Latest News:  

English>>Life & Culture

Planting seeds for a dance revolution (2)

By Deng Zhangyu  (China Daily)

13:21, February 28, 2013

Children from Shanghai and New York connect online and create an extemporized dance. (China Daily)

A program lasts one to two years. It gives children a taste for the arts so that they may one day become professionals, the director adds.

"Give them a taste of success and it will change their way of approaching things in life, saying 'I can do it'," she says. "We have our own teaching techniques to guarantee that every child is engaged and elevated."
Gayner adds they primarily train Chinese teachers in New York.

Teachers are asked to get close to students and engage everyone as much as possible, which is the opposite of traditional Chinese teaching methods, Gayner says.

Some Chinese teachers had said they didn't believe every child can dance but later admitted they were wrong.

Based on her experience teaching children in New York's Chinatown, Gayner says Chinese children are disciplined and well drilled, but its difficult to bring out their personalities.

However, when she watched children in Shanghai dancing together after six months of training, she felt "humbled at how successful they were" and was moved by the quality of their performances.

"Gorgeous! Six hundred and forty children dancing together - no dropouts!" she comments, adding that a boy who had an eye operation just days before the performance insisted on attending despite his parents' opposition.

To further enhance arts cooperation between children from the two countries, NDI employs telepresence to connect them online.

On Jan 21 at one of NDI Center's studios, the back wall was turned into a big screen, while children in New York made their steps first, and their peers in Shanghai thousands of miles away followed. In this way, they created an extemporized dance. Meanwhile, an audience in Philadelphia watched the whole process choreographed via another screen.

"Technology and arts combined is amazing. We will keep doing this," says D'Amboise.

Gayner, the China program director, says they are just half way finished in this experimental form of cooperation, but the program has been so popular that in September nine more schools in Shanghai are expected to join up.

In 2012, eight Chinese teachers attended the summer institute course in New York. And this year, 20 Chinese dancers and 10 musicians will receive training.

"In dance, cultural and language differences don't matter at all. We all grow, and we have planted our seeds in China," Gayner says.


Different faces, same Chinese Dream[Special]


【1】 【2】



We recommend:

Who is No. 1 belle in Chinese compus?

Top 10 hotel bars around the world

Chinese actress Wang Xiwei in swimsuit

China's most complete ancient gov't office

Actresses that will become famous in 2013

49 unmissable tourism destinations

Shocking shots in Journey to the West

The only existing Xiongnu capital in China

Top 10 legendary ladies in the Republic times

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:GaoYinan、Ye Xin)

Related Reading

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. An advanced military training base

  2. Chinese Navy's type-056 frigate

  3. Egypt's balloon explosion kills 19

  4. West debates China's 'leftover women'

  5. Kissing competition in collective wedding

  6. Community's fire, folk carnival in China

  7. Too much of a good thing

  8. The crazy things that you never saw

  9. Easier entry to grid may charge

  10. Media Markt to shut down all city stores

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Housing still on unsustainable path
  2. Property market so far so good
  3. Park Geun-hye's road will be tough
  4. China reserves right to appeal WTO ruling
  5. SOEs must act to avoid PR disaster
  6. Mainland hails Lien Chan's visit
  7. Party mulls personnel, govt reshuffles
  8. China must brace for impact of possible EU-US FTA
  9. Peaceful development important in cross-Straits ties
  10. "China threat" theory still exists despite Nexen deal

What’s happening in China

Public letter calls for gay marriage legislation

  1. Suspect dies following S China bombing
  2. Frugality, anti-corruption affects luxury brands
  3. Regulation to stop production of 'gutter oil'
  4. 225 websites closed for spreading porn
  5. New food scare as report says tainted rice sold