Claire Pring: In this secondary school, I鈥檝e been working with a fantastic Year 7 class and their PE teacher, Jess.
Jess (teacher): (To the students) Let鈥檚 try a different one, Circle鈥10, 9, 8, 7, 6鈥
Claire: They鈥檝e been using geometry to develop their choreographic skills.
Claire: (To the students) Good morning Year 7.
Students: Good morning!
Claire: These shapes you make are lovely. Let鈥檚 see if we can make these a little more complicated. Can you do a right-angled triangle? How could you do that? Yeah, you can do it sitting down, you can do it lying down, you can do it standing up, you can do it balancing. Brilliant!
Jess: Let鈥檚 try an even harder shape. Think to yourself, how many sides does a pentagon have? Show me on your fingers, how many sides does a pentagon have? Good, five. OK I鈥檇 like you to try and make a pentagon. Ten seconds鈥 9, 8鈥
Claire: The task is to find ways to create and manipulate geometric shapes - revisiting shapes they explored in previous lessons. Here they鈥檙e working independently to ensure they are fully warmed up and mentally prepared.
The students progress into working in small groups.
Claire: (To the students) You鈥檙e going to have a go at making a square. Try and use, each person in the group, a different part of their body and make it really precise as a square. Think about all the sides, same length 鈥 that鈥檚 the challenge.
Very nice, what are you going to do with your arms. Maybe your arms almost need to reach your knees. Yeah, that鈥檚 looking more like a square to me now, can you see the difference?
Fantastic, amazing. You鈥檙e holding, can you hold it? Great strength there.
Well done and I love the way you came out of that safely, that you thought that because I鈥檝e got the legs, I need to come down first.
Each group is going to make a shape. I鈥檓 going to choose one group, and it鈥檚 going to be you this time. Once they鈥檝e all made their shapes, you鈥檙e going to be our Shape Shifters. Maybe you are going to add on to it, distort it in some way, change it, alter it, you are going to literally shift those shapes.
Nice, you鈥檝e added onto it. You鈥檝e changed it from a 2-D shape, a triangle to a 3-D one. You鈥檝e gone now into a pyramid. Beautifully done, well done! Go on to your next one off you go. Well done you two, beautiful shape.
Going through. Cutting it in half. Brilliant, fantastic. Out you come and go onto your next one.
Jess: (To Claire) So, if a teacher doesn鈥檛 have as much of a dance background, how can they make sure these lessons are still successful?
Claire: (To Jess) It鈥檚 the difference between dance education and dance training. A lot of people think that dance is about teaching sequences, teaching moves. But actually, it鈥檚 largely about asking questions and setting tasks. So, we鈥檙e not just looking at their performance skills, but we鈥檙e also looking at them being able to their compositional, their creative development and also their ability to analyse. So, if you can ask a good question, you can teach a very successful dance lesson.
Jess: Makes sense.
Claire: (To students) You鈥檙e about to become your own Shape Shifters. You鈥檙e going to make a shape and then you鈥檙e going to be the ones that are shifting it. So, make a square. Go, make a square.
Claire: Students are working now in different groups, so they are exposed to new ideas and challenges.
Claire: (To students) Here鈥檚 a challenge for you. Can you find a way to fold it? If you had a square and you were going to fold it, how would you do it, how can you show it?
Student: It鈥檇 be like a little rectangle. When the square鈥檚 folded.
Claire: So, you use that line of symmetry and it kind of goes up and over? Like that.
Claire: The students are establishing a menu of elements to pick from and build their choreographic understanding - using space and relationships creatively.
Claire: (To students) Brilliant. So, you鈥檙e going to go back to a square shape again, reform a square. But this time, you鈥檙e not going to fold it, you鈥檙e going to flatten it.
Jess: We鈥檝e got our 3-D square. To bring it flatter and down, what do we need to do with our different body parts? What could we do with our legs first?
Good. Oh, there you go, all got the same idea. What could we do with our arms?
Good OK. How could we bring it condensed, closer together, so still keeping this square shape? Ah, lovely so using your arms and your shoulders to make those points. Lovely, make sure we鈥檙e keeping it looking like a square, nice.
So, this time, you can choose what you want to do to change the shape 鈥 dissolve, melt, flatten, rotate, anything you like, but it鈥檚 got to be a triangle this time. Are we ready? Let鈥檚 go.
Claire: Nice shape. Beautifully stable. I like that.
Student: With this there鈥檚 a triangle, and like grows like a plant.
Claire: Yeah, so you鈥檝e increased the size?
Students: Yeah.
Claire: Brilliant!
Claire: If including lifts, ensure the students plan their ideas and allocate roles whilst applying safe lifting techniques.
Claire: (To students) Well done, stabiliser. Don鈥檛 feel you have to take your arms off, you look better with them on and it makes a nice clear triangular shape anyway. You鈥檝e got a triangle with your arms and with your legs. And when you鈥檙e ready, get one foot out and then the other.
Student: If I take it out.
Claire: So, you鈥檙e in control of that. You can just step out of that at any time, alright. That was very nice teamwork, well done.
Jess: You鈥檙e going to pick three shapes from these to use in your routine.
Claire: But then like we did before, you are either going to twist it or melt it or dissolve it. You鈥檙e going to choose, how you鈥檙e going to do them and then how do you move from one to the next. Ready, over to you.
Jess: Let鈥檚 go.
Great, so you鈥檝e melted the shape and turned into another one.
Claire: Instrumental music provides a steady tempo, clear rhythmic pattern and structure to support composing the work and performing with accuracy.
Jess: OK so am I right in guessing that you were doing the pentagon, then then the square, then you went into the circle.
Students: Yeah.
Jess: Brilliant, very clear, well done. You did those three so quickly, let鈥檚 challenge ourselves - try and add one more.
Claire: Allow the students the chance to try their ideas out, they might solve it in an unusual way, or they might learn that something doesn鈥檛 work well and that鈥檚 just as important.
Jess: So, from your shape that you have at the end of your routine, how can you transition that into that smoothly? I like that, that looks great.
Claire: (To students) OK. Oh, what was that, that you just did? Beautiful stretch there. Was that what you did when you came up?
Student: Yeah.
Claire: Put it in, put it in, absolutely. Keep the turn as well. But that can take you into the turn really nicely I think, yeah.
Ready鈥h yeah鈥p and into a turn and start travelling, turn鈥es, yes, yes! Beautiful. Are you going to do a turn? Don鈥檛 worry about that, that鈥檚 something you kind of go oh that鈥檚 what I need to learn for next time, yeah.
Claire: To give the students the opportunity to view and review their work, recording on tablets can be a useful tool. This can be done by the students or the teacher. Watching the work allows the opportunity to share feedback鈥
Claire: (To students) So, you need to make it sort of cleaner?
Students: Yeah.
Claire: Commenting on the skills being developed, identifying the content covered or omitted and reflecting upon whether the choreographic intention is being effectively communicated.
Claire: (To students) That really worked, that spread apart and then next coming in tight. I think that jump can be bigger as well. Maybe hold it a moment more鈥
Students: Yes.
Claire: 鈥nd then鈥eah, yeah, exactly that. OK Happy with that?
Students: Yes.
Claire: OK, brilliant!
(The cool down)
I鈥檇 like you to make a line, a vertical line. Wonderful, fantastic.
Can you find a way of bending that vertical line or folding it in some way?
Brilliant. A triangle, how can you make a triangle with your body? How can you flatten it? Maybe make it melt. Or maybe stretching it out to flatten it鈥nd relax.