Syllabus
Syllabus
Syllabus
edu
I. Descriptive Information
a. Course Description: ITE 329, Performing Arts Expression K-6 (3 credits)
development of communication skills through creative dramatics, rhythmic movement,
related arts (dance, drama, music) Pre-requisite: Admission to the elementary cohort
program. Co-requisite: ITE 317 Field Experience.
b. Focus Designation: (O) Oral Focus
c. Disability StatementKOKUA Program
If you have a disability and related access needs, please contact the KOKUA program
(UH Disabled Student Services Office) at 956-7511 v/text, [email protected], or go
to Room 013 in the Queen Liliuokalani Center for Student Services. Please know that
I will work with you and KOKUA to meet your access needs based on disability
documentation.
d. Professional Dispositions Statement
The professional dispositions shared in this course reflect the standards and
expectations of the College of Education, the Institute for Teacher Education, and the
Elementary and Early Childhood Education Program. Teacher candidates must meet
expectations during all program-related activities (i.e., coursework, field experiences,
meetings, and conferences). Any category marked with does not meet requires a
conference, plan of assistance for improvement, or dismissal. Professional
dispositions can be found on the EECE website.
e. Ethical Behavior
All work you submit as yours must include proper documentation and crediting of
sources. Failure to properly introduce and document paraphrased material or
borrowed ideas is plagiarism. Plagiarism carries serious consequences and possible
dismissal from the program. See the UH General and Graduate Information Catalogue
under Student Regulations and the UH Student Conduct Code for specific
guidelines related to plagiarism.
II. Standards-Based Education and the College of Education Conceptual Framework
During your teacher education program, you will find yourself immersed in standardsbased education. The College of Education (COE) and the Institute for Teacher Education
(ITE) set standards for teacher candidates. The Hawaii Teacher Standards Board (HTSB)
sets standards for Hawaii teachers. The Common Core Standards and the Hawaii
Content and Performance Standards (HCPS III) for K-12 students are set by the Hawaii
Department of Education. In addition, many of your teacher education courses will
Honor inclusion through a fine arts education program for all students that values
diversity, individuality, special needs and various learning styles.
Recognize the developmental stages of children and apply this understanding to
experiences in the performing arts for elementary students.
Demonstrate literacy in the three distinct art forms that comprise the performing
arts dance, drama and music.
Identify the unique principles, elements, properties, and processes of dance,
drama and music and in the work of others and apply these expressive qualities to
your own work and to elementary curriculum and instruction.
Appreciate multicultural art forms and share this appreciation with elementary
students.
Integrate study and teaching in the performing arts to content in literacy and
language arts, mathematics, science, social studies, health, and the visual arts.
Implement a variety of instructional strategies for teaching the performing arts.
Reinforce the National Standards for Fine Arts Education and The Hawaii Content
and Performance Standards III, Fine Arts, Performing Arts.
Locate and develop resources and materials for the study and teaching of the
performing arts in the elementary classroom.
Utilize community and global resources (human, cultural, institutional, material,
and electronic) for the study and teaching of the performing arts in the elementary
classroom.
Practice classroom management strategies for safe and productive performing arts
experiences.
Create, implement, evaluate and reflect upon developmentally appropriate and
sequential performing arts curriculum and instruction for elementary students
Present a professional website for study and teaching in the performing arts.
2.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
% of
Grade
10
10
15
30
15
10
10
Required to
complete
course
Instructions and scoring rubrics for each project are included in this syllabus. Additional clarification
will also be given in class and online.
course projects
__Needs reminders to
submit work as .ppt
.pptx; .doc, or .docx
The following course projects will become part of your Professional Website for Study and Teaching in the
Fine Arts.
2. WHO AM I AS AN ARTIST AND HOW ARE THE ARTS A PART OF MY LIFE? (10%)
Purpose
The purpose of this project is to help you understand the role of the arts in your life; identify
your strengths as a performing artist, visual artist and, or arts educator; set goals for yourself
as an artist and arts educator; and to select three artifacts that reflect how the arts are a part
of your life. This is also a great way to get to know more about each other. This project, like
most other projects in our course, can be modified for your elementary students and will help
your students begin to view themselves as artists too!
