Module PE10 Q3 W1
Module PE10 Q3 W1
Module PE10 Q3 W1
Department of Education
Regional Office III
10
Quarter 3 – Module 1 - Week 1:
Physical Education 10
Active Recreation (Street and Hip-hop Dances)
Objectives:
1
Activity 1:
I. BE HAPPY or BE SAD
Put a smiling icon if you are engages in the following physical activity and put sad icon if not. Put
your answer on the space provided.
1. Jumping Jacks 6. Fetching a pail of water
2. Playing Badminton 7. Folk Dancing
3. Jogging 8. Scrubbing the floor
4. Hip-Hop Dancing 9. Playing Basketball
5. Running 10. Street Dancing
1. RE T E S T A N C E D
3. LESMAXEP FO
TSR E T E
ASDCEN
2
A G
4. P OP I H
H L R U C T U E
5. DNE CA
OI HPHP
Points To Remember:
Street dance refers to dance styles that have evolved outside of dance studios. It is performed
in streets, dance parties, parks, school yards, or in any available space. It is often improvisational and
social in the nature, encouraging interaction and contact
3 with spectators and other dancers.
A full street dance is a collection of various similar dance moves and styles put together into one
practice and regarded as the same dance.
Hip-hop is a cultural movement best known for its impact on music in the form of the musical
genre of the same name. It has its origins in the Bronx, in New York City, during the 1970s, mostly
among African Americans and some influence of Latin Americans. Hip-hop culture is composed of the
pillars such as DJ-ing, rapping, breakdancing, and graffiti art
Hip-hop dance, on the other hand, refers to street dance styles primarily performed to hip- hop
music or that have evolved as part of hip-hop culture. Hip-hop music incorporates a number of iconic
elements, most notably DJing and rapping, along with things like beat boxing, sampling, and juggling
beats on turntables
B-Boying
B-boying or breaking, also called breakdancing, is a style of street dance and the first hip-
hop dance style that originated among Black and Puerto Rican youths in New York City during the
early 1970s. A practitioner of this dance is called a b-boy, b-girl, or breaker.
Although the term breakdance is frequently used to refer to the dance, b-boying and breaking are the
original terms.
Four Movements:
Popping
Popping was popularized by Samuel Boogaloo Sam Solomon and his crew the Electric
Boogaloos. It is based on the technique of quickly contracting and relaxing muscles to cause a jerk in
a dancer’s body.
Popping forces parts of the body outwards, similar to an explosion within parts of your body.
Popping also contracts muscles, but it is followed by relaxation that gives it the jerking appearance of
popping
Locking
Locking or campbellocking, was created by Don Campbellock in 1969 in Los Angeles,
California. It was popularized by his crew, The Lockers. Locking can be identified by its distinctive
stops. It is usually performed by stopping the fast movement that you are doing, locking your body into
a position, holding it, and then continuing at the same speed as before. In locking, dancers hold their
positions longer. The lock is the primary move used in locking. It is similar to a freeze or a sudden
pause. A locker’s dancing is characterized by frequently locking in place and after a brief freeze
moving again.
Krumping
Krumping is a form of dancing that originated in the African-American community of South
Central Los Angeles, California and is a relatively new form of the “Urban” Black dance movement. It is
free, expressive and highly energetic. Most people paint their faces in different designs. Krumping is a
dance style to release anger. It is reported that gang riots in the United States decreased because of
krumping style.
4
Tutting
It is a creative way of making geometric shapes forming right angle using your body
parts. The style was originally practiced by young funk dancers. It is derived from the positions people
were drawn in during the days of the Ancient Egyptians. It is the positions seen in these portraits that
have been adopted by dancers today. Tutting is still a greatly respected move and King Tut aka Mark
Benson is widely acclaimed for pioneering the style
Shuffling
The Melbourne Shuffle (also known as Rocking or simply The Shuffle) is a rave and club dance
that originated in the late 1980s in the underground rave music scene in Melbourne, Australia. The
basic movements of the dance are a fast heel and toe ction with a style suitable for various types of
electronic music. Some variants incorporate arm movements. People who dance the shuffle are often
referred to as rockers, due in part of the popularity of shuffling to rock music in the early 1990s.
Waacking
Waacking is an African American form of street dance originating from the 1970’s disco era of
the underground club scenes in Los Angeles and New York City. Waacking consists of stylized posing
and fast synchronized arm movements to the beat of the music. Today, waacking is a popular element
of hip hop dance.