Discipline of dance improves pupil behaviour
Essentially Dance, a scheme which takes the cha-cha-cha and the quickstep into schools across England, was launched there last month.
The scheme, which is funded by the Aldridge Foundation, has been piloted in 26 schools so far. It trains pupils - and in many cases their teachers - to choose their partners and trip lightly across the dance floor.
According to Sue Cooper, the national co-ordinator for Essentially Dance, pupils no longer associate ballroom dancing with church halls and staid tea dances.
“Strictly Come Dancing has changed it completely,” she said.
“In some schools, boys were worried about touching girls. It was an issue for about four and a half minutes. Then it wasn’t.
“Dancing breaks down barriers between boys and girls.”
“Boys are tapping girls on the shoulder and saying, ‘Would you like to dance?’” Ms Cooper said.
“There’s a certain etiquette to dancing: how they hold each other, how they talk to each other,” said James Donnelly, Year 5-6 teacher at North Grecian Street Primary in Salford.
“It’s breaking down barriers. There’s no more ‘Eugh, I’m not touching a boy.’
“One girl said that she never would have spoken to one of the boys if he hadn’t been her partner. But he’d been in her class all through school.”
The strict code of dance floor etiquette has also had an impact on pupils’ behaviour.
“We have a lot of children who don’t like coming to school,” said Mr Donnelly.
“But even the disaffected kids want to try something new.”
Being forced to work with a partner has also helped improve social skills and teamwork. Outgoing pupils are encouraged to ask others to dance, shy pupils to accept invitations. And concentration is regularly tested.
“They’re so busy thinking about what their feet, arms and partners are doing, they don’t have time to misbehave,” said Sue Cooper.
Over the next three months, 52 more teachers and classroom assistants will receive ballroom training from Essentially Dance professionals.
They will also be given classroom resources, including a step-by-step DVD led by Strictly Come Dancing stars Darren Bennett and Lilia Kopylova, and a CD of appropriate music.
The scheme is also being evaluated by academics from Roehampton University, who are studying pupils’ responses to the new lessons.
“It’s obviously captured the imagination of teachers. I think the children have taken to it, too," said Jeanne Keay, who is leading the study.
“From reception through to sixth form, there seems to be something in it for everybody.”
The ballroom cause is also helped by the fact that dances such as the cha-cha-cha and the jive can be done to contemporary pop music.
“The waltz didn’t go down as well because the music is quite slow,” said Mr Donnelly.
“It’s not what they’re used to listening to. But it’s not like line-dancing, where you can’t see how it would apply to your life. Children see that, at some point in their lifetime, they might have to get up and dance. So it’s a cool thing to do.” (Source: TES)





