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Pilobolus and the middle school: Utopianism meets reality.


In the same jeans Same Jeans is the third single by Dundee band The View, with the B-Sides being Cherry Girl and Screamin' n Shoutin'. It was Radio 1's Jo Whiley's record of the week commencing 27 November 2006 and was released on 15 January 2007.  and sneakers sneakers
Noun, pl

US, Canad, Austral & NZ canvas shoes with rubber soles

sneakers npl (US) → zapatos mpl de lona; zapatillas fpl 
 they've been wearing all day, a group of four middle school girls in their school gym in the Bronx are choreographing a short piece that alternates between krumping, twerking, and off-balance weight distribution. They've got no music other than the sounds of band class coming through from next door. Their teacher, Karen Fuhrman from the Pilobolus Institute, walks over and watches their routine. "Great transitions and level changes," she says. "Now try making the rhythm as random as a bag of popcorn popping."

In 1991 Pilobolus Dance Theatre, the innovative dance company known for its collaborative process and its weight-bearing and sharing technique, established the Pilobolus Institute to explore the ways non-dancers express themselves through movement. They've done educational stints at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School for business students and at an after-school program in Connecticut (where the company is based). They aim to demonstrate the Institute's theory that groups can solve problems better than individuals. This year, they brought their utopian ideas to M.S. 118, the William W. Niles School, in the Bronx. They're teaching dance, but they are also teaching focus, discipline, and respect.

Reality check: Teaching in the New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 public schools is not for sissies. New York City kids often use foul language; they can be streetwise street·wise  
adj.
Having the shrewd awareness, experience, and resourcefulness needed for survival in a difficult, often dangerous urban environment.
; and they frequently try to test their teachers. Middle schools are filled with kids whose hormones are ripping and who are influenced by the media, their peers, and the tough neighborhoods they often live in. It's a super-heated brew.

Yet M.S. 118's principal, Giulia Cox, calls Pilobolus' presence "a smashing success." The 150 students who've taken the class have been "captivated cap·ti·vate  
tr.v. cap·ti·vat·ed, cap·ti·vat·ing, cap·ti·vates
1. To attract and hold by charm, beauty, or excellence. See Synonyms at charm.

2. Archaic To capture.
 by the physicality, the rigor rigor /rig·or/ (rig´er) [L.] chill; rigidity.

rigor mor´tis  the stiffening of a dead body accompanying depletion of adenosine triphosphate in the muscle fibers.
, the seriousness, and the knowledge that you could have a life in dance," she says. Cox, who has a king-size commitment to the arts, realized her school's weak area was dance. The connection to Pilobolus was facilitated by Dreamyard, an organization that serves as an interface between schools and artists. Gox also hired a full-time teacher, Meredith Sheppard, who had just gotten her MA in dance education at New York University New York University, mainly in New York City; coeducational; chartered 1831, opened 1832 as the Univ. of the City of New York, renamed 1896. It comprises 13 schools and colleges, maintaining 4 main centers (including the Medical Center) in the city, as well as the .

Five groups of 20-30 students who signed up for the class meet with Sheppard five times a week in the school gym. A Pilobolus dancer (Matthew Thornton Matthew Thornton (1714 – June 24, 1803), was a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of New Hampshire.

He was born in Ireland: his family immigrated to America when he was three years old, settling first at Wiscasset, Maine, and
 the first semester and Fuhrman the second) comes in twice a week to four of the classes, focusing on improvisation and dance-making. When it's just Sheppard, she keeps the continuity going but also introduces other forms such as African dance The term African dance refers mainly to the dances of subsaharan and West Africa. The music and dances of northern Africa and the Sahara are generally more closely connected to those of the Near East. Also the dances of immigrants of European and Asian descent (e.g. .

Most students had no formal dance training. "Although they may know the merengue merengue

Couple dance from the Dominican Republic or Haiti, danced throughout Latin America. Originally a folk dance, it has become a ballroom dance, where it is danced with a limping step, the weight always on the same foot. Varieties include the jaleo and juangomero.
 by the age of 5 and be proficient in hip hop hip-hop   or hip hop
n.
1. A popular urban youth culture, closely associated with rap music and with the style and fashions of African-American inner-city residents.

2. Rap music.

adj.
," Sheppard points out, "questions arise as to why warm up, what's important about alignment. Our job is to channel and refine their talent, make it work for them"--and in the true Pilobolus tradition, to "work co-operatively to problem-solve."

When first introduced to the Pilobolus style, many students said, "That's cool, but that's not dancing." They felt awkward doing modern dance in front of their peers, so the teachers showed them that the choreographic tools Pilobolus uses can be applied to any style.

A bonus for first-semester students was a field trip to Pilobolus' home turf in Washington Depot, Connecticut, to watch the company in action. Thornton calls the day "a big experience for them," noting that some may never have been out of the Bronx.

During her time with second-semester students, Fuhrman focused on teaching them choreographic tools like "popcorn" (random tempos with each dancer), "restaurant effect" (when everyone is talking over each other), or "sushi syndrome" (when less is more). Students learned that dance is not only about shape and rhythm, but also about communication, transition, texture, and expression. "They have explored new, sometimes awkward movements," says Fuhrman. "They are taking risks in a safe environment." She found that the students were very aware of their sexuality, so she worked on slowing down the tempo and waking up other parts of their bodies like their elbows or knees. One student, Lysa Vasquez, had learned to shake her hips in belly dance classes, but now had to use her whole body while dancing. "It feels a little weird," she says. "But it's fun."

Thornton says, "It's an age group that needs a lot of directing. The students have so much energy and they love to direct it in negative ways. The biggest challenge was how to take it and channel it. There's no lack of talent in the kids." Using the collaborative process and choreographic devices they learned, and the hip hop vernacular they already knew, the students choreographed their own piece. The end product was similar to Pilobolus only conceptually, yet it yielded a performance for the school's winter carnival A Winter carnival is an outdoor celebration that occurs in wintertime.

Winter carnivals, or festivals, are popular in places where winter is particularly long or severe, such as Scandinavia, Canada and the northern United States.
. Now there's talk about developing the school pieces to a level where, this summer or next, Pilobolus can include them in Saturday matinees during their regular Joyce Theater season in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
.

The students were thrilled to see Pilobolus, including Fuhrman, dance at the Oscars on TV. "They were screaming with excitement," Sheppard says, "and thought it was cool that Karen met Beyonce, Jennifer Hudson, and J.Lo."

Thornton feels the goals that the Institute had going into the project were a quarter to a half reached. "You can't get 'em all." Yet by the end of the year, Fuhrman put the success rate at 85-90 percent. "They are bright and intellectually curious, excited, energetic, and full of moxie (language, music) Moxie - A language for real-time computer music synthesis, written in XPL.

["Moxie: A Language for Computer Music Performance", D. Collinge, Proc Intl Computer Music Conf, Computer Music Assoc 1984, pp.217-220].
," she says. "Their energy is contagious. The experience is hittin' home. The sparks are flyin'."
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Title Annotation:TEACH-LEARN CONNECTION
Author:Smith, Amanda
Publication:Dance Magazine
Date:Jun 1, 2007
Words:935
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