Assessment Tasks
You will create either a slideshow presentation or a word document that contains the
following components
Your name in the file name (JHerringWhoAmI.ppt or JHerringWhoAmI.doc)
A self-analysis that lists
your strengths as a performing artist, a visual artist and, or arts educator
three goals you are setting for yourself as an arts educator in the elementary
classroom
steps you can take to achieve the goals you are setting for yourself.
You will also describe a minimum of three artifacts in the pages or slides that follow. Choose
each artifact to show something important about the performing arts and/or the visual arts in
your life.
Each artifact description will be a written reflection of about to page or a slide with bullet
points. The reflection should indicate
a description of the item
why you chose the item
what the item tells about the arts in your life or about you as an artist
share an image of each artifact on the page or slide where you describe the artifact
Protocol
You will
assess yourself on your work using the teacher-created rubric that you will paste into
your project that includes your name.
post your project in Forums under Who Am I as an attachment for peer review.
reply to three projects prepared by your peers in Forums in laulima.hawaii.edu
post your project and your self-assessment in the Assignment area under Who Am I
As An Artist as an attachment for instructor review and include the name of the three
peers you responded to.
place a copy of your project and the completed rubric on your Website.
NAME:__________________________________________________________________
Scoring Rubric for Self-Assessment For Who Am I As An Artist? Check your work!
Does Not Meet
Expectations (D)
Meets Expectations
(M)
Exceeds Expectations
(E)
Online posting:
__ Candidate needs
reminder to complete
the project to meet
expectations
__ Candidate needs
reminder to proofread
for spelling and
grammar
__ Candidate needs
reminder to assess
their own work using
the rubric
__ Candidate needs
reminder to include the
names of three peers
they responded to in
Forums
__Candidate needs
reminder to place their
name on their work
__Candidate needs
reminder to submit
their work as a .ppt;
or .pptx; .doc; or .docx
Online posting:
__ Include your name on your
project file
__ Attach this rubric and assess
your own work.
__ Proofread your work for
spelling and grammar
Include an analysis that lists
__Your strengths as a performing
artist and/or as a visual artist and
arts educator
__Three goals you are setting for
yourself as an arts educator in the
elementary classroom
__ Steps to meet the goals you
have established
__ Images of three artifacts that:
__ Includes a description
of each artifact
__ Includes why you chose
the item
__ Describes what the item
tells about the arts in your
life or about you as an
artist.
__ Share a statement of
validation to three or more of your
peers that indicates that you have
read his/her entire posting and
that you appreciate something
specific about his/her work. Be
sure your validations refer to
specific statements made by
your peer. Provide substantial
feedback.
In addition to Meets
Expectations
__Provide written
evidence below of how
you think you exceeded
the expectations listed
to produce an extremely
high quality
professional product.
__Name________________
__Name________________
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3. READING RESPONSES
__Name________________
(3 X 5% = 15%)
Purpose
The purpose of the reading responses is to demonstrate your understanding of course
content. The second purpose is to help you become more familiar resources in the
performing arts which includes the (1) Cornett (2011) text; (2) the Hawaii Content and
Performance Standards III in the Performing Arts (2005); (3) selected Internet resources
stored in Laulima and online; and (4) lesson planning in the performing arts. The third
purpose is to engage in a dialogue with your peers about what you are reading and how you
are thinking about what you are reading and the lessons you are planning for your students.
Assessment Tasks
There are three reading responses required during this course and the due dates appear on
the course calendar that is part of this syllabus. Each reading response will focus on the
specific art form you are reading about and planning a lesson about. Each reading response
will answer the following questions specific to the readings assigned and the lesson you are
planning. You will also submit the rubric to assess yourself on your own work for each
reading response.
Reading Response 1: Drama (5%)
1. What was most relevant or meaningful to you in the reading that connected to the drama
lesson you are planning for your students? Please provide specific examples and use
citations that include the author, date, and page number.
2. What resources did you locate in Laulima in Resources in Drama or from your own
Internet research that contributed to your teacher research for planning for instruction?
Please describe and explain and include an active link to the specific resource.
3. Briefly describe the piece of childrens literature you have selected as a focus for your
lesson and what your students will do specifically in the lesson you are planning and how
this builds on their prior academic knowledge and experiences.
