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Repertory Dance Theatre's education programs increase critical thinking and nonverbal reasoning skills, develop the ability to communicate as part of a group, encourage groups to work collaboratively, improve individual kinesthetic and spatial learning, as well as intra- and interpersonal knowledge of self and others. RDT’s nationally recognized and lauded Arts In Education (AIE) programs offers students and teachers across Utah much more than exercise or entertainment.
Repertory Dance Theatre is dedicated to the creation, performance, perpetuation, and appreciation of modern dance. Whether welcoming the community—physically or digitally—to our home at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center in Salt Lake City or traveling to urban and rural locations around Utah, RDT builds community wherever we go; celebrating mutual and singular histories, aspirations, and experiences through performances, workshops, classes, and community- and school-based residencies.
RDT uses dance as a way to
help people become more:
Using creative movement, students will explore the many different seed shapes and how the movement of wind, water, animals, or gravity can help a seed move to a new place to grow.
The goal of this lesson plan is to re-enforce the importance and power of abstract thinking and abstract movement in the choreographic process. This lesson plan can help teachers fight the pre-conceived notion that dance MUST TELL A STORY, that dance MUST BE ABOUT SOMETHING.
Often, young choreographers will select a pop song because they like the lyrics. As a result, they end up choreographing to the lyrics rather than the song itself: the mood, feeling, or other associations that go along with their dance’s theme. Hopefully, this lesson plan will showcase that often times, forgetting about the lyrics and finding a different “inspiration” from the music can be successful and, in fact, better than dancing to the lyrics.
This lesson plan can take place in two parts – however, part one can be done without part two.
This lesson plan is written for four groups; however, you can break your class into any number of groups as long as it is two or more. If using more or less than four groups, adjust the supplies and songs as needed.
In this lesson explore the structure of an essay through movement. Students will develop their own movement theme, create introduction and conclusion paragraphs, as well as form the body of their essay. This lesson involves collaboration between students.
In this lesson designed for elementary grades 4-6, students explore dance elements by learning about math fractions.
In-person matinee November 20, 2024 at 10:30 am or 12:30pm Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center - 138 West 300 South, Sa...
In-person matinee October 2, 2024 at 10:30 am or 12:30pm Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center - 138 West 300 South, Salt...
In-person matinee April 23, 2024 at 10:30 am Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center - 138 West 300 South, Salt Lake City...
Join RDT for an exciting JOURNEY through some of the outstanding historic and contemporary dances housed in RDT’s living...
For Intermediate/Advanced Dancers ages 12-14 Join Repertory Dance Theatre for a week long dance intensive, June 16-20...
Professional Learning Workshop for Utah Jr High & High School Dance Educators June 16,17,18, 2025 9:00am - 1:00p...
Throughout the school year, RDT dancers provide a master class of the week online for teachers to draw ideas from to hel...
Pilar I is RDT’s amazingly talented Production Stage Manager, and lighting dance choreography is a central element of he...