|
There are many reasons to consider studying dance in Australia - the teaching and facilities are superb, and the wide variety of career options now on offer include an opportunity to study dance as part of a fascinating and unique cultural environment.
Simultaneously, her friendship with the Artistic Director of The Australian Ballet, Dame Peggy van Praagh, and British dance educator and advocate Dr Peter Brinson, led to the formation of Ausdance, a dance advocacy and professional service organisation. The vision for Ausdance was to unite all sectors of the dance community and provide it with a voice to governments on issues of concern. Its aims included the development of the tertiary dance sector, and in its eighth year - soon after it received its first Federal Government funding - Ausdance established the Tertiary Dance Council of Australia (TDCA) in 1985, under the chairmanship of Professor McKechnie. The late Anne Woolliams, then Dean of Dance at the Victorian College of the Arts, was a founding member. By 1985, there were tertiary dance courses in most States of Australia, and the Rusden campus had been producing graduates for more than five years. As a result, small dance companies and groups were flourishing, and grants from the Australia Council and State funding bodies were beginning to support this growth. The TDCA meets annually and the current chair is prominent Australian choreographer Nanette Hassall, who also heads the Dance Department at the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts at Perth's Edith Cowan University. Dance Education in Australia As well as assisting with the formation of the TDCA, Ausdance continued its work to establish dance as a separate area of study in schools. It was also a prime mover in the formation of the National Affiliation of Arts Educators in 1989, and since then the arts (including dance) have been included as one of the eight key learning areas in all Australian schools. However, by the mid-1990s, following Ausdance's landmark research into injury prevention and management of Australia's professional dancers (Safe Dance Report 1990 by Tony Geeves) it was obvious that the dance teaching profession needed minimum standards. The Australian Guidelines for Dance Teachers (1997) and the Interim Competency Standards for Dance Teachers (1998) are a direct result of a co-operative process undertaken by major teaching organisations such as the Royal Academy of Dancing, the Cecchetti Society and other teaching organisations. All tertiary dance courses have now adopted the standards as part of their own teaching strategies.
Options Tertiary Dance Festival Every two years, the final-year students from tertiary dance courses meet to consider their career options at a special festival. In a country the size of Australia, it is normally difficult to meet one's peers, so the TDCA organises a special week for senior students to share performances, workshops, panel discussions and showings of work. Lectures and master classes are given by senior members of the dance profession, former graduates and faculty members from other universities. The networking opportunities are unique, and many exciting projects have grown out of these initial meetings between the students. The festival rotates every two years, and in 2002 will coincide with the Adelaide International Festival to enable students to take master classes and attend forums with the world's leading dance companies. The issue of 'choreography as research' is one of major significance in Australia at present, with Professor McKechnie recently attracting almost $200,000 from the Australian Research Council to study the 'choreographic mind' in a project entitled 'Unspoken Knowledges' (http://ausdance.anu.edu.au/unspoken). This is a partnership involving the University of Melbourne, the Choreographic Centre in Canberra and Ausdance. Other major research has been undertaken by choreographer Dr Cheryl Stock, head of dance at QUT, in her study of cross-cultural choreographic processes, particularly between Australia and Vietnam. Tony Geeves continues his research into injury prevention and management in the Australian dance profession, and there are many other Australian dancers and academics currently studying for higher degrees, including a high proportion of PhD candidates. Opportunities Studying dance in the Australian tertiary environment is exciting and challenging. There are superb learning spaces, teaching standards are high and there is an emphasis on choreographic development and cultural exchanges. Although the country is geographically and culturally diverse, there is excellent communication between course directors, and with the dance profession as a whole. Ausdance provides a unique link to advocacy processes with governments and their bureaucracies, as well as with all sectors of the Australian dance community. It also provides an information infrastructure through its professional staff, databases and publications. Students' interests are well represented by both student union activities on campus and Ausdance as the national service organisation. Find out more by contacting Ausdance Keep dancing! The Australian Dance Collection: http://www.nla.gov.au/ausdance Author |
|
![]() |
|