4. What is the enduring understanding you want your students to develop as part of this
lesson?
5. What is the essential question you plan to ask your students as part of this lesson?
6. What HCPS III Content Standard and Benchmark in Theater and Drama will your
students demonstrate they can meet through their work in this lesson?
7. What drama element do you plan to teach to your students to use as part of this lesson?
8. What instructional strategies will you use to engage your students in developing
understandings and skills to scaffold student learning that includes participating in a warmup, focusing event, and practicing the drama element(s) that is (are) part of your lesson?
9. How will you assess the students learning throughout the lesson (formative assessment)
10. How will you provide closure to your lesson that also lets your students demonstrate
what they know, understand and are able to do as performers (summative assessment)?
11. What teaching materials (i.e. charts, graphs, visuals, PowerPoint, questions, rubrics, exit
notes) do you need to develop for this lesson to improve and enhance student learning in
drama and theater?
Reading Response 2: Dance (5%)
1. What was most relevant or meaningful to you in the reading that connected to the dance
lesson you are planning for your students? Please provide specific examples and use
citations that include the author, date, and page number.
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2. What resources did you locate in Laulima in Resources in Dance or from your own
Internet research that contributed to your teacher research for planning for instruction?
Please describe and explain and include an active link to the specific resource.
3. Briefly describe the piece of childrens literature you have selected as a focus for your
lesson and what your students will do specifically in the lesson you are planning and how
this builds on their prior academic knowledge and experiences.
4. What is the enduring understanding you want your students to develop as part of this
lesson?
5. What is the essential question you plan to ask your students as part of this lesson?
6. What HCPS III Content Standard and Benchmark in dance will your students demonstrate
they can meet through their work in this lesson?
7. What dance element do you plan to teach to your students and use as part of this
lesson?
8. What instructional strategies will you use to engage your students in developing
understandings and skills to scaffold student learning that includes participating in a warmup, focusing event, and practicing the dance element(s) that is (are) part of your lesson?
9. How will you assess the students learning throughout the lesson (formative assessment)
10. How will you provide closure to your lesson that also lets your students demonstrate
what they know, understand and are able to do as dancers (summative assessment)?
11. What teaching materials (i.e. charts, graphs, visuals, PowerPoint, questions, rubrics, exit
notes) do you need to develop for this lesson to improve and enhance student learning in
dance?
Reading Response 3: Music (5%)
1. What was most relevant or meaningful to you in the reading that connected to the music
lesson you are planning for your students? Please provide specific examples and use
citations that include the author, date, and page number.
2. What resources did you locate in Laulima in Resources in Music or from your own Internet
research that contributed to your teacher research for planning for instruction? Please
describe and explain and include an active link to the specific resource.
3. Briefly describe the piece of childrens literature you have selected as a focus for your
lesson and what your students will do specifically in the lesson you are planning and how
this builds on their prior academic knowledge and experiences.
4. What is the enduring understanding you want your students to develop as part of this
lesson?
5. What is the essential question you plan to ask your students as part of this lesson?
6. What HCPS III Content Standard and Benchmark in Music will your students demonstrate
they can meet through their work in this lesson?
7. What music element do you plan to teach to your students and use as part of this lesson?
8. What instructional strategies will you use to engage your students in developing
understandings and skills to scaffold student learning that includes participating in a warmup, focusing event, and practicing the music element(s) that is (are) part of your lesson?
9. How will you assess the students learning throughout the lesson (formative assessment)
10. How will you provide closure to your lesson that also lets your students demonstrate
what they know, understand and are able to do as musicians, singers or composers
(summative assessment)?
11. What teaching materials (i.e. charts, graphs, visuals, PowerPoint, questions, rubrics, exit
notes) do you need to develop for this lesson to improve and enhance student learning in
music?
9
Protocol
Copy the reading response questions and your responses in Forums by the due date on the
calendar.
Choose to respond to two peers who do not have two responses.
Then read the response of two peers and write a reply to each peer.
When you have completed this process assess yourself and post your work and the rubric
below in Assignments for instructor review and assigning points.
Rubric for Self-Assessment of Reading Responses Check your work!
