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Intellect Handbook of Dance Education Research [Kõva köide]

Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
  • Formaat: Hardback, 576 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x170 mm, 22 Tables, black and white; 33 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835951341
  • ISBN-13: 9781835951347
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 576 pages, kõrgus x laius: 244x170 mm, 22 Tables, black and white; 33 Halftones, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Sep-2025
  • Kirjastus: Intellect Books
  • ISBN-10: 1835951341
  • ISBN-13: 9781835951347
Teised raamatud teemal:
A review of dance education research methodologies with examples and exemplars from the field and an important resource for dance students, professionals, and advocates.





The editors recognized the need for a book of this type one that would not only provide examples of a variety of dance education research projects, but also present a broad look at methodologies. In addition, the book would not only focus on Dance Education research in the U.S, but more broadly with examples of dance research from several different countries. The curated book includes the voices of both seasoned professionals and newer scholars in the field, with examples of dance research from a number of different countries. The contributions represent several countries including Korea, South Africa, United States of America, Jamaica, India, United Kingdom, Brazil, and Slovenia, underscore the global relevance and significance of research in dance education.





This book is divided into 5 parts. The first part focuses on dance education research and methodologies and is divided into three sections. With an introduction by Jill Green, the chapters that follow provide an overview of research types including the more traditional, qualitative, quantitative and mixed, and other methods such as portraiture and a/r/tography.





Part II, introduced by Lynnette Young Overby, includes examples of dance education research that incorporate qualitative, quantitative, and/or mixed methods. Three sections covering dance education research applications in the areas of history and culture, dance teaching and choreography, and community based research follow.





Part III of the Handbook of Dance Education Research provides insight into dance education that takes place in several countries. This part is introduced by Peter Cook, Associate Deputy Chancellor, Southern Cross University, Australia. The collection of chapters within this part of the Handbook of Dance Education Research provides snapshots of research practices from contrasting international areas, and with a variety of approaches and paradigms.





The final Part IV includes chapters focused on Social Justice dance education practice and research. This part is introduced by Alfdaniel Mivule Basibye Mabingo, Makerere University, Uganda. These chapters push the boundaries of dance education research to promote meaning and social change. They provide substantive examples of the impact dance education research can have in response to social and cultural issues.





This book will be a key resource for university students, professors, practitioners and policy makers in organizations and in school systems. It will inspire future dance education researchers to conduct research that is collaborative, impactful, inclusive and diverse research that will solidify the place of dance as an integral part of each persons education.





 
Dedication

List of Illustrations

Foreword

Acknowledgements

Contributor Biographical Sketches

 

1. Introduction to The Handbook of Dance Education Research

Lynnette Young Overby, Billie Lepczyk, and Jill Green

 

Part I:  Dance Education Research Methodologies and Theories

2. Introduction to Part I

Jill Green





Section I: Qualitative Research

3. Qualitative Research as Creative and Critical Bricolage      

Matthew Henley

4. Qualitative Research Methods in Interdisciplinary Arts Projects      

Ali Duffy

5. The Privilege of Portraiture Methodology     

Susan Pope

6. A/r/tography as Research Methodology: Explorations and Impact on
Understanding

Choreographic Practice

Peter Cook

7. Dance Education Research with Oral History: Practice and Potential

Caroline Sutton Clark





Section II: Quantitative Research

8. Quantitative Dance Education Research: Issues, Details and Procedures to
Consider

Sandra Minton

9. Quantitative Research with a Focus on Dance Science

M. Virginia Wilmerding and Donna H. Krasnow



Section III: Mixed Methods Research

10.  When Qualitative Narratives and Quantitative Numbers Work Together:

Making Sense of Mixed Methods Design in Dance Education Research

Jenny McNamara and Doug Risner

11. Methods for Researching Group Activity in Dance and Dance Education

Miriam Giguere

12.  Tap Dance Research: An interdisciplinary approach to mixed methods
research with

collaboration in the areas of dance, early childhood development,
kinesiology, family

studies, and nutrition

Julie Pentz

 

