The three strands are: (1) "Basic Elements of Movement;" (2) "Arts in Civilization;" and (3) "Artistic Communication." The content…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Dance, Dance Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Magruder, Ella – Journal of Physical Education and Recreation, 1981
Improvisation and imagery should be used to strengthen the thin bond between creativity and motor development in children. The approach to dance as an improvisational tool should be made more concrete when working with special populations such as mentally handicapped students. (JN)
Descriptors: Body Image, Creative Activities, Dance, Dance Therapy
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Koff, Susan R. – Childhood Education, 2000
Defines dance education, noting that it enables all children to be expressive nonverbally and to incorporate the physical self as a functioning part of the whole social being. Differentiates dance training and education. Discusses the importance of learning through movement and curricular integration through dance, asserting that dance education…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Childhood Needs, Dance, Dance Education
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Mackinlay, Elizabeth – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2005
In this paper I explore the special type of thinking, moving and dancing place which is opened up for decolonisaton when students engage in an embodied pedagogical practice in Indigenous education. I examine what decolonisation means in this context by describing the ways in which the curriculum, the students and me, and more generally the…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Dance, Music, Dance Education
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Nilges, Lynda M. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2004
The movement meanings of students (n=19) in one fifth-grade class during a creative dance unit focusing on effort (force, time, space, flow) are investigated using a perspective grounded in transcendental phenomenology (Husserl, 1931). Data were collected via videotape, journal, and homework documents and semistructured interviews. Analytical…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Dance, Dance Education, Physical Education
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Gould, Elizabeth – International Journal of Music Education, 2006
For philosopher Gilles Deleuze, the work of philosophy consists of affirmatively and artistically creating and reworking concepts in response to real-life problems in an ongoing process that invites new perspectives and ways of thinking. Carol Matthews's music composition pedagogical practices reflect these processes, arguing that they demonstrate…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Music Teachers, Elementary School Students
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Giguere, Miriam – Journal of Dance Education, 2006
This study examines the cognitive experiences of children as they engage in creative projects in both dance and poetry. The data includes interviews with fifth graders from an elementary School in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, about their lived experience of writing poetry and creating dances. Students interviewed for this study participated in a…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Language Arts, Grade 5, Poetry
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Johnston, Dale – Research in Dance Education, 2006
Authoritarian teaching practices in ballet inhibit the use of private speech. This paper highlights the critical importance of private speech in the cognitive development of young ballet students, within what is largely a non-verbal art form. It draws upon research by Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky and contemporary socioculturalists, to…
Descriptors: Dance, Authoritarianism, Teaching Styles, Dance Education
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Daniels, Kathryn – Journal of Dance Education, 2007
Turnout is a vital element of many dance techniques. Aesthetically, turnout is used to fulfill artistic goals related to body line and design. Mechanically, it increases the potential range of movement in certain leg gestures and facilitates movements sideways through space. Turnout involves external rotation of the femur along its long axis in…
Descriptors: Cues, Dance Education, Teaching Methods, Aesthetics
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Niland, Amanda – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 2007
Humans have communicated through arts such as storytelling, music and dance throughout history, and have often used combinations of different art forms to express ideas. Just as traditional storytellers have done in many cultures through the ages, early childhood practitioners can use a variety of art forms when they share books and stories with…
Descriptors: Music Education, Young Children, Integrated Curriculum, Art Activities
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Smith, Jennifer – Teaching Artist Journal, 2007
There are many talented and creative dance professionals working in academia today, and it can be stifling to an artist to feel that one must give students traditional class assignments to evaluate their progress. Dance is a creative endeavor, and all aspects of the curricula, even non-movement-based classwork, can and should reflect this fact. In…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Holistic Approach, College Instruction, Integrated Curriculum
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Skoning, Stacey N. – TEACHING Exceptional Children Plus, 2008
Benefits to using creative movement and dance as teaching tools in the classroom include increased student understanding of content, improved classroom behavior, and the development of new forms of assessment. Integration of these activities within the instructional day will meet the needs of a variety of learners, especially kinesthetic learners,…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Dance, Emotional Disturbances, Learning Disabilities
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Gard, Michael – Sport, Education and Society, 2008
Why would boys want to dance? Why would anyone want to dance? The argument prosecuted in this paper is that dance educators have tended to see dance as a self-evidently good thing with self-evident benefits for children who learn to dance. In other words, dance educators tend to concern themselves with why students should dance rather than why…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Educational Objectives, Males, Physical Education
Council for Basic Education, Washington, DC. – 1994
This document presents the results of the project to develop an assessment framework and specifications for a planned 1996 Arts Education Assessment. The purpose of the project was to develop and recommend a framework and other design features for an arts education assessment that includes the areas of dance, music, theater, and the visual arts.…
Descriptors: Art Education, Dance, Dance Education, Educational Objectives
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