Fifth Grade Dance and Movement Curriculum
Standard A: A student should be able to create and perform in the arts.
A student who meets the content standard should:
ACTIVITIES
· Use forward, backward, clockwise, and counterclockwise; use different pathways in movement, e.g. spiral, zigzag, curved, etc
· Demonstrate the partner skills of copying, leading, following, and mirroring; work with partner and small groups in creating movement.
· Use face-to-face, back-to back, and side-to-side with a partner.
· Demonstrate the use of weight sharing.
· Use formations: scattered, circle, double line of partners, double circle of partners, trio circle, and sets of four.
· Participate in folk dances and historical dances.
· Learn dance vocabulary and movement, e.g. in, out, step-hop, step-touch, elbow swing, dishrag, do-si-do, star, grapevine, schottische, castoff, and allemande.
· Use locomotor and non-locomotor movement to create own movement sequences or dances.
· Create shapes at low middle and high levels, also shapes that are curved, twisted, angular, etc.
· Use small and big movements to shape; use group shape to create a tableau.
· Respond to beat, accent, meters, rhythmic pattern, and tempi.
· Observe a dancer at work or in a performance.
ASSESSMENT:
· Student performance
· Rubric/checklists
· Observational, anecdotal records
· Video portfolio
Standard
B: A student should be able to understand the historical and
contemporary role of the arts in Alaska, the nation, and the world.
A student who meets the content standard should:
ACTIVITIES
ASSESSMENT:
· Student performance
· Rubric/checklists
· Observational, anecdotal records
· Video portfolio
Standard
C: A Student should be able to critique the student’s art and the art of
others.
A student who meets the content standard should:
ACTIVITIES
·
Explore and discover
multiple solutions to a given movement problem; choose a favorite solution and
discuss the reasons for that choice.
·
Observe a dance
performance.
·
Describe a dance
using simple dance terminology, e.g., space, body, level, pathway, relationship
(partners, circle), etc.
·
Compare two dances
using dance terminology.
·
Demonstrate
appropriate audience skills.
ASSESSMENT:
· Student portfolio
· Rubric/checklists
· Observational, anecdotal records
Standard
D: A student should be able to recognize beauty and meaning through the
arts in the student’s life.
A student who meets the content standard should:
ACTIVITIES
ASSESSMENT
· Student performance
· Rubric/checklists
· Observational, anecdotal records