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Let’s Dance: Greek and Latin Affixes and Roots

January 22, 2016 by Erika Leave a Comment

This class was inspired by this standard from the Utah Common Core (4th grade Literacy):

Language Standard 4 
Determine or clarify the meaning of unknown and multiple-meaning words and phrases based on grade 4 reading and content, choosing flexibly from a range of strategies.

  1. Use common, grade-appropriate Greek and Latin affixes and roots as clues to the meaning of a word (e.g., telegraph, photograph, autograph).

roots and affixes

First, grab this printable and print out word cards for all the affixes and roots you’ll be learning today.  Make sure to print double sided!  Arrange all word cards so that the side with the root word is visible, Jeopardy board style.  Allow students to pick words from the board and do the associated activity.  Quiz students throughout the class period on the English meaning of each root word.

dynam=power (In small groups, create an interesting group shape.  Figure out a way to explode out of your shape in the largest, most powerful explosion you can create.   Everyone make your shape, vibrate and gather all the energy you can; now, explode as big as you can!)

micro=small (Teach students a short, eight-count sequence using average amounts of space.  For example: step, step, kick, punch, pivot turn, and balance.  They have thirty seconds to figure out how they can perform the sequence as small as possible.  Can they use different body parts?  Levels? )

macro=large (Do in conjunction with micro, and allow students to choose changing the sequence to large or small movements).

cycl=circular (Magic Circle: Quickly spread out in the room, find a spot, and freeze.  Take a look around the gym.  You know where everything in this room is, right?  I will count to twenty.  By the time I count to twenty, you need to be inside of this circle on the floor.  You may move any way you want as long as you do not run.  Raise your hand if you think you can do that.  Now, everyone close your eyes.  Do not open them again until I ask you to.  Be frozen in a round shape inside of the circle by the time I reach twenty.  If I see you open your eyes, you will have to sit down right where you are.  Do not move quickly so that you do not hurt anyone else.  Ready?  Go.)

tri=three (Create 3 shapes.  Shape #1 will have three body parts touching the ground, #2 has three sharp angles, #3 has three straight body parts.  Quiz students on memory of shapes by calling out shapes and requiring them to freeze quickly.)

re=again (Divide into four lines.  Demonstrate a short movement sequence for the first person in line to see, while all others face the back.  When I say go, the first person will tap the next person on the shoulder.  They will turn around and watch the movement sequence once.  Then the second person will tap the third person on the shoulder.  The third person will watch as the second person does the movement sequence.  Continue down the line to the end.  The last people in line will simultaneously show what they think the sequence is.  Repeat with the line in a different order.)

sub=under (Make a partner shape with one person under the other.  Switch roles.)

sum=highest (Everyone line up on the black line.  When I say go, run and leap as high as you can over this black line, then line up on the far black line.  I am looking to see who can jump the highest.  Repeat with: turning while jumping, having bent legs while in the air, etc.)

homo=same (Mirroring: Everyone mirror my movements.  Gradually split the class into smaller groups each mirroring a student leader.)

hetero=different (Level boogie: Everyone in the class will be constantly moving while the music plays.  When the music stops, do not let me catch you with your head on the same level as one of your classmates.  If I catch you, you will sit down on the black line.  Play until you have a handful of students who are the “Level Boogie Champions”.)

phone=sound (Rhythm clapping exercise: Everyone stand on the medium yellow circle.  I clap a rhythm, you clap it back.  Repeat with several rhythmic variations.  Now, I clap a rhythm, you make that rhythm with your body without clapping your hands together.  Use stomps, slaps, snaps, etc.  Repeat several times.  Now, you make your own four count rhythm using your body doing something other than clapping.)

scope=see (#1’s either walk, run, jump, skip, or roll through the space.  #2’s find someone in the room to watch.  Do the movements they are doing, but do not follow them around the room; find your own pathway.  Don’t let the #1 know that you are copying them.  You can switch who you are following at any time.)

tele=distance (Partner mirroring: Quickly find a partner and stand back to back.  Now face your partner. Decide who will be the leader and who will be the follower.  Mirror with your partner standing as close together as possible.  Now go to opposite sides of the gym from each other.  Switch leaders and mirror from a far distance.)

 

Create and Perform:

Each partnership receives one root word sign.  Think of a word that has the assigned root inside of it.  Create a sentence using that word.  Now, create a short composition that has one movement for each word in your sentence.  For example, if I got the root sum and chose the word summit, my sentence might be: We climbed to the top of the summit.  My sentence has eight words, so I need eight movements in my dance.  My dance could be: Partner shape, jump, run, turn, freeze up high, step, step, leap.  Try doing your dance while saying the word that goes with each movement.

