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dance and the Child international USA

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7th National Gathering Holland, Michigan 2023

daCi Dance Postcard_Expanding Horizons Postcard (2)_Page_1

Anchored in Hope: Expanding Horizons, the 7th National Gathering in Holland, Michigan, on the beautiful campus of Hope College will provide a multitude of dance experiences, including daily skills and cultural classes, intergenerational creative classes, and performing opportunities for ages 7 to adult.

daCi participants will enjoy an evening performance and dinner on Wednesday and a dance party on Saturday evening. We invite children, adults, dancers, educators, and dance advocates to come together to celebrate the power of dance.

Join us and enjoy the unique and inspiring opportunities for people of all ages to connect and collaborate through the power of dance.

Registration opens January 1, 2023.

Nicki Flinn, Gathering Chair
flinn@hope.edu

Hope College

What is a daCi USA National Gathering?

This national gathering is an opportunity for children, young people and adults to come together in a collaborative, culturally, and artistically rich dance environment for three action-filled days. Participants will explore, create and observe through daily classes including technique (western and nonwestern) and collaborative multigenerational choreography. Participants will create dance works in collaborative intergenerational classes, learning new dances in cultural and world classes and viewing or performing dances in a professional theatre each evening. Classes will be taught by dance educators and instructors from across the country. They will share their expertise and passion for dance and provide enriching, age-appropriate, creative, and culturally-authentic experiences.

Participant, 6th National Gathering, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2017

"We connected with daCi USA friends and colleagues, shared ideas and creativity, made new friends and connections. We were exposed to new dance styles and mixed generations of dancers had the chance to work together and learn from each other. Students and teachers that work together on a regular basis got to see and be with each other as equals... we are all students and learners at daCi USA."

Participant, 6th National Gathering, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2017

"I benefited from dancing with multiple generations and having the opportunity to create work together."

Teacher, 6th National Gathering, Salt Lake City, Utah 2017

"My dancers were able to experience new forms of dance while also sharing their own skills and ideas with other dancers. It was an opportunity for everyone to try new things, grow, and develop as a dancer."

Henry, Age 13, 6th National Gathering, Seattle, Washington, 2014

"I learned so many things at this conference. But I especially loved working with my core group instructor David Williams. He was very funny. He called me Beyonce when he found out how much I liked her, which made me laugh. He encouraged me to do things that I thought I couldn’t do, like safely lifting other dancers who were bigger than me. He encouraged us to reach further and further through our dancing. He created beautiful dance, and good friendships, too."

Teacher, 6th National Gathering, Salt Lake City, Utah, 2017

"My dancers gained great experience working with a variety of kids, teens and adults; I was inspired with many new ideas for teaching to bring back to my studio and company. It was also fantastic to connect with so many people in our dance world here in the U.S."

Schedule

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Stream Performances

Our Friday evening performance and Saturday creative sharing performance were streamed for those not attending the conference to view and enjoy. Members of daCi, family, and friends can continue to enjoy our celebration of dance with the recordings on our YouTube channel (@daCi_USA).

Evening Performance - Friday, July 28th, 7-8:30 pm EST - Click here to watch the recording. 

Core Group Performance - Saturday, July 29th, 5-6:30 pm EST - Click here to watch the recording!

Classes at the National Gathering

Skills classes are where participants are gathered in age-alike groups to explore and develop new technical dance skills. These classes happen each morning and are modern and contemporary technique classes facilitated by one or two professional dance educators.  Class content is curated specifically for the age and experience of each group.

Core classes are intergenerational sessions that meet daily to create a choreographic work based on the gathering theme. These collaborative creative sessions are facilitated by two professional dance teaching artists. Products of the creative sessions are performed at the end of the gathering on Saturday evening.

Options classes allow participants of all ages to explore another art form, dance style, or genre. Participants have two opportunities to choose from four or five options classes. See below for Options Teacher Bios.

Perspectives classes allow participants of all ages to explore the cultural, ethnic, and societal context of dance forms from across the globe in the past and present. Perspectives classes highlight the diversity of dance traditions worldwide and in our international dance community.

