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Syllabus M.

Saba
Danc 2333 001-Beginning Jazz Dance Monday/Wednesday 3:30-4:45pm
M. Saba

Office Hours: Monday 2:00 – 3:15 and by appointment


Office: JO 4.906 Phone: 972-883-2083 Email: msaba@utdallas.edu

Grade Value
60% Class participation and attendance
20% Performance attendance and written critiques
10% Required Papers
10% Skills and vocabulary

Course Requirements

Attendance and Participation:


Attendance is mandatory. You will be given 2 absences that will not count against you; any thereafter
will be 3 points off starting at 100 for each class missed. Please be on time, you will be considered late if
you arrive after the warm up has begun. If you arrive after roll has been taken it is your responsibility to
remind the instructor you attended class. Failure to do so could result in an absence recorded and applied
for that day. If you arrive after the warm up has begun you will receive a ½ point deduction from your
daily class points. A ½ point will be deducted every fifteen minutes thereafter until you arrive for class.
You may not physically participate if you arrive more than thirty minutes late which may affect your
participation grade. Classes may be made up, please speak to the instructor for various options. All
classes must be made up before the last two weeks of classes.
Participation is graded on your participation in the class, learning material given, effort, preparedness for
class (including proper attire), and your own personal growth. Each class has a value of 3 points awarded
daily by attending class and fulfilling the preceding requirements. Points may be deducted if any of these
requirements are unfulfilled.

Critiques:
You are required to see two live dance productions and write a critique for each. All performances must
be dance concerts approved by the instructor. Critiques will be due October 19 and November 28.
The critiques must include a detailed description of no more than 2 dance pieces from the program you
saw. You must also include a brief summary of the first and last piece of the program if they were not
chosen for the full critique required. 3 points will be deducted for the omission of each.
When writing the critique include these points:
1. Did it tell a story, show a particular emotion, or make you feel a certain way? After each one of
these questions then ask yourself why and explain.
2. What was the music? List the title and composer. Did the choreography go with the music? How?
3. Did you like it? What made you like or dislike it?
4. What was the movement like? What did the dancers do through movement to help you come to
conclusions from the previous questions?
5. How did the sets, costuming, and lighting affect the piece?
6. Give the title and choreographer of the piece selected.
Write the critique assuming I did not see the dance and would understand what is was about from your
description. 3 points may be deducted for the omission of each point mentioned above.
An approved list of performances for critique will be posted on the inside door of JO 1.216

Papers:
Due November 28. The paper titled "Jazz and Other Forms of Dance," will include the following:
1. A comparison of jazz dance and other dance forms. Once again this paper will be your own personal
opinion written in your own words based on the different ways you have experienced dance this
semester or in the past. No research is necessary. Be sure to include similarities and differences of
the art forms you have observed.
2. Explain what you have personally experienced and learned from the course.

Grading for Papers and Critiques


A check mark for both papers and critiques averages as 95%. Exceptional papers will be awarded a
higher percentage. Papers on average will be no more than two pages typewritten or three pages
handwritten. Handwritten papers must be printed and double spaced. There will be 5 points counted
off if not written as such. Late papers may be accepted, but point deductions will be taken according to
how late the paper is turned in.

Skill and Vocabulary:


You will be expected to learn set warm up exercises and have acquired an understanding of the dance
vocabulary often used in class. You will be tested verbally, physically, and/or on paper at the end of the
semester

Extra Credit
Extra credit may be received by attending other dance performances. You may receive 5 points by just
turning in a ticket and program or 10 if accompanied by a critique. The credit will be added to the final
total of points accrued for the course at the end of the semester, not a specific category.

General Class Etiquette and Attire


Minimum jewelry
Hair away from face
No chewing gum
Closed liquid containers (water only)
No sitting down during class
No talking while dancing or during demonstrations of exercise
You are required to wear dance or work out clothes. Loose fitting street clothes are not appropriate.
Acceptable attire would be tights, leotards, bike shorts, crop tops, sweat pants, sweat shorts, T-shirts,
leggings, and sweat shirts. Jazz shoes are required for this class.
Points may be deducted from your daily grade for inappropriate attire or etiquette.

