Student Ana Montenegro in rehearsal
No matter how much one studies,
prepares and trains, the complexity of the dance world in its pure exercise is
always ready to surprise us. Dance is an art that reflects the spontaneity
and changing complexity of the real world that it represents. Learning is
fluid and dependent on formal dance education experiences and the nuances of
the student´s cognitive process as she responds to formal and informal dance
exposure.
As one prepares to become a dance teacher, one studies with hypothetical
students in mind. One fits specific profiles with dance education and
theory matching profiles with a complex needs’ assessment, goals and
objectives. All fits in a beautiful, intricate puzzle formed from ages of
tradition and modern practices.
Real life teaching, especially when one wanders away from the
pre-professional dance training world, challenges all these pre-conceived
concepts of dance theory and syllabi. Students become as diverse as the
real life from which they come from.
Such has been my experience since I have taken upon a dance fitness
group at Body Motion Dance Studio since last year. Originally, the class
was conceived as a dancer physical conditioning class that would accompany the students’
training in other technique classes. Yet, the group evolved majestically
before my eyes. My class became filled by more mature students,
university students and high school students both. Curiously, one common
denominator to all students was an absence of early dance training or the discontinuation
of early dance training if they had had any. Yet, my students nonetheless
are young, healthy, beautiful and full of potential. They are late to the
challenge of dancer development, yet young enough that training can still
deliver great results. To my surprise my students´ aspirations were not
to get fit through dance, but to become prepared enough to dance. They
dreamed of tutus and pointe shoes. I in turn became deeply moved to see
how childhood dreams endure in the adult beyond the aging and structure that
maturity requires. The class evolved to include technique and
choreographic exploration. Carefully going back and forth between
traditional delivery of a class to return to focalized strengthening and
flexibility to prevent injuries and build up the body in record time to face
real life dancing choreographic challenges.
No teacher training has truthfully prepared me to become my students
´teacher, both my students and I are in intense training as we decipher how to
fit the pieces of this puzzle. Perhaps I should fast forward and reveal
that my students have danced onstage with full ballerina costumes and they are
working intensely in class and developing solid pointe work. Thus, as a
dance educator I seek to truly understand in depth the experential learning of
this work.
Student Valeria Perez, after a few months of pointe work
The most important part of this process for me has been letting go of
any traditional roles of the authoritarian teacher-director. I must
listen to my students throughout the class and after class. Their bodies
respond to training in unique ways according to their own personal
stories. I must get simultaneous feedback and find myself creating a
truly differentiated classroom in which my students will work through the
exercise with different goals and with personal modifications each.
Injuries and immediate limitations cannot be ignored. Instead of jamming
their bodies into the challenging forms of classical ballet, I have chosen to
slowly open, mould and work in micro improvements with great discipline and at
times in painfully repetitive motions to encourage muscle memory and to ease
the body beyond its current limitations into the demanding technique they wish to achieve.
I am fooling the mind and body to believe that ballet is easier than what it
truthfully is, I work slowly so that the steps feel natural and, in their
struggle, they do not lose the natural ballerina within them. Allow me to
explain, my students dance with the illusion of children, I seek to preserve
that by moving at a speed that they do not lose the naturalness of movement
that their intuition permits.
The objectives of this dance classroom are established by the students,
the level is established by me. Due to the maturity of my students I can
establish conversations about artistry and technique at an intellectual level
truly unusual for beginner adults. However, their cognitive grasp of
technical theory allows them to jump ahead in their dance technique attainment
at a speed that younger students would never achieve. We have begun working
with a flipped classroom model in which I share with them dance content
prior to the class, and we are able to move ahead as they have been exposed to
certain concepts before we begin to work in classroom. Even after class
the feedback continues especially individually, with continuous formative
assessment and additional exercises for the student.
Beyond educational practices to reflect upon, socially I believe this
artistic experiment is of great weight. My students are extraordinarily
high school students, some are high honours in their classes. My
university students are studying to become educators, psychologists,
accountants, adminidistrators, odontologists, doctors and academic mathematicians.
It is still beyond me the huge academic weight on their shoulders and the
importance of their time, time that they faithfully abandon in my dance
classroom. The extreme discipline and humbleness that the process of
becoming an older dancer is extraordinary. The transformative process in
their lives has a deep impact on their human development. As in later
years they will become older, I feel great pride to know that these women will
hold the world in their hands, I have been the humble witness to their great
potential.
Backstage