Choose your classes by July 1st!

Participants must rank their top five classes from the Perspectives and Options Class selections. Use the form in the button below to rank your classes. There will be opportunities to experience 3 Perspectives and 2 Options classes.

You may not get your first choice in all classes as there are 175 dancers to place, but we will do our best to provide you with your selections. All of the classes and teachers are amazing, and you will gain new insights from each class.
 
Fill out the form by July 1st!
Click here for class descriptions.

Meet our Teachers!

Skills Teachers

Jasmine Meija Expand

Jasmine Mejia is a New York City native, choreographer, and teaching artist. She is an Assistant Professor of Dance and Co-Director of H2 Dance Company at Hope College. She received an MFA degree in Dance with a concentration in Pedagogy from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, a BFA in Dance and Choreography from Virginia Commonwealth University, and graduated from Long Island High School for the Arts. Jasmine has performed at Radio City Music Hall, Lincoln Center, and the Kennedy Center as well as toured the states and performed abroad in Bulgaria, London, and Sweden as a company member of VON HOWARD PROJECT, MADArt Creative, LMproject, and Jamal Jackson Dance Company. She has also worked with artists’ including Stefanie Batten Bland, Ronald K. Brown, Elizabeth Corbett, Leah Cox, and Jawole Willa Jo Zollar. Her choreography has been featured Off-Broadway and across the country at festivals, residencies, and events. Jasmine’s current research is focused on developing her teaching practice and movement method, Rhythmic Motion.

Find her on Instagram: @jazzydoms

Bri Wilson Expand

Bri Wilson was raised in a small northern Michigan town, where she started dancing at age seven. She earned her BFA in Dance from the Alonzo King LINES Ballet  BFA Program at Dominican University of California, and supplemented her collegiate training with intensives at Hubbard Street Dance Chicago and Movement Invention Project. She moved to Seattle in September 2018. Since then, she has worked with Elia Mrak, The Three Yells, Beth Terwilleger + The Gray, and Marlo Martin + badmarmarDANCE. She has presented her own work at 12 Minutes Max, Full Tilt Dance Festival, and LAUNCH, and has choreographed on both Kaleidoscope Dance Company, a youth modern dance collective, and thePROGRAM, eXit SPACE’s pre-professional training program. In July 2019, she was certified in brain-compatible dance education at the Creative Dance Center in Seattle, and in 2022 graduated from the Teaching Artist Training Lab offered by ArtsWA. She is on faculty at eXit SPACE School of Dance and Creative Dance Center, where she hopes to help movers of all ages and abilities feel at home in their bodies.

Find her on Instagram: @briwilsondance

Matthew Farmer Expand

Matthew Farmer is currently the Dorothy Wiley DeLong Endowed Chair of the Dance at Hope College, the Co-Artistic Director of R.G. Dance Productions and the Co-Artistic Director of H2 Dance Co. Farmer has had great success as a director, educator, choreographer, performer, and author; co-authoring the book Introductory Modern Dance: A Teaching Manual. He is the former Director of Dance at Anderson University, a former Associate Director and company member of LehrerDance, and former company member of The Peter Sparling Dance Co. While dancing for Sparling, Matthew received his MFA from the University of Michigan in Dance Performance and Choreography. Farmer received his BA in Theatre and Dance from Hope College.   As a soloist and guest performer, his performance credits include The Stars of Ballet and Broadway, Dance Chicago, Chicago Dance Festival, Dance in the Desert Festival, Men Dance Michigan, Next Step Dance, Chicago Humanities Festival, The Rein Orange (Duesberg, Germany) The European Cultural Bid (Liverpool, UK), The Roof (Germany), The Summer Stage (Brugge, Belgium), and various other festivals. Farmer has also had the privilege of dancing in works by Avi Kaiser, Sergio Antonino, Merce Cunningham, Laura Dean, Matthew Thornton, Doug Varone, and many more.

