编辑

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 DANCE Research in Dance Education Pub Date : 2022-10-02 DOI:10.1080/14647893.2022.2148420
A. Pickard
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引用次数: 0

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欢迎收看本期《舞蹈教育研究》。我很高兴与大家分享,该杂志继续蓬勃发展,拥有广泛的国际作者和读者群,投稿量增加,现在每年出版四期。编委会和我欢迎更多的审稿人支持我们,所以如果你在任何同行评审的期刊上发表了一篇学术期刊文章,并想进行评论,请与我们联系。我也想借此机会感谢所有现有的审稿人,感谢他们作为同行审稿人所做的宝贵工作,以确保出版的作品达到高标准。此外,我们的书评编辑Wendy Timmons和我非常希望收到我们新作家和知名作家社区的兴趣表达,以便进行书评。此外,如果您想让我们复习一本书,请与我们联系。本期包含代表中国、土耳其、加拿大和英国作品的文章。我在本期的开头发表了一篇文章,讨论了电子学习对学习舞蹈教育的学生的一些好处和局限性,特别是高等教育中的编舞,以及作者游玉海在舞蹈教育在线技术(中国和世界经验)中的文章。本文分析了学生如何看待在线教育对特定学科能力形成的影响,并确定了理想的在线培训计划的这些能力。该制度证明了在制定教育方案时采用基于能力的方法的必要性和便利性。该系统定义了专业能力、素质、知识和技能的群体,这些群体构成了从事编舞和舞蹈领域工作的学生和教师的形象。有人认为,这项研究的发展具有普遍性,可以应用于国家(地区)和全球教育管理实践,但培训的质量控制系统需要改进。这篇文章将在历史的这个时间和空间引起人们的兴趣,因为许多课程都采用了一种混合、混合的舞蹈教学方法,利用了一系列技术。接下来,作者Ozdemir和Yildirim分析了一个名为“安纳托利亚之火”的现代土耳其民间舞蹈团的作品,在现代土耳其民间舞者的动作和平衡的联合范围中,“阿纳托利亚之大火”。该研究涉及40名舞者:20名女性舞者(21.70±3.61岁),20名男性舞者(22.10±3.14岁)。作者重点研究了运动范围(ROM)、灵活性和平衡,并使用了八种关节运动范围和躯干下肢灵活性测量方法。睁开眼睛,闭上眼睛,还进行了单腿平衡测试。因此,研究发现,髋关节屈伸(U:106-Z:−2.55–p=0.011)、髋关节内收外展(U:65-Z:−3.65-p=0.000)和踝关节跖背屈(U:68-Z:−3.58–p=0.000,393–395https://doi.org/10.1080/14647893.2022.2148420
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Editorial
Welcome to this issue of Research in Dance Education. I am pleased to share that the journal continues to thrive with a wide, international reach of authors and readership, increased submissions and now four issues a year being published. The editorial board and I would welcome more reviewers to support us, so if you have published an academic journal article in any peer reviewed journal and would like to review, please get in touch. I also wish to take this opportunity to thank all the existing reviewers for the valuable work that they do to as peer reviewers, to ensure the high standard of the published work. In addition, our book review editor, Wendy Timmons and I, are keen to receive expressions of interest from our community of new and established authors, to undertake a book review. Further, if there is a book you would like us to review then please get in touch. This issue contains articles that represent work from China, Turkey, Canada and the UK. I open this issue with an article that discusses some benefits and limitations of e-learning for students studying Dance Education and particularly choreography in Higher Education, in Online technologies in dance education (China and worldwide experience) by author Yuhai You. The article analyses how students perceive the impact of online education on the formation of subject-specific competencies and to identify those competencies of the ideal online training programme. The system substantiates the necessity and expediency of implementing a competence-based approach in developing educational programmes. The system defines groups of professional competences, qualities, knowledge, and skills that make up the profile of students and teachers working in the field of choreography and dance. It is suggested that the developments of the study are universal in nature and can be applied in both national (regional) and global educational management practices but that the quality control system of training needs to be improved. This article will be of interest at this time and space in history as many courses have employed a hybrid, blended approach to teaching and learning in dance that utilise a range of technologies. Next, authors Ozdemir and Yildirim have analysed the work of a modern Turkish folk dance group called Fire of Anatolia, in Joint range of motion and balance in modern Turkish folk dancers‘The fire of Anatolia’. The study engaged 40 dancers: 20 female dancers (21.70 ± 3.61 years), 20 male dancers (22.10 ± 3.14 years). The authors focused on range of motion (ROM), flexibility and balance and used eight joint range of motion and trunk-lower limb flexibility measures. Eyes opened-closed, single leg balance tests were also applied. Consequently, it was found that the measurement of flexion-extension of the hip joint (U: 106-Z: −2.55 – p = 0.011), adduction-abduction of the hip joint (U: 65-Z: −3.65-p = 0.000) and plantar-dorsal flexion of the ankle joint (U: 68-Z: −3.58 – p = 0.000) was higher for the benefit of a female dancer and there is no significant RESEARCH IN DANCE EDUCATION 2022, VOL. 23, NO. 4, 393–395 https://doi.org/10.1080/14647893.2022.2148420
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
30.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Research in Dance Education aims to inform, stimulate lively and critical debate and promote the development of high quality research and practice in dance education. The journal is relevant to dance academics, teachers and learners. The journal includes contributors from a wide and diverse, international community of researchers. This extends to all aspects of dance in education, providing opportunities for both experienced and less experienced researchers. The journal encourages a wide range of research approaches and methods, in a forum for debate. Issues related to pedagogy, philosophy, sociology and methodology in relation to creating, performing and viewing dance in various contexts are welcome. The role and value of dance as part of arts education and the connections with other arts practitioners is also supported. The research field of Research in Dance Education includes for example: all phases of education, pre-school to higher education and beyond; teaching and learning in dance, theory and practice; embodiment; new technologies; systematic reviews of literature; professional dance artists in education; learning in and through dance; aesthetic and artistic education; dance and the arts; dance and physical education; training dance teachers: initial teacher education, continuing professional development, dance degrees, and professional dance training; examination dance; dance therapy; special educational needs; community dance and youth dance; dance in society: gender, ethnicity, class, religion, economics; psychological issues: self esteem, motivation, body image; creativity; philosophy and the arts; research methods and methodologies.
期刊最新文献
Dancing mind, minding dance: socially relevant and personally resonant dance education Meshwork choreography: a pragmatic approach to collaborative embodied learning in South African higher education Walking histories: narratives of young urban dancers in the city of Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) Bias of responses to white and black dance companies and their dancers on Instagram Talking about assessment: metaphors of grading in dance education
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