Art
As a teacher it is of the utmost importance to have a tolerance for ambiguity – there is no right way or wrong way to draw and create. This session allowed me to realise and focus on breaking down the perception that you do not need to be an artist to be able to draw. Writing and mark making can be seen as drawing, as soon as a material hits a piece of paper or other resource it can be argued that a piece of art has been created. The following clip of The Dot is a wonderful video in illustrating this in a way both adults and children can understand.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5mGeR4AQdM
I really appreciated this realisation as when I was younger I loved drawing random squiggles and adapting it into a drawing. I would have considered this as mindless doodling as opposed to art however thinking about it in a different light has shown me to appreciate that this doodling is a form of art and should be acknowledged. The workshop perfectly solidified this as manipulating the ink prints showed how something may not look like much initially but when looked at again closely and at a different angle it can take form as an animal or an object.
Dance
The idea of teaching and performing dance did not excite me in the slightest, I am not very able in the execution of dance never mind teaching it. Dancing was never something I have enjoyed doing more than just swinging a hairbrush around my room thinking I was the Spice Girl missing from the group and as I got older the idea of dancing turned into half-hearted swaying of the body with a drink in hand. Nothing really more, nothing really less – it’d be far too embarrassing. The in-between stages only consisting of the yearly winter social dancing lessons which consisted of running away from the boys who you didn’t want to hold hands with.
However, this session was great for providing teaching methods and ways to eliminate the class fear of touching one another. The games during the workshop today were really effective for getting kids more comfortable with each other. Playing games such as People-to-People and number games involving sitting back to back, being lifted up etc made me forget the awareness of the others’ bodies as I was only focusing on completing the task of elbow to elbow, knee to elbow etc. Games like these eradicate the discomfort of bodily contact by replacing it with fun. We also discussed that dance lessons realistically do not require a lot of work from the teacher’s point of view, I really liked how easy it was developing on the 10 basic moves to getting the kids to put moves to numbers so then they can easily take the reigns in making up their own dance moves. Randomly generating the order of the numbers allows each group to have a different routine and for the children to come up with ways of how they will connect the moves.