Towards a socially just dance curriculum entitlement

被引:0
作者
Jeff Meiners
机构
[1] University of South Australia,
来源
The Australian Educational Researcher | 2021年 / 48卷
关键词
Dance; Power; Agency; Performance; Creative learning; Competition; Critical approaches;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The paper begins by drawing upon research to understand the genealogical position of dance within the school curriculum as a new ‘entitlement’ for all young Australians. Whilst dance is included within the Australian curriculum it has been historically marginalised as a ‘soft’ subject within curriculum hierarchy. This low position in the curriculum order has been questioned, with assertions that dance requires a high level of embodied intelligence not usually recognised by education systems. Ball’s (1993) analytic framework for policy-making has been utilised to explore the context of influence through a genealogy of the dance curriculum; the context of policy text production through the process of writing about Dance for the Arts Shape paper in the Australian Curriculum; and the context of policy practice through a case study of pre-service teachers’ lived experiences of dance in school. The findings revealed a series of complex factors which have impacted upon the implementation and practice of dance in schools including the relationship between teacher control, disciplinary power and student agency; the impact of dance competitions and their influence on the perceptions of dance; the interests of diverse faiths and cultures as well as the potential of dance to support growing interest in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander histories and culture; and the twenty-first century proliferation of dance on screen via new technologies and access to highly sexualised performance are discussed. These factors prompt the need for critical approaches towards developing a more accessible and socially just dance curriculum that is culturally responsive and meaningful for diverse learners.
引用
收藏
页码:837 / 856
页数:19
相关论文
共 52 条
  • [1] Anderson K(2005)Exclusionary politics and the question of national belonging: Australian ethnicities in ‘multiscalar’ focus Ethnicities 5 460-485
  • [2] Taylor A(2000)Policy as discourse: What does it mean? where does it get us?’ Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 27 45-57
  • [3] Bacchi C(1993)What is policy? Texts, trajectories and toolboxes Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 13 10-17
  • [4] Ball S(1998)Big policies/small world: An introduction to international perspectives in education policy Comparative Education 34 119-130
  • [5] Ball S(2011)Embodied faith: Islam, religious freedom and educational practices in physical education Sport, Education and Society 16 17-34
  • [6] Benn T(2007)Health or art? The case for dance in the curriculum of British state schools 1909–1919 History of Education 36 681-696
  • [7] Dagkas S(2008)Pedagogue of the dance: The dancing master as educator in the long eighteenth century History of Education 37 605-618
  • [8] Jawad H(2011)National curriculum: A political-educational tangle Australian Journal of Education 55 259-280
  • [9] Bloomfield A(2005)The individual point of view: Learning from Bourdieu’s The Weight of the World Cultural Studies - Critical Methodologies 5 354-372
  • [10] Bloomfield A(2001)Dancing around the 'problem' of boys and dance Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 22 213-225