Warming up and finding ideas
Students start the year exploring movement and pulling ideas from their own lives and interests. They try out short dance sketches and learn how a small idea can grow into a longer piece.
This is the year dance becomes a way to say something on purpose. Students take ideas from their own lives, history, and culture and shape them into short pieces with a clear point of view. They sharpen their technique, rehearse with intent, and give each other useful feedback before performing. By spring, students can perform a polished dance they helped create and explain what it means and why they made the choices they did.
Students start the year exploring movement and pulling ideas from their own lives and interests. They try out short dance sketches and learn how a small idea can grow into a longer piece.
Students build longer dances by arranging movements on purpose, not at random. They learn how choices about timing, space, and energy change what a dance says to someone watching.
Students polish their dances and sharpen their technique. They take feedback, fix rough spots, and rehearse the same section many times so it looks clean and intentional onstage.
Students present finished work to classmates or a wider audience. They focus on conveying a clear feeling or idea through their movement, not just remembering the steps.
Students study dances from different cultures and time periods and learn to talk about what they see. They use shared criteria to explain what works in a piece and why.
Students connect their own life experiences to the dances they create or study, explaining how personal history and outside knowledge shape the choices they make in movement.
Students examine a dance piece by asking where, when, and why it was made. That context changes how they see the movement and what it means.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect their own life experiences to the dances they create or study, explaining how personal history and outside knowledge shape the choices they make in movement. | DA:Cn10.8 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students examine a dance piece by asking where, when, and why it was made. That context changes how they see the movement and what it means. | DA:Cn11.8 |
Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a dance piece, moving from a spark of inspiration to a clear concept they can build on.
Students take their choreography ideas and shape them into a structured piece, making deliberate choices about movement, order, and how the dance fits together as a whole.
Students review a dance they've been building and make deliberate choices to finish it. They cut what isn't working, sharpen what is, and bring the piece to a clear, intentional end.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a dance piece, moving from a spark of inspiration to a clear concept they can build on. | DA:Cr1.8 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take their choreography ideas and shape them into a structured piece, making deliberate choices about movement, order, and how the dance fits together as a whole. | DA:Cr2.8 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students review a dance they've been building and make deliberate choices to finish it. They cut what isn't working, sharpen what is, and bring the piece to a clear, intentional end. | DA:Cr3.8 |
Students choose which dances to perform and explain why, considering how each piece fits the audience, the occasion, and what they want to express.
Students practice and improve a dance piece until it's ready to perform in front of an audience. Rehearsal is the work.
Students perform a dance they have shaped with purpose, so that what the audience sees and feels matches what the choreographer intended to say.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose which dances to perform and explain why, considering how each piece fits the audience, the occasion, and what they want to express. | DA:Pr4.8 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice and improve a dance piece until it's ready to perform in front of an audience. Rehearsal is the work. | DA:Pr5.8 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students perform a dance they have shaped with purpose, so that what the audience sees and feels matches what the choreographer intended to say. | DA:Pr6.8 |
Students watch a dance performance and break down what they see: how the movement is structured, what choices the choreographer made, and why those choices create a particular effect on the audience.
Students watch or perform a dance and explain what the choreographer was trying to say. They look at movement choices and describe the mood, message, or idea behind the work.
Students use a clear set of criteria to judge a dance performance, explaining what works, what doesn't, and why. The focus is on building a reasoned opinion, not just a gut reaction.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch a dance performance and break down what they see: how the movement is structured, what choices the choreographer made, and why those choices create a particular effect on the audience. | DA:Re7.8 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students watch or perform a dance and explain what the choreographer was trying to say. They look at movement choices and describe the mood, message, or idea behind the work. | DA:Re8.8 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students use a clear set of criteria to judge a dance performance, explaining what works, what doesn't, and why. The focus is on building a reasoned opinion, not just a gut reaction. | DA:Re9.8 |
Students move from learning steps to making their own short dances. They build technique, create original pieces with a clear idea behind them, perform for an audience, and watch other dancers with a thoughtful eye. Expect more independent choreography than in earlier grades.
No. Eighth grade dance is about effort, growth, and ideas, not years of training. Students who are new can hold their own by paying attention in class, practicing short movement sequences at home, and being willing to share their work.
Give them floor space and a few quiet minutes to practice or invent movement. Ask what idea or feeling their current piece is about. Watching a short dance video together and talking about what worked also builds the same skills used in class.
Start small with short solo studies that explore one idea, like a shape or a memory. Move into duets and small group work in the middle of the year. Save longer pieces with cultural or historical themes for the second half, once students can revise their own work.
Two areas tend to lag. First, revising a dance instead of just adding more to it. Second, writing or speaking about intent in clear language. Build short reflection routines after every showing so these become habits, not one-off lessons.
No. Grades reflect what students can choose to do: showing up ready, refining a piece based on feedback, performing with focus, and giving useful comments to classmates. A student with no prior training can earn strong marks by working through the full creative process.
By spring, students should be able to plan a short dance around an idea, revise it after feedback, perform it with intention, and explain what a classmate's piece was trying to say. If those four pieces are solid, they are ready.
Students look at where dances come from and what they meant to the people who made them. A piece might pull from a cultural tradition, a moment in history, or a personal story. The goal is to dance with understanding, not just copy steps.