GRADES 5-8
CONTENT AND ACHIEVEMENT STANDARDS
Except as noted, the standards in this section describe the cumulative
skills and knowledge expected of all students upon exiting grade
8. Students in grades 5-7 should engage in developmentally appropriate
learning experiences to prepare them to achieve these standards
at grade 8. These standards presume that the students have achieved
the standards specified for grades K-4; they assume that the students
will demonstrate higher levels of the expected skills and knowledge,
will deal with increasingly complex art works, and will provide
more sophisticated responses to works of art. Determining the curriculum
and the specific instructional activities necessary to achieve the
standards is the responsibility of states, local school districts,
and individual teachers.
Dance
Music
Theatre
Visual
Arts
DANCE (5-8)
Through creating, performing, and responding to dance, middle
school students can continue to develop skills and knowledge that
enhance the important development of self-image and social relationships.
Cooperation and collaboration are emphasized at this age, fostering
positive interactions.
Dance education can offer a positive, healthy alternative to the
many destructive choices available to adolescents. Students are
encouraged to take more responsibility for the care, conditioning,
and health of their bodies (both within and outside the dance class),
thus learning that self-discipline is a prerequisite for achievement
in dance.
Students in grades 5-8 develop a sense of themselves in relation
to others and in relation to the world. As a result, they are ready
to respond more thoughtfully to dance, to perceive details of style
and choreographic structure, and to reflect upon what is communicated.
The study of dance provides a unique and valuable insight into the
culture or period from which it has come. Informed by social and
cultural experiences, movement concepts, and dance-making processes,
students integrate dance with other art forms.
Content Standard #1: Identifying and demonstrating movement elements
and skills in performing dance
Achievement Standard:
Students demonstrate the following movement skills and explain
the underlying principles: alignment, balance, initiation of movement,
articulation of isolated body parts, weight shift, elevation and
landing, fall and recovery Students accurately identify and demonstrate
basic dance steps, positions, and patterns for dance from two different
styles or traditions (e.g., ballet, square, Ghanasian, Middle Eastern,
modern) Students accurately transfer a spatial pattern from the
visual to the kinesthetic Students accurately transfer a rhythmic
pattern from the aural to the kinesthetic Students identify and
clearly demonstrate a range of dynamics / movement qualities Students
demonstrate increasing kinesthetic awareness, concentration, and
focus in performing movement skills Students demonstrate accurate
memorization and reproduction of movement sequences Students describe
the action and movement elements observed in a dance, using appropriate
movement/dance vocabulary
Content Standard #2: Understanding choreographic principles, processes,
and structures
Achievement Standard:
Students clearly demonstrate the principles of contrast and transition
Students effectively demonstrate the processes of reordering and
chance Students successfully demonstrate the structures or forms
of AB, ABA, canon, call and response, and narrative Students demonstrate
the ability to work cooperatively in a small group during the choreographic
process Students demonstrate the following partner skills in a visually
interesting way: creating contrasting and complementary shapes,
taking and supporting weight
Content Standard #3: Understanding dance as a way to create and
communicate meaning
Achievement Standard:
Students effectively demonstrate the difference between pantomiming
and abstracting a gesture Students observe and explain how different
accompaniment (such as sound, music, spoken text) can affect the
meaning of a dance Students demonstrate and/or explain how lighting
and costuming can contribute to the meaning of a dance Students
create a dance that successfully communicates a topic of personal
significance
Content Standard #4: Applying and demonstrating critical and creative
thinking skills in dance
Achievement Standard:
Students create a movement problem and demonstrate multiple solutions;
choose the most interesting solutions and discuss the reasons for
their choice Students demonstrate appropriate audience behavior
in watching dance performances; discuss their opinions about the
dances with their peers in a supportive and constructive way Students
compare and contrast two dance compositions in terms of space (such
as shape and pathways), time (such as rhythm and tempo), and force/energy
(movement qualities) Students identify possible aesthetic criteria
for evaluating dance (such as skill of performers, originality,
visual and/or emotional impact, variety and contrast)
Content Standard #5: Demonstrating and understanding dance in
various cultures and historical periods
Achievement Standard:
Students competently perform folk and/or classical dances from
various cultures; describe similarities and differences in steps
and movement styles Students competently perform folk, social, and/or
theatrical dances from a broad spectrum of twentieth-century America
Students learn from resources in their own community (such as people,
books, videas) a folk dance of a different culture or a social dance
of a different time period and the cultural/historical context of
that dance, effectively sharing the dance and its context with their
peers Students accurately describe the role of dance in at least
two different cultures or time periods
Content Standard #6: Making connections between dance and healthful
living
Achievement Standard:
Students identify at least three personal goals to improve themselves
as dancers and steps they are taking to reach those goals Students
explain strategies to prevent dance injuries Students create their
own warmup and discuss how that warmup prepares the body and mind
for expressive purposes
Content Standard #7: Making connections between dance and other
disciplines
Achievement Standard:
Students create a project that reveals similarities and differences
between the arts Students cite examples of concepts used in dance
and another discipline outside the arts (such as balance, shape,
and pattern) Students observe the same dance both live and recorded
on video; compare and contrast the aesthetic impact of the two observations
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