Part II: Exemplars of Dance Education Research

13.  Introduction to Part II

  Lynnette Overby





Section I: Dance Education History and Culture

14. Dance Education Literature and Research Descriptive Index: A Body of

Knowledge In and About Dance Education

Rima Faber

15.  Moving Between Competitive and College Dance: Students Experiences
Bridging

the Gaps

Karen Schupp

16.  Shaped by American Pageantry Movement in Forceful and Forgotten Ways,
Dance

Education, History and Culture 1911-1924

Naima Prevots





Section II:  Dance Pedagogy and Choreography

17.  Why Focus on Children and Dance? 

Judith Lynne Hanna

18.  Research Your Pedagogy Using Two Methods 

Teresa Heiland and Kaitlyn Whitaker

19.  Pathways to pedagogical diversity: dance and disability in education

Sara Whately

20.  Assessment as a Pedagogical Tool and Research Method for Programmatic

Evaluation

Dale Schmid



21.  Unraveling Embodied Terrains: Scrutinizing Choreographic Process

Nadra Assaf and Heather Harrington 

22.  Bubble Dance: Visualizing Microscopic Acoustic Phenomena

Billie Lepczyk





Section III:  Community Engaged Research

23.  Youth Participatory Action Research: Generating Knowledge Together for
Social

Change

Rachel Swenson

24.  Developing dance students as active citizens through civic and
community

engagement

Joy Guarino and Enya-Kalia Jordan

25.  Building a Dance Community in Lebanon: An Introspection on the Journey
to the

International Dance Day Festival in Lebanon (IDDFL)

  Nadra Assaf and Rain Ross

26.  Planning Relevant Dance Interventions Through Logic Modelling 

Lucie Beaudry and Sylvie Fortin

 

Part III: International Dance Education Research

27.  Introduction to Part III

Peter Cook

28.  Dance Education in India 

Aadya Kaktikar

29.  Analysis  of  Research  Trends  in  Dance  Education  in  Korea:

Focusing  on  Dance  Research  Journal  of  Korea

Young Moon

30.  The Importance of Dance Integration for the Educational Process in
Kindergartens,

Primary Schools and Secondary Schools in Slovenia

Vesna Gersak

31. Dancing Videoletters between a Mehin (indigenous krahô)

and a Supposed Cup (non-indigenous): An expanded notion of embodiment

Alba Pedreira Vieira and Francisco Hyjnõ Krahô

32.  A snapshot of Dance Education Research in South Africa

Gerard M Samuel  

33.  Dance ANDDance Education Research in the USA 



Susan Koff

34.  Addressing value concerns with advocacy research: Dance education in
the UK

Kathryn Stamp

35.   Dancing to a Different Beat: The Distinctive Evolution of Dance
Education

Research in Jamaica and Its Resonance Throughout the Caribbean

Nicholeen DeGrasse-Johnson, and Christopher A. Walker



Part IV:  Dance Education Social Justice Research and Practice

36.  Introduction to Part IV

Alfdaniels Mabingo

37.  A Qualitative Methodology for Social Justice in Dance Education and
Somatic

Research

Jill Green

38.  Plática, Testimonio, y Convivencia: Centering Chicana/Latina Feminist
Pedagogies

and Research Methodologies in Dance Education

Kiri Avelar and Franchesca Marisol Cabrera

39.  Using Hip Hop Pedagogy to Create Equitable Dance Spaces

Ariyan Johnson

40.  BEYOND CONSUMPTION: The Power of Dance to Transform

Elana Denise Anderson Anderson

41.  Disrupting and Reimagining the Archives: 

Interdisciplinary and Chicana/Latina Feminist Interventions as Decolonial
Praxis

Kiri Avelar and Michaela Summers

 

Reflection and Next Steps

42.  Lynnette Young Overby

 

Appendix:  Dance Education Resources 

Emily Uhler and Lynnette Young Overby

 

Index
Lynnette Young Overby, Ph.D. sits on the National Council for the Humanities and was a Professor of Theatre and Dance at the University of Delaware. She currently serves as a Research Associate with the Arnhold Institute for Dance Education, Research, Policy & Leadership, Teachers College, Columbia University.





Dr. Billie Lepczyk , Professor of Dance and member of the Academy of Teaching Excellence at Virginia Tech, is a Teacher College Fellow of Columbia University and holds Dance Notation Bureau Certifications as Professional Notator, Movement Analyst and Labanotation Teacher. Her research and publications concern movement analysis and dance style and her forthcoming book outlines the creative dance curriculum she developed where floorplans serve as a composition tool in dance-making.





Jill Green, Ph.D., taught dance and somatics for over forty years. She served the School of Dance at UNCG as professor, researcher, and Director of Graduate Studies, and Interim Director, and received a number of teaching and researcher awards.