Filed Under: Dance in School Tagged With: creative thinking, cross-curricular, dance in school

Dancing a Book About Lines: The Straight Line Wonder

January 18, 2016 by Erika Leave a Comment

Straight Line Wonder

This is one of those books I just discovered while perusing the children’s section of the library (a frequent activity of mine, much to my husband’s dismay).  It is so cute and fun.  Great for the preschool/kindergarten crowd!  It’s all about a straight line who just gets tired of being straight all the time.  He decides to go twirling and looping and zig-zagging.  His friends are embarrassed, but then he becomes “The Straight Line Wonder!”  Here’s my lesson plan!

The Straight Line Wonder  (15 minutes)

Read The Straight Line Wonder
by Mem Fox

  • “best of friends” Look at their bodies. Their bodies are very straight, like sticks.  Can you make your body as straight as a stick?  What’s another way to be straight as a stick? (lay down, stand tall, arms held vertically, etc.)
  • “jump in humps” Can you make a shape with humps like the straight line did? Show me how you can jump in humps!
  • “twirling in whirls” Show me your chaine turns. Now show me your favorite kind of turns.
  • “point his joints” MIRRORING – practice isolations with each joint.  Facing the students, have students copy movements you do that are “pointy”.  Move just your head, then just your elbows, knees, hips, ankles, etc.
  • “creep in heaps” Practice monkey jumps around a hula hoop by placing two hands inside a hula hoop that is laying on the floor.  Jump your feet around the outside of the hoop, practicing shifting weight from feet to hands.
  • “spring in rings” Practice jumping and turning in the air.  Set up an obstacle course of things for students to jump over.  Require different jumps over different items (tuck jump over a block, jump turn around in the circle of cones, one foot hops over the spots, etc.)

Finish the book!

 

More Activities:

Sculptor and Clay – Divide into partnerships.  Partner 1 from each partnership is the sculptor.  Partner 2 is the clay.  Partner 1 create a shape out of your clay by moving him or her into a shape.  Walk around your sculpture and make one change.  Do you like it?  Do you need to change your sculpture?  Then partners 1 and 2 switch roles. (This idea came from the exceptional book: Creative Dance for All Ages by Anne Green Gilbert).

Body parts shape game – Pick a body part paper out of the bag and make a shape with those body parts on the ground.  (i.e. if the paper says 1 head and 2 feet, make a shape with two feet and your head touching the ground).  For more details, read about it here.

 

Choreograph and Share (5 minutes)

Make a pointy shape.

Make a round shape.

Make a straight shape.

Don’t forget your shapes!  Quiz students to remember each of their three shapes.

 

Let’s connect your shapes.  Everyone show me your pointy shape.  Skip to a new place in the room.  Freeze in your round shape.  Turn to a new place.  End in your straight shape.  Practice your dance!

 

Closure (2 minutes)

Share your shape dance with a partner or the class, as time allows.

Filed Under: Creative Movement, Dance in School, Lesson Plans Tagged With: Books, creative movement, obstacle course, preschool dance, shape games, studio dance

Follow the Leader

January 18, 2016 by Erika Leave a Comment

Follow the Leader

 

Follow the Leader by Erica Silverman is the story of two brothers who play follow the leader.  They do all kinds of activities and use their imaginations to fly, swim, climb, and more!  This book is a whole class in itself.  I love to use it for dance or gymnastics birthday parties, and as a fun class towards the beginning of each semester.  All you have to do is read the book and it will tell you what to do!  The teacher pretends to be the older brother.

Activities follow in this order:

p. 2 Students follow you walking, then hopping, skipping, then stop! (Freeze)

p. 3 Students follow you trotting (galloping), frog jumping, and “leap like a rabbit” over something in the room (a cone, rolled up yoga mat, climb over a gymnastics mat, etc.)

p. 4 Run with wings (arms) outstretched, swoop in a circle, and land (freeze down low).

p. 5 Do handstands if age-appropriate.  If not, I sometimes change the words to “Turn upside down, and put your hands on the ground”

p. 6 “Run around in a loop.  Somersault backwards.  Now hula a hoop!”  We follow instructions precisely. 🙂

p. 8 “Close your eyes tight.  Arms out!  Spin around! Reach for the sky.  Drop to the ground.”  Keep following instructions.  Just make sure you spread out the students before they spin with arms out and eyes closed!!!

p. 9 I usually use a pop-up tunnel.  But I have also used folding gymnastics mats to make a tunnel, and we have crawled underneath chair legs for tunnels!

p. 10 Grab some instruments (homemade maracas, dollar store tamborines, wooden spoons and boxes, etc.) and march in a parade.  Take turns being the leader.

