CDEAdance.org E-Blast Newsletter
APRIL 2008
For more information visit CDEAdance.org
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CDEA NEWS
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YOU ARE INVITED TO THE NEXT CDEA BOARD MEETING.

Saturday, May 17
General Attendance 11-3 pm

California Institute for Dance Learning
2138 Ceder Street, Berkeley, CA 94709

PLEASE E-MAIL Info@CDEAdance.org and let us know if you are planning to attend.

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Recognizing the Work of Young Dancers:
The National Honor Society for Dance Arts (NHSDA)
By Jill Randall

Yet another exciting program is available to CDEA members, through our state affiliation with the National Dance Education Organization. NDEO has established an honor society for schools, studios, and arts organizations to honor outstanding middle and high school dancers.

As Jane Bonbright, the Executive Director of NDEO, writes in her description of the program on their website,

The primary goals of the National Honor Society for Dance Arts (NHSDA) are: (1) to promote and honor outstanding achievement in students 11-18 years of age studying dance; (2) to encourage well-rounded young dance artists to be leaders in their communities; and (3) to identify honor students of junior and senior high school age for nomination to the National Dance Education Organization’s Artistic Merit, Leadership, and Academic Achievement Award, one of the highest honors programs in the United States.

The Honor Society is a great way to publicly recognize your students; it is a great goal for each student to achieve. The Honor Society is a way to publicly recognize the value of dance education and how learning in the arts requires commitment, hard work, perseverance, and is as rigorous as every subject being taught in a school. Honor Society chapters can be established in public and private schools, dance studios, and arts centers.

How can you find out more and get involved?  There are 5 easy steps.

  1. Read over the basic information at http://www.ndeo.org/national.asp#A&S.
  2. Confirm your membership. Your school must be an institutional member of NDEO/CDEA.  If you are an individual member, and your school is not a member, you cannot set up an honor society chapter on your own at your school.  (This could be a perfect reason to have your school join.  An institutional membership is $150.)

  3. I will be the liaison for CDEA. Please contact me at (510)872-0891 or jillhrandall@mac.com for more information.

  4. Complete a “chapter application” form, that can be found on the NDEO website (see link above).

  5. Once the application has been received, you will establish criteria for your students to earn “points” to be inducted into your school’s Honor Society.

Please join us as we recognize the achievements of young dancers in our state!

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No Dancer Left Behind: Chasing the Dance Credential
By Nancy Ng

Did you know that before the Ryan Act of 1970 there was a Dance Credential in the State of California?  With a Dance Credential, a dance educator could receive a salaried teaching position in a school district complete with healthcare and benefits. School Districts could hire a credentialed teacher in the subject matter of dance to teach dance on a daily basis. Although it is still possible to teach dance in the public schools with other kinds of teaching credentials, to do so, is not always the most straightforward and direct path. (Please see grey box.)  I know many dance artists who have taken and passed the physical education examination for a PE credential, but for those dancers, like myself, who are not sports inclined, answering a question like this:

A. Pick and roll
B. Give and go
C. Zone defense
D. Free-lancing

is much more challenging than answering a question about choreographic devices, or the elements of dance.

"Performing arts audiences have declined in the past two decades as a result of decreased arts exposure in schools."

Why should there be a dance credential?

A dance credential is vital to the continuation of dance as an art form. The after effects of the Ryan Act and Proposition 13 (1978) devastated dance education in public schools. Performing arts audiences have declined in the past two decades as a result of decreased arts exposure in schools. Cultivation of an audience who appreciates and understands dance needs to happen early in education, not later. In addition, the dance makers of our future need to have an opportunity now, when they are going to school, to begin developing their craft. Other more practical reasons to have a dance credential are the simple facts that No Child Left Behind mandates dance as core curriculum nationally and the state of California also mandates a dance education—there are visual and performing arts standards which students are supposed to complete as part of their education. Most importantly, I believe all children have the right to have access to a whole education, and this includes the opportunity to communicate through dance—expressing their ideas, feelings and emotions.

While true that there are many dance education programs in schools today, and that teaching artists are filling in a few of the gaps in dance education, their teaching situations demonstrate how much dance is undervalued and dismissed as an educational subject. I have heard stories of dance classes being taught in school basements, under stairwells and in bathrooms— most challenging for a subject matter with SPACE as a key learning concept. I hardly imagine the subject matter of language arts or math would be relegated to such sub-standard teaching environments. A teaching credential in dance would lend stature to the subject matter of dance, putting it on par with other core curricula.. It is interesting to note that the state of California, which is known for its arts and entertainment industry, lags far behind other states. Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, North Carolina, Texas, Utah, and Wisconsin all have dance credentials.