Does Not Meet Expectations (D)
__ Candidate needs reminder to submit
their work in Forums for peer review and
in Assignments for instructor review
__Candidate needs reminder to complete
all components of the project
__ Candidate needs reminder to
proofread for grammar, spelling and
punctuation
__ Candidate needs reminder to assess
their own work using the rubric
__ Candidate needs reminder to submit
their work as a .ppt; .pptx; .doc or .docx
__ Candidate needs reminder to respond
to two peers.
10
11
Assessment Tools
NAME:__________________________________________________________________
Scoring Rubric for Self-Assessment of your Drama Lesson Plan
Check your work!
Does Not Meet
Expectations
(D)
__ Candidate needs
reminder to post
lesson plan on Forums
and in Assignments
__ Candidate needs
reminder to complete
all components of the
lesson plan
__ Candidate needs
reminder to proofread
for spelling and
grammar
__ Candidate needs
reminder to assess
their own work using
the rubric
Meets Expectations
(M)
Exceeds Expectations
(E)
In addition to Meets
Expectations
__Provide written
evidence below of how
you think you exceeded
the expectations listed
to create a quality
product:
13
14
Purpose
The reading and responding you did for dance and music was an opportunity for you to
engage in teacher research to prepare for developing a lesson plan in each of these content
areas, to make decisions related to your plan, and to prepare for teaching your lesson in
your field placement. You will want to discuss your ideas for your dance and/or music lesson
with your mentor teacher before you select the content of your lesson and create the
supporting teaching materials you will need for your lesson. It is also important to refer to
and update the Context for Learning Task prior to developing your lesson to better
understand the needs of the students in your classroom and the specific components of the
classroom curriculum.
You may choose to teach either a dance lesson or a music lesson. The dance lesson or
music lesson project serves numerous purposes and is outlined below. You will
plan to teach an effective dance or music lesson in your field placement
base your lesson on a literature selection that is appropriate for your students
use the lesson plan format to write a lesson plan in either dance or music
teach a dance or music lesson designed for the children in your field placement
reflect on your teaching and your impact on student learning
write the reflection
share your work teaching dance or music with your peers, your mentor teacher, your
field supervisor and your course instructor
learn from your own work and from the work of your peers.
It is also important to provide students the opportunity to observe, describe, interpret and
evaluate mentor texts in dance or music that may impact their own understanding of the
creative process or specific elements of dance or music. You will need to locate or develop
the resources needed to effectively teach your students that represent the concepts you are
trying to develop. These resources will also be shared with your peers along with your
lesson plan and reflection.
Assessment Tasks and Protocol
Use the lesson plan format for writing your lesson plan and complete all parts of the
lesson plan.
Base the dance or music lesson on a piece of childrens literature that is appropriate
for your students and culturally relevant.
Create the teaching materials and visuals you need to effectively teach your lesson
and include these with your lesson plan.
Include an energizer or warm-up, a focusing event, active and engaging learning
experiences to scaffold student learning, and a closing event for students to reflect on
their learning.
Develop an assessment tool to document and record individual student learning.
Plan a date and time to teach your dance or music lesson.
Invite your field supervisor to observe you teaching if possible.
15
Assessment Tools
NAME:__________________________________________________________________
Scoring Rubric for Self-Assessment of your Dance or Music Lesson Plan
and Reflection
Check your work!
Does Not Meet
Expectations
(D)
__ Candidate needs
reminder to post lesson
plan on Forums and in
Assignments
__ Candidate needs
reminder to complete all
components of the lesson
plan
__ Candidate needs
reminder to proofread for
spelling and grammar
__ Candidate needs
reminder to assess their
own work using the rubric
Meets Expectations
(M)
__Uses the lesson plan format for writing
your lesson plan and complete all parts
of the lesson plan.
__Bases the lesson on a piece of
childrens literature that is appropriate for
your students and culturally relevant.
__Creates the teaching materials and
visuals needed to effectively teach your
lesson and include these with your
lesson plan.
__Includes in the instructional strategies
__energizer or warm-up
__focusing event
__active and engaging learning
experiences to scaffold student
learning
__closing event for students to
reflect on their learning.
__Develops an assessment tool to
document and record individual student
learning.
__Plans a date and time to teach the
lesson.
__Invites the field supervisor to observe
teaching.
__Reflects on your teaching and student
learning.