Topics for Individual Class Meetings


8/22 Review syllabus
8/24 Begin teaching warm up/Technique Class
8/29 Technique Class/1st combination
8/31 Technique Class
9/5 Holiday
9/7 Technique Class
9/12 Technique Class
9/14 Technique Class
9/19 Technique Class/
9/21 Technique Class
9/26 Technique Class/2nd combination
9/28 Technique Class
10/3 Technique Class
10/5 Video
10/10 Technique Class/
10/12 Technique Class
10/17 Technique Class
10/19 Technique Class/1st critique due/3rd combination
10/24 Technique Class
10/26 Technique Class
10/31 Technique Cla ss
11/2 Video
11/7 Technique Class/4th combination
11/9 Technique Class
11/14 Technique Class
11/16 Technique Class
11/21 Skills quiz on warm up/Review for Skills and Vocabulary test
11/23 Review for Quiz
11/28 Paper due/2nd critique due/Skills and Vocabulary Test

***All dates and assignments are subject to change at the instructors


discretion*********

I will send all electronic correspondence only to a student’s UTD email address and require
that all official electronic correspondence be tween a student and me be transmitted from the
students’ UTD email account. UT Dallas furnishes each student a FREE Network ID (netid)
linked to an email account. To activate or maintain a UTD computer account and/or to set
email forwarding options, go to http://netid.utdallas.edu. NOTE: The UTD Department of
Information Resources provides a method for students to forward their UTD email to other
personal or business email accounts.

The drop dates for the current Full Term Session are as follows:
Last day to drop a class without a “W”...…………………………………Fri., September 2
Undergraduates WP or WF withdraw period begins……………………...Thurs., September 22
Undergraduates last day to withdraw with WP/WF………………………Thurs., October 20
Graduates last day to withdraw from a course with an automatic “W”…..Tues., November 1

The following are excerpts of policies and procedures from the UTD University Catalog. For a
complete list of all policies of the university please refer to the University Catalog on the UTD
website.

Incomplete Grade (X)


A grade of Incomplete may be given, at the discretion of the instructor of record for a course, when a
student has completed at least 70% of the required course material but cannot complete all requirements
by the end of the semester. The incomplete course grade (grade of X) must be completed within the
time period specified by the instructor, not to exceed eight weeks from the first day of the subsequent
long semester. Upon completion of the required work, the symbol X may be converted into a letter grade
(A through F) by the instructor. If the grade of Incomplete is not removed by the end of the specified
period, it will automatically be changed to F. Extension beyond the specified limit can be made only with
the permission of the instructor and the student’s ADU (or the Undergraduate Dean in the case of
students without declared majors). A student may not re-enroll in a course in which a grade of X
remains.

Students may obtain a petition/documentation form for an Incomplete in the office of the student’s ADU.
The form is to be submitted to the instructor from whom the Incomplete is sought. Students should be
aware that an Incomplete is only appropriate for work unavoidably missed at semester’s end. Students
should contact their school office for school policies on Incompletes. If a significant fraction of a
semester is missed with cause, see the section on “Withdrawing from and Adding Courses”.

An instructor assigning an Incomplete must submit the petition/documentation form containing a


description of the work required to complete the course to the ADU of the school offering the course.
Upon approval, a copy of the petition will be forwarded to the student’s ADU to be retained with the
student’s academic record. The instructor alone will be responsible for determining whether the
requirements for completion are met and for assigning the grade in the cours. However, if the instructor
who has signed the Incomplete is no longer associated with U.T. Dallas and the work is completed within
the time allowed before the Incomplete lapses to an F, the Associate Dean of the instructor’s college
may assign a committee of appropriate faculty to evaluate the material and/or obtain any other
information which may be required to assign the grade in the course.

Rules, Regulations, and Statutory Requirements


A. Student Conduct and Discipline
The University of Texas System and The University of Texas at Dallas have rules and regulations for the
orderly and effic ient conduct of their business. It is the responsibility of each student and each student
organization to be knowledgeable about the rules and regulations which govern student conduct and
activities. General information on student conduct and discipline is contained in the U.T. Dallas
publication, A to Z Guide, which is provided to all registered students each academic year.

Academic Dishonesty
The faculty expects from its students a high level of responsibility and academic honesty. Because the
value of an academic degree depends upon the absolute integrity of the work done by the student for that
degree, it is imperative that a student demonstrate a high standard of individual honor in his or her
scholastic work.
Scholastic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to, statements, acts or omissions related to applications
for enrollment or the award of a degree, and/or the submission as one’s own work of material that is not
one’s own. As a general rule, scholastic dishonesty involves one of the following acts: cheating,
plagiarism, collusion and/or falsifying academic records. Students suspected of academic dishonesty are
subject to disciplinary proceedings.

Disability Services
Disability Services provides accommodations for students with documented disabilities. Students are
urged to make their needs known to Disability Services as soon as they are admitted to the university.
The Office of Disability Services is located in the Student Union, (972) 883-2070.

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