Current Credential Requirements To Teach Dance in California

Currently, those who hold BA or BFA degrees in Dance and wish to teach dance as a credentialed teacher in California public schools must  hold a:

1- Physical Education Credential: Concentration in Dance;

2- Physical Education Credential;

3- Multiple Subject Credential; or

4- a Single Subject Credential in another subject area that the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing (CCTC) has granted plus evidence that you have completed a minimum of 32 units in Dance to meet the new No Child Left Behind requirements

To earn a Single Subject Credential you must do one of two things:

1-Complete all of the requirements (equivalent to a second BA degree) in the subject you choose at a university that has a CCTC approved program or

2- Take what is called the CSET. If you pass the CSET exam for your selected subject area, you do not have to complete the coursework.

As of this writing, only California State University, Dominguez Hills and San Francisco State University have CCTC approved Subject Matter Programs in Physical Education: Concentration in Dance.

What you can do to Advocate the Credential:

For the moment, there is something very important you can do to make the dance credential, once again, a reality in our state. Become involved in advocacy efforts in California to obtain a dance credential. For the past 38 years, leaders in the California Dance Education Association (CDEA) and California Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance, and the California Educational Theatre Association (CETA) have worked tirelessly to re-obtain a dance credential. Since 1970, four bills have been drafted to establish dance and theatre credentials: SB762, SCR 31, AB 1024, AB752.  These bills were waylaid in committee or vetoed due to lack of Governor support. The last bill was vetoed in 1999.

In 2003 CDEA formed a steering committee to develop a Pedagogical Competency Certification Process. This committee proactively examined how theoretical dance education knowledge and practical dance teaching experience would align once the credential became a reality. In 2007, a committee was co-formed with CDEA and CETA. to outline advocacy strategies for obtaining dance and theater credentials. (Currently, only visual arts and music have credentials.) They are working with the Visual and Performing Arts Consultant in the State Department of Education to implement the strategies. Some of these strategies include establishing a credential committee which includes PTA representatives and teacher union representatives, increasing CDEA membership to demonstrate there is large membership support, and writing position papers to submit to state legislators.

It is our hope that with the support of CDEA members, and others interested in helping with this campaign, that the fields of Dance and Theatre will have Single Subject Credentials by 2012. Change can happen, it just take time, patience and an effort by a group of individuals with a single purpose.

Please commit to joining advocacy efforts toward a dance credential. As dancers, we deserve a dance credential.  How else can we guarantee quality dance education in our schools and the continuation of dance as an art form? The most important thing you can do to support a dance credential is to become a member of the CDEA. Your membership fee supports an arts education lobbyist in Sacramento, and when the credential is once again in front of the legislators the number of CDEA members will make a difference. Since CDEA is a state affiliate of the National Dance Education Organization, you get two memberships for the price of one.  Visit cdeadance.org or ndeo.org to join.  For more information about advocacy efforts please check the CDEA website or contact info@cdeadance.org.

Nancy Ng is the Director of Community Development at Luna Kids Dance and the Co-President of the California Dance Education Association.  She has been a dance educator, performer and choreographer in the San Francisco Bay Area for the past 23 years.
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IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENTS
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TEACHING ARTISTS ORGANIZED (TAO)
Teaching Artists Connect: Gather to Network
& Discuss New Support Resources

Teaching artists and community artists interested in teaching in schools are invited to participate in conversations about new opportunities for professionalizing the field of teaching artists and current steps to re-energize Teaching Artists Organized (TAO) to support the resource needs of teaching artists. The gatherings are free and new ideas and feedback are encouraged. Information collected at the meetings and through the attached survey link will be used to evaluate the needs of local teaching artists and guide future planning.

Please join us at one or both gatherings:

Saturday, April 19, 9:00 am to noon
Berkeley Rep School of Theatre, 2025 Addison Street, Berkeley

Monday, April 28, 3:30 pm to 6:30 pm
Chabot College Little Theater, 25555 Hesperian Boulevard, Hayward, Bldg. 1200.
South and East Alameda County artists especially are invited to attend this meeting.