__Writes the reflection.
__Assesses self, using this rubric.
__Submits completed work with the
reflection in Forums for peer review.
__Reads the work of one peer and write
a reply.
__Adds the name of the peer to the selfassessment.
Exceeds Expectations
(E)
In addition to Meets
Expectations
__Provide written evidence
below of how you think you
exceed the expectations
listed to create a quality
product:
16
__Name______________
__Submits all of work to Assignments for
Instructor Review.
17
Purpose
The first purpose of this assignment is to provide an opportunity for you to seek out a
professional theatrical performance in your own community to attend this semester as
someone who appreciates the arts and is becoming an arts educator in the elementary
classroom. The second purpose of this assignment is to write a review of the performance.
The third purpose is to reflect on your personal involvement with the performance as a
member of the audience. The fourth purpose is to connect what you are learning in this
class or understand about this art form to what you experienced throughout the performance.
Assessment Tasks
You will write a one to two-page review of the performance that includes
Title, Location, Date and Cost of the Performance
Brief description of the performance in your own words
Description of your personal involvement with the performance as a member of the
audience
Description of how you can connect this experience to something that you have
learned in our class or understand about this art form.
Protocol
Proofread your work for spelling and grammar
Answer all prompts listed above
Assess your own work using the scoring rubric
Attach the scoring rubric to your work
Place in the Assignments only for instructor review
Place a copy in your Professional Electronic Portfolio for Study and Teaching in the
Performing Arts
Scoring Rubric for Self Assessment for Theatrical PerformanceCheck your work!
Does Not Meet
Meets Expectations
Exceeds Expectations
Expectations (D)
(M)
(E)
__ Candidate needs
reminder to submit their
work to assignments
__ Candidate needs
reminder to include all
components of the
assignment
__Candidate needs
reminder to proofread
writing for spelling and
grammar
__ Candidate needs
reminder to assess their
own work.
In addition to Meets
Expectations
__Provide written evidence
below of how you think you
exceed the expectations listed
to create a high quality product.
18
19
20
Purpose
The purpose of this assignment is for you to compile the course projects into a professional
website that emphasizes your preparation in integrating the performing arts throughout the
curriculum. The professional website is required for you to complete the course.
Professional presentation and organization of your work is important. You may add to this
website throughout our program and place other work in this site as well.
Assessment Tasks Professional Website
Professional Website for Study and Teaching in the Arts will include the following
components:
Name
ITE
and HTPS
Standards
Assignment
ITE: E, C
HTPS: 9,10
ITE: K, E
HTPS:
3,4,5,6,7,8
ITE: K,C
HTPS: 1, 2,
3,4,9,10
1. Professional Dispositions
Meets
Expectations
Exceeds
Expectations
DME
10%
1.Chapters 8-9
2.Chapters 10-11
3.Chapters 12-13
15%
10%
ITE: K,E,C
4. Drama Lesson Plan, Videotape, and Instruction
HTPS:1,2,3,
Commentary
4,5,6,7,8
ITE: K,E,C 4. 5. Dance or Music Lesson Plan and Reflection
HTPS:1,2,3, U
4,5,6,7,8
ITE: K, C
6. Review of Theatrical Performance
HTPS:
4,5,6,7
ITE: K,E,C
7. Small Group Creative Performance and Reflection
HTPS:4,5,6,
10
ITE: K,E,C
8. Professional Website for Study and Teaching in the Arts
HTPS: 9,10
Includes all course projects
30%
15%
10%
10%
Required to
complete course
Required
to
complete
course
6. Assessment
7. Planning for Instruction
8. Instructional Strategies
9. Professional Learning and Ethical Practice
10. Leadership and Collaboration
A
B
C
D
F
22
Friday, January 9
Face to Face Session
5:30 pm 8:30 pm
LSP 4A
Sunday, January 11
Face to Face Session
9:00 am 1:00 pm
LSP 4A and 4B
Module 1
Getting Organized
January 12 18
Module 2
Who Am I As An Artist?
