Sixth 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:
- Participate
in dance, drama, music, visual arts, and creative writing;
- Refine
artistic skills and develop self-discipline through rehearsal,
participation, and revision;
- Appropriately
use new and traditional materials, tools, techniques, and processes in the
arts;
- Demonstrate
the creativity and imagination necessary for innovative thinking and problem
solving.
- Collaborate
with others to create and perform works of art’
- Integrate
two or more art forms to create a work of art; and
- Investigate
careers in art production.
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.
·
Demonstrate kinesthetic awareness.
·
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,
schottishe, castoff, and allemande.
·
Use locomotor and nonlocomotor movement ot 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 through movement tableau.
·
Observe a dancer(s) 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:
- Recognize
Alaska Native cultures and their arts;
- Recognize
United States and world cultures and their arts;
- Recognize
the role of tradition and ritual in the arts;
- Investigate
the relationships among the arts and the individual, the society, and the
environment;
- Recognize
universal themes in the arts such as love, war, childhood, and community;
- Recognize
specific works of art created by artists from diverse backgrounds;
- Explore
similarities and differences in the arts of world cultures;
- Respect
differences in personal and cultural perspectives; and
- Investigate
careers relating to arts history and culture.
ACTIVITIES
- Perform folk dances and singing games of
increasing complexity from a variety of cultures, may include Charleston,
pop dances, cancan, etc.
- Observe and perform, if culturally
appropriate, Alaskan Native dances.
- Discuss
the role of tradition and ritual in dance of various cultures.
- Describe
dances in a particular culture and time period.
- Compare
and contrast the role and signature of dance in two different
social/historical contexts.
- Create
a dance project that reveals understanding or a concept or ideas from
another discipline, e.g., pattern in dance and science.
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:
- Know
the criteria used to evaluate the arts; these may include craftsmanship,
function, organization, originality, technique, and theme.
- Examine
historical and contemporary works of art, the works of peers, and the
student’s own works as follows:
- Identify
the piece;
- Describe
the use of basic elements;
- Analyze
the use of basic principles;
- Interpret
meaning and artist’s intent;
- Express
and defend an informed opinion;
- Accept
and offer constructive criticism;
- Recognize
and consider an individual’s artistic expression;
- Exhibit
appropriate audience skills; and
- Investigate
careers relating to arts criticism.
ACTIVITIES
·
Create a dance and
revise it over time, articulating the reasons for artistic decisions and what
was lost and gained by those decisions.
·
Evaluate own work
and that of peers according to established criteria.
·
Explore and discover
multiple solutions to a given movement problem; choose a favorite solution and
discuss the reasons for that choice.
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:
- Make
statements about the significance of the arts and beauty in the student’s
life;
- Discuss
what makes an object or performance a work of art;
- Recognize
that people tend to devalue what they do not understand;
- Listen
to another individual’s beliefs about a work of art and consider the
individual’s reason for holding those beliefs;
- Consider
other culture’s beliefs about works of art;
- Recognize
that people connect many aspects of life through the arts;
- Make
artistic choices in everyday living; and
- Investigate
careers related to the search for beauty and meaning, which is aesthetics.
ACTIVITIES
- Discuss how dance is different from other
forms of human movement.
- Formulate and answer questions about how
movement choices communicate abstract ideas in dance.
- Present own dances or movement sequences to
peers and discuss their meaning with competence and competence.
- Discus, when appropriate, cultural beliefs
about dance.
- Discuss how a given dance evokes a feeling.
- Examine ways that dance creates and conveys
meaning by considering the dance from a variety of perspectives.
ASSESSMENT
·
Student performance
·
Rubric/checklists
·
Observational, anecdotal records