Many students who excelled in my class in the brick and mortar setting, did not submit assignments and opted out of synchronous learning opportunities. There were a plethora of reasons for their absences and low engagement. Some students had to share devices with siblings and parents, others had low internet bandwidth, still others found themselves with additional familial responsibilities as their parents did not have the luxury of working from home.
Our school was very responsive in addressing these external factors through daily family outreach from our deans and counselors as well as adjusting grading practices to accommodate the trauma of learning during a pandemic. We chose to center “grace before grades” and support students with extended deadlines, office hours, and multiple opportunities to resubmit their work. Students leveraged these opportunities in their traditional academic classes but were slower to avail themselves of these opportunities in the arts and aesthetics.
Since March, many students and teachers have experienced “troubled lives” in ways we did not imagine this year would bring. I knew meaningful dance experiences would not only benefit my students physically, but also emotionally and mentally. I was also aware that students who formerly exercised so much choice and independence daily in riding the train to school, buying meals from local delis, and spending time with friends before and after school were now confined to their homes, with limited choices. So I decided to infuse student choice in as many aspects of the curriculum as possible. Here are some examples of how I did that:
Choice in virtual backgrounds:
Choice in warm-up:
Choice in pathways to standards:
Choice in sequence:
Choice in pathways for work submission:
These were some of the ways I leveraged choice to engage my students in remote learning. Students also chose to dance alone or with siblings, parents, and pets. They dance with props, in kitchens and outside. They danced to songs that healed them or voiced emotions they were not ready to verbalize, and they engaged in the creative process in ways that will impact me for a long time. Through providing choice in remote learning, I heard my students’ voices and they assured me of hope beyond our collective, current experience.
If you have other ideas or topics you'd like us to discuss in the future about teaching in the arts, please add them on this Padlet.
Here are some additional resources to support you in your teaching:
Dance Remote Learning Resources | |||
Apps | Online Classes | ||
Yoga Bar HIIT App Dance Maker App Just Dance Now |
Clistudios.com ($) Steezy.co ($) https://www.aileyextension.com/keepdancing |
||
Performance Streams | |||
The Joyce Theater | |||
Youtube Resources/Unit Ideas | |||
KidzBop Daily Dance Break (3pm EST) Just Dance Choreography via Youtube Dance Theater of Harlem Virtual Ballet Series Trisha Brown Dance Company’s site Exquisite Corpse (PBS - Mitchell Rose) Tutting (Mihran via youtube) Journal Your Day through Dance (Inspired by Ailey’s Ella at home version) Small space dances + Rhythm |
|||
Other Resources: | |||
Teaching Dance in Fall 2020 |