Giraffes Can't Dance
by Giles Andreae
from Orchard
Gerald the giraffe doesn't really have delusions of grandeur. He just wants to dance. But his knees are crooked and his legs are thin, and all the other animals mock him when he approaches the dance floor at the annual Jungle Dance. "Hey, look at clumsy Gerald," they sneer. "Oh, Gerald, you're so weird." Poor Gerald slinks away as the chimps cha-cha, rhinos rock 'n' roll, and warthogs waltz. But an encouraging word from an unlikely source shows this glum giraffe that those who are different "just need a different song," and soon he is prancing and sashaying and boogying to moon music (with a cricket accompanist). In the vein of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Gerald's fickle "friends" quickly decide he's worthy of their attention again.
With this rhyming, poignant (in a cartoonish way) tale, Giles Andreae, author of Rumble in the Jungle, and numerous other picture books, shows insecure young readers that everyone can be wonderful, even those that march to the beat of a different cricket. The rhymes are somewhat awkward, but the bold, bright watercolors by Guy Parker-Rees will invite readers to kick up their heels and find their own internal harmony. (Ages 3 to 6) --Emilie Coulter
Gerald is a giraffe who simply can¹t dance. Try as he may, his long, spindly legs buckle whenever he starts to boogie. Every year he dreads going to the Great jungle Dance, until one night he finds his own special music.
Let's Dance, Little Pookie
by Sandra Boynton
from Robin Corey Books
POOKIE’S MOM proposes a lively dance together. Pookie, being Pookie, is somewhat hesitant to try something new. But little by little, Pookie is drawn into the dance—hopping, marching, shimmying, singing. Presented in Boynton’s captivating style, this book will thoroughly delight toddlers and their caregivers alike.
Oliver Button Is a Sissy
by Tomie dePaola
from Voyager Books
Angelina Ballerina
by Katharine Holabird
from Viking Juvenile
Angelina Ballerina is the picture book that first introduced Angelina to her adoring fans. This tiny dancer has proved to have enormous staying powershe has been a hugely popular character for more than twenty years. And Angelina's popularity only continues to grow. She is even the spokescharacter for National Dance Week.With Katharine Holabird's lively writing and Helen Craig's charming illustrations, the original story about the feisty little mouse who wants nothing more than to dance still keeps young ballerinas leaping with delight.
Dance Teaching Methods and Curriculum Design
by Gayle Kassing
from Human Kinetics Publishers
There's a lot more to dance education than steps and dances. To be successful, dance educators must practice a variety of skills that go far beyond dancing. They must incorporate educational theories to meet state and national arts standards, establish a solid knowledge base of the dance form to be taught, and set up developmentally appropriate learning experiences.
To help aspiring dance educators acquire the skills that will make them successful in the classroom, this book provides vital information on teaching methods in general, then shares specific applications for teaching each dance form.
Dance Teaching Methods and Curriculum Design presents a conceptual model of dance education that embraces dance as an art form and disseminates it through learning experiences in dancing, dance making, and dance appreciation. Through this book, dance educators will broaden their understanding of the dance content that is appropriate for their students and their educational setting.
Part I presents an overview of the teaching and learning process in dance, including the background information necessary to plan, organize, set up, and deliver an effective learning experience. It provides essential information about the national standards in dance and guides readers smoothly through the process of
identifying both dance content knowledge and teacher knowledge,
developing observation skills,
being aware of how students learn movement,
constructing a dance class,
choosing a presentational method,
addressing student behaviors in the classroom,
analyzing the learning environment, and
teaching for artistic development across various dance forms.
Part II offers ideas for unit and curriculum development, design, and evaluation. Readers will learn how to create learning experiences, lesson plans, unit plans, and finally a dance curriculum. They will become familiar with four categories of dance that encompass 10 dance forms; they also will discover the application of movement, choreographic, and aesthetic principles to these dance forms. Readers will find step-by-step instructions for teaching beginning dance units in 10 different dance forms to offer a curriculum of experiences for students in preschool to college settings.
This book contains many special features so that readers can access important information quickly:
Chapter objectives and summaries
Tables that compile information about different topics
Highlight boxes that draw attention to important information
Self-check lists that provide a quick way to understand a process or learn a new concept
It's Your Turn activities that provide practical, interactive experiences in dance
33 forms, including lesson plans, teaching evaluations, unit plans, block time plans (with detailed information about what to teach in each class), and scope and sequence forms that show the order in which to teach various dances and techniques
Ready-made rubrics that match the objectives for each of the sample unit plans for evaluation
Sample unit plans for 10 different dance forms, each containing a three-week unit of 15 progressive classes
An extensive list of book, music, and video resources for each dance unit
More than 120 photos and 66 illustrations that illustrate the various dance forms and techniques
Icons for movement, choreographic, and aesthetic principles as they apply to each dance form
Beyond Technique exercises that provide additional learning activities in dance making and dance appreciation for each sample unit
A culminating portfolio project that synthesizes all of the elements explored in the book into a practical product that prospective dance educators can present to potential employers
Even the most experienced dance educators will appreciate the sample units for 10 different dance forms, divided into four categories:
Creative movement and creative dance
Recreational dance (including social dance, contra dance, folk dance, and square dance)
Concert dance (including ballet, modern dance, jazz, and tap)
Aerobic dance (dance fitness)
Dance Teaching Methods and Curriculum Design provides a sound foundation in the art and science of dance pedagogy-for those who seek a rewarding career in teaching dance.
To Dance: A Ballerina's Graphic Novel
by Siena Cherson Siegel
from Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books
Dancers are young when they first dream of dance. Siena was six -- and her dreams kept skipping and leaping, circling and spinning, from airy runs along a beach near her home in Puerto Rico, to dance class in Boston, to her debut performance on stage with the New York City Ballet.
To Dance tells and shows the fullness of her dreams and her rhapsodic life they led to. Part family history, part backstage drama, here is an original, firsthand book about a young dancer's beginnings -- and beyond.
Barn Dance! (Reading Rainbow)
by Bill Martin
from Henry Holt and Co. (BYR)
Dinosaurumpus!
by Tony Mitton
from Orchard
+++




