Stage C - Fine Arts--Dance
Descriptors
25A - Students who meet the standard understand the sensory
elements, organizational principles, and expressive qualities
of the arts.
- Identify and describe basic locomotor and nonlocomotor
movements in personal and peer performances.
- Distinguish among spatial factors (direction, level, size,
shape).
- Describe quick/slow, strong/ light movements in personal
and peer performances.
- Create and demonstrate dances showing an understanding
of AB form and logical sequencing of movement (beginning,
middle, and ending).
- Structure movements into dance phrases and sections.
- Identify specific actions, gestures, and changes in movements
that communicate feelings and ideas.
25B - Students who meet the standard understand the similarities,
distinctions, and connections in and among the arts.
- Compare sensory elements, organizational principles, and
expressive qualities shared among several art forms that
express a similar idea (e.g. beginning, middle, and end
in music, dance, and drama).
- Compare the use of sound, movement, action, or visual
images to express similar ideas (e.g., subject matter such
as night, ocean; emotions/moods such as sad, scary).
26A - Students who meet the standard understand processes,
traditional tools, and modern technologies used in the arts.
- Explain why the body is the main tool of dance.
- Discuss ways words, sounds, pictures, props, and stories
are used to create or perform dances.
- Create and perform sequences/phrases that demonstrate
the elements.
26B - Students who meet the standard can apply skills
and knowledge necessary to create and perform in one or more
of the arts.
- Perform a nd differentiate among basic locomotor and nonlocomotor
movements.
- Perform using a series of shapes on different levels and
create moving transitions between them.
- Vary actions with regard to spatial elements (i.e., personal,
shared, levels, directions, pathways, relationships, size).
- Demonstrate a variety of beats, tempos, and rhythms in
response to verbal cues.
- Demonstrate changes in force/energy of movement (e.g.,
strong/light) in response to verbal cues when dancing.
- Perform folk dance representative of a variety of cultures.
- Improvise, create, and perform dances using a variety
of resources: voice sounds, body sounds (e.g., clapping,
patting, finger snapping), stories, poetry, images, props,
and music.
- Describe processes used when creating dances (e.g., imagining,
visualizing, problem solving, how ideas are communicated
through movement).
27A - Students who meet the standard can analyze how the
arts function in history, society and everyday life.
- Distinguish between appropriate and inappropriate audience
behaviors.
- React to performances/ art works in a respectful, constructive,
and supportive manner.
- Match the types of occupations with their art form (e.g.,
actor, director, playwright, designer with drama).
- Compare ways the arts are used in a celebration (e.g.,
masks, costumes, banners, songs, dances).
- List the things that artists make or do when they communicate
through the arts (e.g., pictures, songs, advertisements,
stories, movements, buildings).
- Point out ways the arts are used for personal time and
enrichment (e.g., concerts, plays, exhibits, broadcasts,
social dances, choirs, lessons).
- Describe occupations that are related to the arts (e.g.,
photographer, illustrator, composer, playwright, choreographer,
architect).
27B - Students who meet the standard understand how the
arts shape and reflect history, society and everyday life.
- Identify cultural characteristics of a work of art.
- Describe how the arts inform viewers about people and
events from history.
- Name significant artists in dance, drama, music, or visual
art.
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