Starting conversations...
As part of the Dance UK Teachers mentoring
scheme (Nov 14-June 15), myself and mentor Adesola Akinleye decided to share a
blog with the aim of documenting, reflecting and probing my teaching practice.
The focus of the Dance UK Mentoring scheme for
me is to develop the ways in which I work choreographically with children,
predominantly within an educational context. This arose from my own yearning to evolve the way I worked in primary schools. As opposed to myself
setting the theme, choreographic tasks, structure and music, I am eager to explore
more collaborative ways of working and the facilitation of children’s creative processes.
During my first meet with Adesola I began
by contextalising my teacher work in terms of session time, topic length and
theme. I was quickly challenged by her in relation to the topics I was
covering, allocated by the school.
She highlighted the challenge to my desire
to work more collaboratively, describing that at present, I was talking the
narrative what ‘what’ of the subject. In essence, rearticulating the current
knowledge in a different form to aid memory and understanding.
Adesola challenged that the body can be
seen not only as another way to explore a concept, but as the very means by
which we mainly experience and learn about the world in the first place. In summary, dance as a way of learning in
itself, not as an reinforcer of learning.
In order for this to happen, there needs to
be a blank space in the dance class which can be filled with the childrens
ideas. She illustrated a triangle format between teacher, children and concept. Dialogue should flow between the three,
being shaped and directed as the children question and discover things. As opposed to being prescribed beforehand, there should be open and unanswered space.
In terms of working from a topic, Adesola
explained that one string can be picked of which that topic is one example but
then children can explore others. My current methods of dance teaching have immediately been thrown wide open, now to try and think this through some more...

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