p. 11-12 Walk across an aerobics step, balance beam, or other stable “ledge”.  If unavailable, put a line of masking tape on the ground to tip-toe across.

p. 13 If they are old enough, we’ll play some catch with balls.  If I feel like this will be super disruptive, I’ll just skip this page!

p. 14-15 Grab a blue scarf and go “swimming” throughout the room.  This is also a good time for The Goldfish Song.

p. 16-17 If you have bars, this is a good time to go swing under the bars.  If not, just skip this page.

p. 19 Slide down a wedge mat, slide on your belly across several exercise balls, or push with your hands to slide backwards on your belly on the floor.

p. 22 FREEZE!  Don’t move.

p. 26-28 Let students take turns being the leader.  If the class is too big for everyone to get a turn, you can divide into partnerships and have each partner take turns leading the other.

 

Have fun!  Did you get other ideas when reading this book???

Filed Under: Creative Movement, Dance in School, Lesson Plans Tagged With: Books, creative movement, gymnastics, preschool dance, studio dance

Love and Valentines

January 11, 2016 by Erika Leave a Comment

I love dance.  I love teaching.  And I LOVE my students!  As I pulled this lesson out to put it up on the blog, this valentine from last year fell out. Happy smiles! 🙂

Valentine from Dance student

Anyway…today’s lesson plan is all about Valentine’s day.  I love holiday activities, because I can do them as a special day with almost all ages I teach!  I made a simple lesson with “conversation hearts” (get the printable) that I put up on the walls.  The students pick one heart, and the older ones get to guess what dance activity it’s linked to, then we do the associated activity.  Simple, but so fun!

Valentines Heart Dance Activity

Usually on holidays I’ll bring a few treats (stickers, bouncy balls, small candies, etc.) and students can earn a treat if they have especially good behavior, perform a skill the best I have ever seen, or remember a sequence without help from me.  However, that’s only for ages 5 and up.  Anyone younger gets stuck in the “it’s not fair” stage and can’t function unless they’re first to get a prize.  Anyway, here are the hearts:

u warm my heart

This is our warm-up heart.  We follow our regular warm-up routine for the class once someone picks this heart (follow the leader, mirroring, circle time, Zumba style, etc.).  This often means that the warm-up is not first in class. 🙂

ur the only one

For my preschool dancers, I ask the students to create their own solo.  It should go from one side of the room to the other and it has to have at least one jump (leap, spin, etc.).  I play music and ask them to practice.  Then, they perform for each other.

For older students, we’ll do jazz isolations, only moving ONE body part at a time.  OR, we might create solos with a few more parameters (i.e. Your solo must start and end with a frozen shape and have at least one jump and one balancing shape), depending on the class.

chase me

Chasse means to chase.  One foot chases the other.  So, let’s do chasses!  Forward, sideways, in a circle, etc.

candy bars

Ballet barre work.  Depending on the class that may be my 1, 2, 3, look at me ballet positions rhyme, a regular ballet barre class portion, jazz/modern foot articulation series, a barre stretch, or monkey dancing under the barre (for the 2 year olds).

fall in love

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Dance in School, Lesson Plans, Technique Classes Tagged With: creative movement, holidays, preschool dance, studio dance

Integrating Dance with Common Core Standards

January 1, 2016 by Erika Leave a Comment

educational movement

Just like music, theater, and visual art, dance is an art form.  It’s a language of expression and a tool for creative and critical thinking.  It’s powerful, especially for kinesthetic learners.  I believe that every school should have dance, especially elementary schools!  Okay, stepping off of my soapbox now…

If you are lucky enough to call yourself a teacher of elementary school aged children, then this post is for you!  It’s a throwback to a project I did in college, but I think it’s still worthwhile.  While in college, I did a thesis project that focused on integrating dance and other core subjects.  I made a book of lesson plans and teaching tips for teachers to use dance as a means to teach other common core standards to their classes.  Click on this link to find all the visual aids, full educational movement packet, and videos of me teaching.

 

8 Tips for Teaching Dance

 

The lesson plan subjects are:

Math: 2-Digit Addition with Regrouping

Math: Fractions

Math: Number Ordering

Math: Telling Time (A.M. vs. P.M.)

Music: Musical Beats and Rhythm

Music: Music and Rhythm

Music: Musical Canon

Language Arts: Row, Row, Row Your Boat

Language Arts: Homophones

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Dance in School Tagged With: creative thinking, cross-curricular, dance in school

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I am a teacher, dancer, runner, fitness instructor, choreographer, musician, wife, and mother to two wonderful children! I love to teach creatively and am excited to share my ideas with you!

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