Light refreshments will be served. For more information and to RSVP contact Belinda Taylor at belindat@mac.com.
Please indicate in the subject line which meeting you plan to attend. For ideas about future TAO work, contact Sabrina Klein at sabrina@CreativeEducationConsulting.com

PLUS... Please fill out a Bay Area teaching artist survey at the following link or paste into your browser. http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=DqdZP6cCtxmdYIeD0A0vpA_3d_3d

These gatherings are organized by the original partners in Teaching Artists Organized:  Berkeley Rep School of Theatre, Cal Performances, Dancers Group, Glitter and Razz Productions, Shawl-Anderson Dance Center and Theatre Bay Area.
Additional partners include: the Alameda County Arts Commission, the Alameda County Office of Education Alliance for Arts Learning Leadership, California College of the Arts' Center for Art and Public Life, Chabot College, San Francisco Arts Providers Alliance, Young Audiences of Northern California and Performing Arts Workshop.

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Children’s Dance Workshop at Shawl-Anderson Dance Center
Saturday, May 10 from 2-4pm

Sheila Kogan will teach a workshop on Saturday, May 10 from 2-4pm. This is a foundational workshop is for anyone working with pre-school to sixth grade children. The material is appropriate for classroom, special education, and dance/movement teachers. No movement experience is required. The cost for this wonderful opportunity is $40 ($25 for students). Please join us!

For more information and to register check our website:
http://www.shawl-anderson.org/workshops.html#tmfc_1

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BEYOND SPACE, FORCE & TIME
2 Spring CEU Workshops offered by
California Institute for Dance Learning
Continuing education for the dance teaching professional. Join with colleagues to improve teaching practice, establish a community of inquiry and bring dance learning to life in the Bay Area.


DANCE LITERACY
MAY 3, 2008 | 9:30 am - 12:30 pm

Explore what it means to be dance literate. In this seminar we will define literacy, examine how national arts initiatives and standards affect dance literacy and develop a personal philosophy of dance teaching. For dance teaching artists, classroom teachers, supervisors and administrators.
Pre-requisite: DICDC-A, SI, Intensive or permission of LKD faculty. $90.


REFLECTIVE TEACHER-REFLECTIVE STUDENT
MAY 31, 2008 | 1:30 pm - 4:30 pm

Explore how observation, inquiry and an action researcher’s approach can enhance dance learning for your students and yourself. Includes gallery walk. Bring photos, videos and other documentation of your work with children pre-K through grade 12.
Pre-requisite: any prior LKD workshop or permission of LKD faculty. $50.

Register for any of these workshops at www.lunakidsdance.org. Call for more information.
CIDL | 2138 Ceder Street, Berkeley, CA 94709 | 510-644-3629

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BE PART OF HISTORY
Oral History Training Workshop: June 12-14, 2008

Legacy Oral History Program, Museum of Performance & Design, San Francisco
led by Jeff Friedman, Ph.D. and Basya Petnick

This stimulating and informative three-day workshop will provide the training necessary for participants to launch their own oral history projects. While drawing on references and examples in the performing arts, the workshop will be equally appropriate for those involved in anthropology, institutional history, social history, family history, personal history, master's or doctoral studies, or other projects.
The 13th annual oral history workshop will be carefully designed to match the experience levels of all participants—beginning, intermediate, or advanced. The lecture/discussion format will also include opportunities to apply the material presented.

The workshop will cover:

  • Project Design

  • Legal/Ethical Issues

  • Technology

  • Interviewing

  • Transcription

  • Editing

  • Creating a research quality document

Fee: $300, before May 1st; $350 after May 1st.

Fee includes syllabus/guidebook containing all the material taught in the workshop, special readings, and other vital information. In order to give personal attention to each participant and project, the
workshop is strictly limited to 22 participants. Pre-registration required. Two partial scholarships (half tuition) are available. Apply by May 1.

Workshop Leaders:
Jeff Friedman, Ph.D. founded Legacy in 1988 and continues as senior advisor to the program. He is a member of the faculty of Rutgers University and contributes to scholarly conferences and publications
on oral history theory, method, and design.
Basya Petnick is Legacy program manager, seasoned interviewer, and published journalist. She is also experienced in the technology and funding of oral history projects.

Contact: legacyoralhistory@gmail.com
Call 415-255-4800, ext. *823 for information and registration.

CDEA E-BLAST DELIVERY AND SUBMISSION DEADLINES
CDEA's E-Blast appears in your INBOX the FIRST WEEK OF THE MONTH of the Month
E-mail your announcements to: info@CDEAdance.org
(Please, no text attachments; pictures accepted; we reserve the right to refuse a submission)

REMAINING 2008 EBLAST SUBMISSION DEADLINES
April 22 - May 27 - June 24 - July 29 - Aug. 26 - Sept. 23 - Oct. 28 - Nov. 25 - Dec. 23
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VIEW THE LATEST NDEO Newsletter, E-Communicator,
(formerly NDEO E-Newsletter) at NDEO.org