Finding ideas to move
Students start the year by turning their own experiences, memories, and observations into movement. Expect them to come home talking about where their dance ideas came from and why.
This is the year dance becomes a way to say something on purpose. Students pull from their own lives and from the world around them to shape short pieces with a clear idea behind them. They learn to revise their choreography, polish how they perform it, and talk about what other dancers are trying to express. By spring, students can perform a short dance they helped create and explain the meaning behind the moves.
Students start the year by turning their own experiences, memories, and observations into movement. Expect them to come home talking about where their dance ideas came from and why.
Students take rough ideas and build them into longer pieces with a clear beginning, middle, and end. They make choices about timing, space, and energy, then revise until the dance feels finished.
Students work on the craft of dancing itself. Balance, control, and clean transitions get steady practice so that the movement they choose actually shows up in their bodies.
Students study performances by classmates and professional dancers. They describe what they see, figure out what the choreographer was trying to say, and use clear reasons to judge how well it worked.
Students bring it all together in a final performance. They link their dance to a culture, time period, or idea that matters to them and present it so an audience can feel the meaning.
Students connect what they know from other subjects and from their own lives to the dances they create. Personal experience shapes the choices they make in movement and performance.
Students connect a dance piece to the time, place, or culture it came from. Knowing that context changes how they watch, perform, and talk about the work.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect what they know from other subjects and from their own lives to the dances they create. Personal experience shapes the choices they make in movement and performance. | DA:Cn10.8 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students connect a dance piece to the time, place, or culture it came from. Knowing that context changes how they watch, perform, and talk about the work. | DA:Cn11.8 |
Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a dance, deciding what movement, mood, or story they want to explore before they begin choreographing.
Students take a dance idea and shape it into a full piece, making deliberate choices about movement, structure, and how the parts fit together.
Students revisit a dance they've been building, fix what isn't working, and bring the piece to a finished, performable state.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a dance, deciding what movement, mood, or story they want to explore before they begin choreographing. | DA:Cr1.8 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take a dance idea and shape it into a full piece, making deliberate choices about movement, structure, and how the parts fit together. | DA:Cr2.8 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students revisit a dance they've been building, fix what isn't working, and bring the piece to a finished, performable state. | DA:Cr3.8 |
Students choose dances to perform and explain why each piece works for the audience and occasion.
Students practice and improve a dance piece until it's ready to perform, making deliberate choices about technique, timing, and how the work looks to an audience.
Students choose specific movements and sequences to express an idea or feeling, then perform that work for an audience in a way that makes the meaning clear.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose dances to perform and explain why each piece works for the audience and occasion. | 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, making deliberate choices about technique, timing, and how the work looks to an audience. | DA:Pr5.8 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students choose specific movements and sequences to express an idea or feeling, then perform that work for an audience in a way that makes the meaning clear. | DA:Pr6.8 |
Students watch a dance and break down how it works: what the choreographer chose to do with movement, timing, and space, and why those choices shape what the piece feels like.
Students explain what a dance is trying to say and back it up with specific movements they observed. They connect what they see in the choreography to the emotions or ideas the dancer seems to be expressing.
Students choose specific standards to judge a dance, then explain in writing or discussion why a performance meets or falls short of those standards.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch a dance and break down how it works: what the choreographer chose to do with movement, timing, and space, and why those choices shape what the piece feels like. | DA:Re7.8 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what a dance is trying to say and back it up with specific movements they observed. They connect what they see in the choreography to the emotions or ideas the dancer seems to be expressing. | DA:Re8.8 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students choose specific standards to judge a dance, then explain in writing or discussion why a performance meets or falls short of those standards. | DA:Re9.8 |
Students create their own short dances, perform them for others, and talk about what dances mean. They also learn to watch dance carefully and explain what they notice. The work moves past copying steps and into making real choices about movement.
Give students space to move and time to rehearse, even if it is just five minutes in the living room. Ask them to show a piece of what they are working on and explain one choice they made. Watching a short dance video together and talking about it also helps.
No. The year rewards thinking, choice-making, and revision as much as physical skill. A student who can explain why they used a slow movement or a sharp turn is doing the work that matters at this level.
Start with generating and shaping ideas, then move into refining and rehearsing, and end with performance and reflection. Build responding skills alongside creating from day one, so students can talk about dance before they have to present their own.
Refining work is the hardest part. Students often want to call a first draft finished. Spend extra time on revision cycles, giving and using feedback, and choosing movement on purpose rather than by habit.
Students link their dances to history, culture, and personal experience. A piece might respond to a poem, a news story, or a moment from a student's own life. These connections give the movement something to be about.
A student can take an idea, build it into a short dance, rehearse it, perform it with intent, and explain the choices behind it. They can also watch a peer's dance and give specific, useful feedback tied to clear criteria.
Work is judged against clear criteria such as use of space, control, intent, and revision. Students know the criteria before they create, and they use the same criteria to evaluate their own work and a classmate's.
They should be comfortable making a short dance from scratch, rehearsing it, performing for a small audience, and discussing meaning in their own work and others'. If those four pieces feel familiar by spring, they are ready.