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Dance Education around the World: Perspectives on dance, young people and change [Mīkstie vāki]

Foreword by , Edited by , Edited by (Department of Exercise and Sport Sciences, University of Copenhagen)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 186 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 380 g, 29 Halftones, black and white; 29 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Apr-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 041574363X
  • ISBN-13: 9780415743631
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 66,41 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 186 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 380 g, 29 Halftones, black and white; 29 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Apr-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 041574363X
  • ISBN-13: 9780415743631
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Dance has the power to change the lives of young people. It is a force in shaping identity, affirming culture and exploring heritage in an increasingly borderless world. Creative and empowering pedagogies are driving curriculum development worldwide where the movement of peoples and cultures generates new challenges and possibilities for dance education in multiple contexts. In Dance Education around the World: Perspectives on Dance, Young People and Change, writers across the globe come together to reflect, comment on and share their expertise and experiences. The settings are drawn from a spectrum of countries with contributions from Europe, the Americas, the Middle East, Asia, the Pacific and Africa giving insights and fresh perspectives into contrasting ideas, philosophies and approaches to dance education from Egypt to Ghana, Brazil to Finland, Jamaica to the Netherlands, the UK, USA, Australia, New Zealand and more.

This volume offers chapters and narratives on:





Curriculum developments worldwide





Empowering communities through dance





Embodiment and creativity in dance teaching





Exploring and assessing learning in dance as artistic practice





Imagined futures for dance education

Reflection, evaluation, analysis and documentation are key to the evolving ecology of dance education and research involving individuals, communities and nations. Dance Education around the World: Perspectives on Dance, Young People and Change provides a great resource for dance educators, practitioners and researchers, and pushes for the furtherance of dance education around the world.

Charlotte Svendler Nielsen is Assistant professor and head of educational studies at the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, research group Body, Learning and Identity, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Stephanie Burridge lectures at Lasalle College of the Arts and Singapore Management University, and is the series editor for Routledge Celebrating Dance in Asia and the Pacific.

Recenzijas

"...this book is more than a catalogue of examples. It is a book of analysis and reflection. Its intention is not simply to declare the power of dance but to fathom it. It is designed to deepen understanding of the many roles of dance in human life: in shaping cultural identity, in expressing our deepest feelings, in embodying relationships and in giving form to ideas than cannot be rendered so aptly in any other way. More than this, it interrogates the conditions that are needed, in education especially, for dance to fulfill these roles." - Sir Ken Robinson, Foreword

"The contents of the various anthology contributions vary, but they show together on the importance of sharing experiences and ideas between researchers dance, dance teachers and dance practitioners around the world. This anthology is a step in the right direction and the process to reflect, evaluate, analyze and document dance education must continue." - Torun Mattsson, idrottsforum.org

List of contributors
ix
Foreword xv
Sir Ken Robinson
Acknowledgements xviii
Introduction xix
Charlotte Svendler Nielsen
Stephanie Burridge
PART I Curriculum developments worldwide
1(44)
Chapters
1.1 Applied dance curriculum: a global perspective
3(8)
Susan R. Koff
1.2 An Australian dance curriculum for social justice: potentials and possibilities
11(11)
Jeff Meiners
Robyne Garrett
1.3 Reciprocal engagement in dance: empowering encounters in New Zealand early childhood settings
22(10)
Adrienne Sansom
Case narratives
1.4 From concept to classroom: challenges facing the implementation of the dance curriculum in the Western Cape of South Africa
32(3)
Sharon Friedman
1.5 Dance in the New Zealand classroom: making connections
35(4)
Liz Melchior
1.6 Creative dance education in a Singapore primary school
39(6)
Lim Mei Chian
PART II Empowering communities through dance
45(32)
Chapters
2.1 Exploring the rights of the First Nations child through the arts: our dreams matter too
47(8)
Mary-Elizabeth Manley
2.2 Dancing beyond the post-trauma paradigm: community projects in the Occupied Palestinian Territories
55(9)
Nicholas Rowe
Case narratives
2.3 The politics of dance education in post-revolutionary Cairo
64(4)
Rosemary Martin
2.4 Traditional dance in Ghanaian schools: maintaining national identity through the involvement of youth and children
68(4)
Beatrice Ayi
2.5 Negotiating multiple spheres of identity: a Filipino dance community in Toronto, Canada
72(5)
Catherine Limbertie
PART III Embodiment and creativity in dance teaching
77(28)
Chapters
3.1 Dance as embodied dialogue: insights from a school project in Finland
79(9)
Eeva Anttila
3.2 The transformative impact of dance experiences in Brazil
88(7)
Alba Pedreira Vieira
Case narratives
3.3 Dialogue and `pedagogical love': atmosphere and reflexivity in dance
95(4)
Isto Turpeinen
3.4 Teaching for better lives: the philosophy of a Jamaican dance teacher
99(3)
Carolyn Russell-Smith
3.5 `The Summer Workshop of Dance Education for Children' at Tainan University of Technology, Taiwan
102(3)
JuanAnn Tai
PART IV Exploring and assessing learning in dance as artistic practice
105(34)
Chapters
4.1 Rethinking standards and assessment in dance education
107(10)
Susan W. Stinson
4.2 Exploring learning in dance as artistic-educational practice
117(10)
Charlotte Svendler Nielsen
Case narratives
4.3 Stepping into skin: expanding empathy through dance
127(4)
Kristen Jeppsen Groves
Marin Leggat Roper
4.4 Making the learning visible in creative dance education
131(4)
Marc Richard
4.5 Watching dance to discover `new worlds'
135(4)
Liesbeth Wildschut
PART V Imagined futures for dance education
139(38)
Chapters
5.1 Dance education: embodied knowing in the digitalised world
141(8)
Ann Kipling Brown
5.2 Partnerships for creativity: expanding teaching possibilities
149(12)
Kerry Chappell
Veronica Jobbins
5.3 Stepping back to step forward: reflections on future directions for dance education
161(7)
Ralph Buck
Case narratives
5.4 Twinning: an intercultural approach to dance education
168(5)
Maria Speth
5.5 The Post Natyam Collective: building a grassroots artistic community online
173(4)
Cynthia Ling Lee
Index 177
Charlotte Svendler Nielsen is Assistant Professor and Head of educational studies at the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, research group Body, Learning and Identity, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.

Stephanie Burridge lectures at Lasalle College of the Arts and Singapore Management University, and is the series editor for Routledge Celebrating Dance in Asia and the Pacific.