January 19 25
Module 3
Elements of Drama
January 26
February 1
Module 4
February 2 8
Module 5
February 9 15
Module 6
Elements of Dance, I
Saturday, February 21
February 16 22
Reading
Teach Drama Lesson, Edit Videotape, and
Write Instruction Commentary
Open Due Date in Forums and
Assignments when Completed
Reading
Teach Drama Lesson, Edit Videotape, and
Write Instruction Commentary
Open Due Date in Forums and
Assignments when Completed
Wear: Comfortable clothes for dance
23
LSP 4A
Walk to Dance Studio
1:00 pm 5:00 pm
Module 7
Reading
Saturday, March 7
Punahou School
1:00 pm 5:00 pm
Module 9
Elements of Dance, II
February 23 March 1
Module 8
Elements of Music, I
March 2 8
Elements of Music, II
March 9 15
Module 10
March 16 22
Module 11
Spring Break
March 23 March 29
Module 12
UH SPRING BREAK
Complete All Course Projects
Theatrical Performance and Theatrical Review
Writing a Review
March 30 April 5
Module 13
Creativity, I
April 6 12
Module 14
Creativity, II
April 13 19
Module 15
Complete Website
April 20 26
Friday, April 24
5:30 pm 8:30 pm
LSP 4A
Saturday, April 25
1:00 pm 5:00 pm
24
University of Hawaii
College of Education
Institute for Teacher Education
Elementary and Early Childhood Education Program
To:
Mentor Teachers
From:
Subject:
Thank you for your work with our teacher candidates enrolled in the College of Education Teacher
Education Program. I appreciate the major role our mentor teachers assume in the preparing
professional educators for their work with children and their families.
All of our teacher candidates enroll in ITE 329, Performing Arts Expression, K-6, which focuses on
integrating the performing arts (dance, drama and music) throughout the elementary curriculum.
Most of our teacher candidates are working in public school settings where the classroom teacher is
required to provide consistent sequential instruction and experiences in the fine arts. In some
settings our candidates have the opportunity to collaborate with performing arts specialists to
develop arts lessons that are linked to content across the curriculum.
One area that we focus on is integrating the arts across the curriculum to build on and reinforce
concepts that are important in other disciplines. We believe that performing arts experiences provide
tangible evidence of student learning and achievement and are alternative forms of student
assessment that demonstrate what students know, are able to do and care about. This semester our
candidates are focusing their performing arts lessons on a selection of childrens literature that is
developmentally appropriate for their students and is related to the current grade level curriculum.
We practice the artistic processes of creating, performing, and responding. We know that having
experiences in the arts also requires some time to reflect on these experiences in order to create
new connections and new ways of knowing.
The information printed on the back of this page articulates the field component of our course.
The field component requires our teacher candidates to develop and implement a drama
lesson early in the semester and to develop and implement a dance or music lesson later in
the semester.
We also believe that seeing what students are really capable of doing requires them to create all of
the work themselves. This eliminates using any type of adult created script and provides a more
authentic assessment tool that focuses on the child and his/her ability to communicate through the
arts. Our teacher candidates participate in performing arts workshops with specialists in drama,
dance and music to learn how to integrate the arts into the elementary classroom.
It is my expectation that the teacher candidates will discuss their ideas with you and share their
lesson plans with you before implementation of the lesson. Candidates will also arrange for one of
their peers to videotape them teaching the drama lesson and will invite their field supervisor to
observe their teaching. After teaching the lesson and viewing the videotape, candidates will write an
instruction commentary to reflect on their teaching and student learning.
Please contact me if you have any questions or concerns.
Dr. Jennifer Herring
25
[email protected]
221-7283
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Summary of Field Experience Assignment for ITE 329, Performing Arts Expression, K-6
Overview of the Drama Lesson, Implementation, Videotaping, and Instruction Commentary
The purpose of this assignment is to give teacher candidates an opportunity to collaborate with their
mentor teacher to plan, teach, and reflect upon one drama lesson, and one lesson in either dance or
music to will implement in the elementary classroom. The culminating event is a classroom
performance where students offer each other feedback. Candidates use the EECE Program Lesson
Plan Template, which will include the following:
These lessons and the classroom performance may reinforce themes and objectives that are already
part of the curriculum and are developed in collaboration with the mentor teacher.
These lessons will include opportunities for students to create, perform and respond to experiences
in drama, and experiences in dance or music. The lessons should build on a literacy concept.
27
______
______
Signature
Date______________
(Teacher Candidate
28