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By Elizabeth Starr on August 14, 2018
Category: Women Change Worlds

Quality Summer Learning In Action: Encouraging Dancers to Create and Learn

About 20 tweens pile into the unassuming studio space of their ballet school in mid-July. There are no frills here. The waiting area is small and a bit disheveled; the cinder block building has seen its share of life. But look closer: there鈥檚 magic inside.

The dancers are not exactly sure what to expect from this week of 鈥渃horeography camp,鈥 but are glad to be there and ready for anything. Starting from nothing, in five days they will create a 20-minute ballet for family and friends. The director says she has it easy this week because the kids do all the work. The dance choreography might be the most straightforward part; they are also charged with music selection, costume and set design, hair and makeup. They first choose which story they will perform, selecting Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, perhaps knowing on some level that the fun and magic of the story will parallel their own experience that week.

As a parent, I watched the final performance (criss-cross applesauce on the floor) with a huge smile on my face, amazed to see what these kids could accomplish in a week--without many resources beyond, of course, the staff鈥檚 and their own creativity, skill, and knowledge. I tapped my toe to the jazzy music they selected, laughed at the Oompa-Loompa鈥檚 pigtails and freckles, and the squirrels鈥 (who separate out the 鈥渂ad nuts鈥) tails constructed out of cardboard tubes and old nylons, and was impressed by the level of dance, particularly of the older girls.

As a research associate of the , I watched with a more serious eye, knowing that there were many best practices here in the room that could be shared with the larger field. What made the program seem so magical? How could the director, along with several other staff members, keep the youth so happy, relaxed, and engaged all week and guide them to create something wonderful?

The answer is simple: They do it by using many of the research-based quality practices that we know work, and are measured by field-tested tools (the , for example).

Activities were of a high quality and included:

Staff were of a high quality. The director has a master鈥檚 degree in education and decades of experience teaching youth, and the assistant director is mid-way through her master鈥檚 degree in counseling. Leadership development, which helps youth and at the same time sustains quality staff, has always been built in; the small dancers hold the even smaller dancers鈥 hands at performances, older dancers assist the younger ones in classes, and the director offers a more formal leadership program, thus creating well-trained staff. In fact, the staff assisting at this week鈥檚 camp were former students.

But it鈥檚 what they do that counts. They:

At the end of the final performance, the dancers took a big bow and soaked in the well-earned applause. Was it really magic I witnessed, or simply high-quality out-of-school time programming in action? I think both 鈥 aren鈥檛 they the same thing, after all? Like any good trick, it only looks like magic.

M.Ed., is a research associate at the National Institute on Out-of-School Time () at the 妻友社区 since 2007. Her work focuses on professional development and system-building for the field of afterschool and youth development.

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