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Dance Technique Extension 2 (DNCE20015)
Undergraduate level 2Points: 6.25On Campus (Southbank)
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About this subject
Contact information
Semester 1 (Early-Start)
Associate Professor Jenny Kinder
Please refer to the LMS for up-to-date subject information, including assessment and participation requirements, for subjects being offered in 2020.
Overview
Availability | Semester 1 (Early-Start) |
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Fees | Look up fees |
Dance Technique Extension 2 is designed to complement Dance Technique 3 through additional classes, which provide diverse approaches to training and exposure to industry professionals. Students take three dance technique extension classes each week, which serve to broaden the individuals’ experience. Students choose between two classes in Contemporary Dance technique and one in Ballet OR two classes in Ballet and one in Contemporary Dance technique. Classes continue to focus on developing technical expertise and artistry.
Intended learning outcomes
To extend the understanding of Contemporary and Ballet technique and the objectives of technical training in these genres.
Objective 1.
Application of alignment principles, technical accuracy and energy efficiency in the execution of more complex movement phrases in contemporary and ballet technique.
- Physical and kinaesthetic understanding of technical exercises
- Use of anatomical knowledge to facilitate full movement range of the individual body
- Increase in muscular efficiency through appropriate use of effort to reduce tension and overuse of muscle groups
- Capacity to dance with a balanced relationship between strength and flexibility.
- Application of principles of alignment to achieve excellence.
Objective 2.
Increased ability to organise and direct the body in time and space.
- Capacity to source movement initiation in different parts of the body.
- Clarity and accuracy in articulating set phrases of movement – including dynamic, rhythm/organization in time, shape, orientation in space.
- Ability to travel expansively through space.
- Ability to fully engage and isolate the spine, torso and limbs within the individual's muscular and skeletal possibilities.
Objective 3.
Ability to direct the body’s centre of mass around and away from its axis.
- Ability to generate and control momentum through all activities involving weight transference including falling, thrusting, running, turning and jumping
- Ability to control centred and off-centre actions.
Objective 4.
Development of muscular strength, tone and flexibility.
- Capacity to be connected/grounded to the floor through stretch and strength in legs.
- Ability to sustain and control high effort movement/shape activity.
- Capacity to quickly change speed, effort and direction.
- Demonstrate freedom of movement through efficient muscle use when performing enchainment or movement phrases.
Objective 5.
Capacity to use visualisation techniques to enhance movement form.
- Embodied variation in movement articulation in response to different imagery
Objective 6
A strong work ethic (maintenance of self-discipline, concentration and application).
- Constructive response to, and application of feedback and corrections.
- Demonstration of a focussed, intelligent and inquiring approach to learning.
- Capacity to challenge self and take risks within safe dance practice.
Generic skills
On completion of this subject students should have acquired the following skills:
- The capacity for kinaesthetic awareness
- The ability to move within aesthetic domains
- The facility to dance in particular contemporary movement techniques
- A facility with ballet technique
- The application of theory to practice
- The capacity to synthesise data and evaluate information
- Capacities of imagination, transformation, and interpretation
- The ability to perform
Last updated: 3 November 2022