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E-raamat: Intersecting Cultures in Music and Dance Education: An Oceanic Perspective

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This volume looks forward and re-examines present day education and pedagogical practices in music and dance in the diverse cultural environments found in Oceania. The book also identifies a key issue of how teachers face the prospect of taking a reflexive view of their own cultural legacy in music and dance education as they work from and alongside different cultural worldviews. This key issue, amongst other debates that arise, positions Intersecting Cultures as an innovative text that fills a gap in the current market with highly appropriate and fresh ideas from primary sources. The book offers commentaries that underpin and inform current pedagogy and bigger picture policy for the performing arts in education in Oceania, and in parallel ways in other countries.

Introduction by Linda Ashley and David Lines.- Part I Music and Dance in Education Through Oceanic Traditions.- Mau K_rari - Traditional Maori Martial Art Training Incorporating American and European Dance Forms by Tanemahuta Gray with Jenny Stevenson.- Learning Music and Dance in Micronesia by Brian Diettrich.- Sasa: More Than Just a Dance by Robyn Trinick and Luama Sauni.- Pride and Honour: Indigenous Dance in New South Wales Schools by Katie Wilson.- Part II Culturally Responsive Pedagogies.- Making Connections: Culturally Responsive Pedagogy and Dance in the Classroom by Liz Melchior.- Legacy and Adaptation: Orff Schulwerk in the New Zealand Setting by Linda Locke.- Forging Genuine Partnerships in the Performance Studio: Reviving the Master-Apprentice Model for Post-Colonial Times by Te Oti Rakena.- Changing Pedagogical Approaches in "Ori Tahiti: "Traditional" Dance for a Non-Traditional Generation by Jane Freeman-Moulin.- Dancing into the Third Space: The Role of Dance and Dr

ama in Discovering Who We Are by Janinka Greenwood.- Untangling Intersections of Diverse Indigenous Heritages in Dance Education: Echoes, Whispers and Erosion in the Creases by Linda Ashley.- Part III Sharing and Constructing Identities, Meanings and Values.- Songs Stories Tell and Intersecting Cultures by Harold Anderson.- Being Heard: Indigenous Community Narratives by Stephen Matthews.- Cross-Cultural Education in Dance and Song in Aotearoa and Samoa by Olivia Taouma.- Musicultural Identity and Intersecting Geographic Contexts in Oceania by Trevor Thwaites.- Tama Wat_a: Integrating Maori perspectives into Dance Education by Ojeya Cruz-Banks.- The Ocean Swim: Rethinking Community in an Early Childhood Education Performing Arts Research Initiative by David Lines

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Western dance and music educators usually know little about Oceania and issues underlying the teaching of their discipline in this part of the world. The value of this book, however, goes beyond simply informing them of such practices; it would be a useful resource for all educational scholars asking how teachers of music and dance can look reflexively at their own cultural legacy within the diverse cultural environments of the schools in which they practice. Higher education faculty providing inservice and preservice education will find many stories written in accessible language, often by classroom practitioners, appropriate for sharing with their undergraduate as well as graduate students in music and/or dance. A number of them include the kind of reflexive thinking that contemporary teacher educators seek to encourage among their students. Intersecting Cultures in Music and Dance Education: An Oceanic Perspective is an important contribution to 21st century pedagogical literature in music and dance. Susan W. Stinson, USA
Introduction 1(18)
Linda Ashley
David Lines
Part I Music and Dance in Education Through Oceanic Traditions
Mau Korari -- Traditional Maori Martial Art Training Incorporating American and European Contemporary Dance Forms
19(14)
Tanemahuta Gray
Jenny Stevenson
Cultural Disjunctures and Intersections: Indigenous Musics and School-Based Education in Micronesia
33(16)
Brian Diettrich
Sasa: More Than Just a Dance
49(18)
Robyn Trinick
Luama Sauni
"Pride and Honour": Indigenous Dance in New South Wales Schools
67(14)
Katie Wilson
Part II Culturally Responsive Pedagogies Making Connections: Culturally Responsive
Pedagogy and Dance in the Classroom
81(16)
Liz Melchior
Legacy and Adaptation: The Orff Approach in the New Zealand School Setting
97(22)
Linda Locke
Forging Genuine Partnerships in the Music Studio Context: Reviving the Master-Apprentice Model for Post-colonial Times
119(16)
Te Oti Rakena
Changing Pedagogical Approaches in 'Ori Tahiti: "Traditional" Dance for a Non-traditional Generation
135(24)
Jane Freeman Moulin
Dancing into the Third Space: The Role of Dance and Drama in Discovering Who We Are
159(16)
Janinka Greenwood
Untangling Intersections of Diverse Indigenous Heritages in Dance Education: Echoes, Whispers and Erosion in the Creases
175(30)
Linda Ashley
Part III Sharing and Constructing Identities, Meanings and Values
Songs Stories Tell and Intersecting Cultures
205(18)
Harold Anderson
Being Heard: A Maori Community Narrative
223(24)
Stephen Ralph Matthews
Cross-Cultural Education in Dance and Song in Aotearoa and Samoa
247(18)
Olivia Taouma
Musicultural Identity and Intersecting Geographic Contexts in Oceania
265(20)
Trevor Thwaites
Tama Watea: Integrating Maori Perspectives into Dance Education: A Tertiary Example
285(14)
Ojeya Cruz Banks
The Ocean Swim: Rethinking Community in an Early Childhood Education Performing Arts Research Initiative
299
David Lines