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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results
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Francis, Nancy R.; Lathrop, Anna H. – Journal of Dance Education, 2014
Educational scholars agree that the relationship between curriculum development and practice is mitigated by complex political and cultural agendas (Goodson 1984; Vertinsky 2007). As a performing art form and physical activity, dance does not easily fit within the context of a typical school subject and is a site for ontological and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Curriculum, Dance Education, Curriculum Development
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Purvis, Denise – Journal of Dance Education, 2014
Dance education in the P-12 setting serves many purposes, including creating technicians, producing creative thinkers, and increasing students' understanding of emotional and physical health. However, in settings where there is often only one teacher running an underfunded program, how is it possible to attain all these goals? The instructor…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Dance Education, Dance, Secondary School Students
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Henley, Matthew – Journal of Dance Education, 2014
There are many reasons to teach dance as part of the broader curriculum. This article focuses on using dance as a way to foster critical thinking. In this conceptual article, I draw from the National Standards goals that were in line with my own framework of dance as uniquely engaging the three different sensory systems of exteroception,…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Teaching Methods, Sensory Experience, Perceptual Development
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Humphreys, Kathryn; Kimbrell, Sinéad – Journal of Dance Education, 2013
Drawing on more than two decades of experience refining this teaching process, as well as insights from two consecutive research studies of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago's education work, this article presents best practice strategies for teaching choreography to elementary students in schools. The article outlines the rationale behind the…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Instructional Effectiveness, Dance Education, Elementary Education
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Munjee, Tara – Journal of Dance Education, 2012
Contact improvisation can serve as a way to access new understandings of Bartenieff Fundamentals. Inherent elements of contact improvisation such as thinking and feeling bodily in the moment, sensitivity to activated weight along with weight sharing and bearing, flow, whole-body organization, and immediacy of embodied presence provide fertile…
Descriptors: Creative Activities, Investigations, Models, Movement Education
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Aceto, Melanie – Journal of Dance Education, 2012
For intermediate and advanced university students, technique class has traditionally been the place to study a particular teacher's style and to hone technical skills. This article suggests a pedagogy that broadens standard practice by focusing additionally on both performance principles and spontaneous problem solving in the technique classroom.…
Descriptors: Dance, Movement Education, College Students, Higher Education
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Soriano, Christina Tsoules – Journal of Dance Education, 2010
In this article, the author describes how she was able to instill some ideas about looking at the world through the lens of dance as an important reorientation of what it means to be male through an eight-week course entitled Movement for Men. This elective class is open only to male undergraduates, and predominantly, the class population is…
Descriptors: Dance, Stereotypes, Dance Education, Males
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Siegenfeld, Billy – Journal of Dance Education, 2009
"Standing down straight" means to stand on two feet with both stability and relaxation. Using standing down straight as the foundation of class work, Jump Rhythm Technique offers a fresh alternative to conventional systems of dance study. It bases its pedagogy on three behaviors: grounding the body so that it can move with power and efficiency,…
Descriptors: Dance, Dance Education, Music, African Americans
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Kaufmann, Karen; Ellis, Becky – Journal of Dance Education, 2007
University courses preparing elementary education majors to incorporate creative movement into their teaching methodology are becoming requirements in many schools of education around the country. The article addresses three questions pertinent to preparing upcoming teachers: 1. How can pre-service generalist teachers develop an appreciation of…
Descriptors: Education Majors, Elementary Education, Teaching Methods, Creative Teaching
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Gottlob, Stephanie; Oka, Yuji – Journal of Dance Education, 2007
Re-Education classrooms are self-contained and tightly organized, to meet the unpredictable challenges of daily school life. It is typical to observe children hitting, kicking, spitting, crying or shutting down completely while lessons are being taught. Teachers, in turn, are required to physically restrain a child if he might cause injury to…
Descriptors: Movement Education, Emotional Disturbances, Teaching Methods, Preschool Children
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Lavender, Larry – Journal of Dance Education, 2006
Within the Western fine arts tradition of concert and theatrical dance, new dances may be created in any number of ways. No matter how dance making begins, however, unless the work is to be improvised afresh each time it is performed, a process of developing, revising, and "setting" the work needs to take place. To move confidently and…
Descriptors: Creativity, Mentors, Fine Arts, Criticism
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Bales, Melanie – Journal of Dance Education, 2006
This topic stems from the author's experience in the technique classroom, and from her training in Laban Movement Analysis. The three fundamental branches of Laban's system--Body, Effort and Space--offer an opportunity to approach teaching through these separate, yet inextricably linked, lenses. This article defines each of the three categories in…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Dance, Human Posture, Teachers
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Eddy, Martha – Journal of Dance Education, 2006
Based in bodily awareness, somatic education has many points of relationship with dance education. Body-Mind Centering[R] (BMC), with some of its roots in Laban Movement Analysis/Bartenieff Fundamentals (LMA/BF), has a particularly easy link to dance. When studying Body-Mind Centering, the theoretical components are often taught through dance…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Anatomy, Metacognition, Human Body
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Van Dyke, Jan – Journal of Dance Education, 2005
This is a report on teaching the first semester of college-level choreography with an emphasis on elements of craft. The philosophical and aesthetic issues that lie behind this choice are described and an attempt is made to explain the sequence of coursework and the way choreographic skills are approached. Student comments are included to show the…
Descriptors: Dance, Dance Education, Higher Education, Aesthetic 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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