Finding ideas to move
Students start the year pulling movement ideas from their own lives, memories, and things they notice around them. Expect short solos and small group pieces built from a feeling, a question, or a story.
This is the year dance becomes a way to say something on purpose. Students draw on their own experiences and what they know about history and culture to shape short pieces with real intent. They polish their technique, rehearse with focus, and learn to give honest feedback on their own work and a classmate's. By spring, students can perform a piece they helped create and explain the meaning behind the choices they made.
Students start the year pulling movement ideas from their own lives, memories, and things they notice around them. Expect short solos and small group pieces built from a feeling, a question, or a story.
Students take rough ideas and build them into real dances with a clear beginning, middle, and end. They try different orders, repeat strong moments, and cut what does not work.
Students look at where dances come from and what they meant to the people who made them. They compare styles from different times and places and use that thinking in their own work.
Students work on the craft side of dance: balance, control, timing with music, and clean transitions. Parents may see more focused practice and self-correction at home.
Students rehearse and present finished pieces, paying attention to what they want the audience to feel. They give and receive feedback using clear criteria instead of just liking or disliking a piece.
Students connect something from their own life to a dance they create or study, explaining how that personal experience shapes the movement or meaning.
Students look at a dance and ask where it came from. They research the time period, culture, or community that shaped it, then explain how that context changes what the dance means.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect something from their own life to a dance they create or study, explaining how that personal experience shapes the movement or meaning. | DA:Cn10.8 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students look at a dance and ask where it came from. They research the time period, culture, or community that shaped it, then explain how that context changes what the dance means. | DA:Cn11.8 |
Students brainstorm movement ideas and develop them into a plan for an original dance. They explore different ways a body can move before committing to a direction for their piece.
Students take their movement ideas and shape them into a structured piece, making deliberate choices about how sections connect and where the work is heading.
Students review a dance they have been building and make final decisions about movement, timing, and structure before calling it finished.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm movement ideas and develop them into a plan for an original dance. They explore different ways a body can move before committing to a direction for their piece. | DA:Cr1.8 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take their movement ideas and shape them into a structured piece, making deliberate choices about how sections connect and where the work is heading. | DA:Cr2.8 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students review a dance they have been building and make final decisions about movement, timing, and structure before calling it finished. | DA:Cr3.8 |
Students review a piece of choreography or movement study and decide whether it's ready to share with an audience. That means looking closely at the artistic choices behind it, not just whether the steps are clean.
Students practice and improve specific dance skills until their movements are ready to share with an audience. The focus is on refining what they already know, not just running through a routine.
Students refine and perform a dance so the movement communicates a clear idea or feeling to the audience. The choices they make, from tempo to gesture, are intentional.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students review a piece of choreography or movement study and decide whether it's ready to share with an audience. That means looking closely at the artistic choices behind it, not just whether the steps are clean. | DA:Pr4.8 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice and improve specific dance skills until their movements are ready to share with an audience. The focus is on refining what they already know, not just running through a routine. | DA:Pr5.8 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students refine and perform a dance so the movement communicates a clear idea or feeling to the audience. The choices they make, from tempo to gesture, are intentional. | DA:Pr6.8 |
Students watch a dance performance and break down what they see: how the movement, timing, and use of space work together to create meaning.
Students analyze a dance performance and explain what the choreographer was trying to say. They support their reading of the work with specific movements, staging, or artistic choices they observed.
Students use a set of criteria to judge a dance, explaining why specific movements or choices do or do not meet the standard they set.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch a dance performance and break down what they see: how the movement, timing, and use of space work together to create meaning. | DA:Re7.8 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students analyze a dance performance and explain what the choreographer was trying to say. They support their reading of the work with specific movements, staging, or artistic choices they observed. | DA:Re8.8 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students use a set of criteria to judge a dance, explaining why specific movements or choices do or do not meet the standard they set. | DA:Re9.8 |
Students make their own short dances, perform pieces for an audience, and watch and discuss the work of others. They pull ideas from their own lives and from history or culture, then shape those ideas into movement with a clear beginning, middle, and end.
Ask students to show a short piece they're working on and explain what it's about. Five minutes of real attention and one specific question, such as what a certain move means, does more than praise. Clear floor space and a phone for recording practice also help.
Choreography is one part. Students also study how dance connects to history and culture, give feedback on classmates' work, and refine their own pieces based on that feedback. The thinking and revising matter as much as the steps.
Many teachers start with short making tasks to build a movement vocabulary, then layer in performance skills once students have material worth refining. Responding works best woven through, not saved for the end, so students learn to give and use feedback while pieces are still in progress.
Revision is the sticking point. Students often treat a first draft of a dance as finished. Plan repeated cycles of show, feedback, and rework on the same short piece so refining becomes a habit rather than a one-time step.
By spring, students should be able to make a short original piece tied to a clear idea, perform it with control, and talk about another dancer's work using specific criteria. If a student can explain why they made a choice and how they changed it, they're ready.
No. The work rewards students who think carefully about ideas and put in honest practice. A student who has never taken a class can still make strong pieces by paying attention to feedback and rehearsing between sessions.
Teachers use criteria such as how clearly an idea comes through, how well the movement is performed, and how thoughtfully a student responds to other dancers' work. Students learn those criteria and use them on their own pieces too.