So-Cal Family Dance off to a powerful start
Ruth Torres, Maya Luz Gordon, Meg Glaser Teran and Rosemary Robertson spent a day together planning multiple sessions of family dance in three southern California counties: LA, Ventura, Orange. It is a pleasure to be working with them to develop leadership and program planning skills thanks, in part, to a generous donation from the Dizzy Feet Foundation.

Outcomes & Process: With support from the Clarence E. Heller Charitable Trust, Luna has been working with former Summer Institute participants to build cultures of dance in Southern California. The goals of this process were 1) to leverage the relationships forged through Luna’s SIs to create professional learning communities of dance education in Southern California. This would create a level of autonomy as professionals in that region could support and rely on each other; share resources; and develop their skills in a more immediate, organic, grass-roots manner. 2) to develop leadership skills among the core cadres. 3) to broaden Luna’s reach to improve teaching practice by holding a Summer Institute in Southern California July 2012 and smaller introductory workshops prior to that time to identify potential participants. 4) to develop SoCal educators to create and implement MPACT-like programs in partnership with social service agencies in the region.
Outcomes & Process: Beginning January 2011, Luna has partnered with ASI alumnae Erica Rose Jeffrey and the Marin City-Sausalito Parent Center to develop a family dance program for the community. Impact: This program will allow Marin County to build capacity for dance teaching for ALL children. Torri Campbell, a dancer and therapist, is learning to teach parent-child classes and will take over the program in 2012. Other professionals have already expressed interest in the training, expanding the dance resources available in the region.
Dance teaching artist, Rosemary Robertson, completed our MPACT internship at the end of 2009. A third year of supervised teaching has brought parent-child dance classes to dozens of families living in south Alameda County.
The first phase of Luna’s action-research project on parent-child engagement through dance had a dramatic impact on our dance teaching practice.