Farmer specializes in teaching Modern, Contemporary, Improvisation and Jazz technique. His teaching and faculty credits include Hope College, Universidad Autonoma de Queretaro, Universidad Espíritu Santo, University of Michigan, Eastern Michigan University, Anderson University, Dancer’s Inc. National Conventions, Chicago National Association of Dance Maters, Southern Association of Dance Masters, Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp, Interlochen Arts Academy, Cecchetti Council of America, and a host of festivals and master classes nationally and internationally. Farmer’s choreography spans the field of dance, and can be seen on college campuses, professional dance companies, international festivals, summer theaters companies, competitive dance teams, and musical theater venues throughout the U.S and abroad.

Find him online: www.facebook.com/matt.farmer.777/

Karen Kuebler Expand

Karen Campbell Kuebler loves sharing her dual passions for Dance and French with children and adults. After completing her BFA in Dance Performance and Education and French Education at Towson University in 1991, she completed a MA in Liberal Studies with a multidisciplinary focus of the arts, language, and history in 1996. In 2018, she earned a Doctorate in Education from Concordia University in Transformational Leadership. Kuebler teaches Dance Integration in Elementary School in Baltimore County. This is a program that she developed into a full-time elementary dance position. She is also on the Faculty at Towson University specializing in Dance History and Dance Education. In addition to being active in numerous local Dance and French organizations, Kuebler also participates on a national level with both the National Dance Education Organization and the American Association of Teachers of French. Kuebler presents her research at local, regional, and national conferences throughout the year including BRIDGES, Innovate our World, ACTFL (American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages), MFLA (Maryland Foreign Language Association), AATF (American Association of Teachers of French), and NDEO (National Dance Education Organization). In 2012, she was one of thirty educators selected to participate in a worldwide conference for French educators focusing on multidisciplinary curriculum design and implementation. Karen is excited to be a part of the daCi Gathering this year!

Find her online: www.facebook.com/karen.kuebler.3/

Hannah Seidel Expand

Hannah Seidel is an Associate Professor of Dance at Grand Valley State University and a Board member of the National Dance Education Organization and Michigan Dance Council. New York City performance credits include Tiffany Mills, Mariah Maloney, Erica Essner, David Appel, and Gibney Dance with whom she also offered movement workshops to survivors of domestic violence for six years. Hannah has previously served as Lecturer at Purchase College, Education Programs Coordinator for Dance New Amsterdam, and summer intensive teacher at NYU's Tisch School for the Arts and Interlochen Center for the Arts. Her choreography has been seen in venues around New York City, commissioned by the Society for New Music, and presented in regional festivals such as Midwest RAD Fest, Regeneration, and Dance Days of Buffalo. Recent choreography focuses on water awareness in collaboration with musicians from GVSU and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, new music composers, and the Annis Water Resources Institute. Hannah is currently pursuing study of Dance/Movement Therapy through the 92Y in New York. BA Pomona College; MFA the College at Brockport, SUNY; certifications: Pilates, Autism Movement Therapy.

Chara Huckins Expand

Chara Huckins is a dance educator, choreographer, performer, curriculum developer, and dance advocate. She earned a BFA in modern dance from the University of Utah and a M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction Creative Arts in Learning from Lesley University. Chara has an extensive background in performing and teaching historical and contemporary dance forms. She performed with Repertory Dance Theatre (RDT) for 19 years where she danced works by (selected) Lucinda Childs, Laura Dean, Zvi Gotheiner, Margaret Jenkins, Hwai-min Lin, Elise Monte, David Parsons, Jo Strombren, Merce Cunningham, Isadora Duncan, Viola Farber, Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, Jose Limon, Sophie Maslow, Elizabeth Waters, Helen Tamaris. Chara is a certified movement specialist that has brought the magic of dance to students and teachers with her performances, dance classes, chorography, and professional development workshops through the Utah Artist-in-Education Program. Chara teaches and choreographs for the University of Utah Tanner Dance.  She is a dance educator for the Beverly Taylor Sorenson Arts Learning Program where she inspires hundreds of students to learn, create, and perform through the art form of dance.  Chara was honored with the Sorenson Legacy Award for excellence in teaching dance education. She received the honor of Who’s Who Among Executives and Professionals. Chara directs the dance program at two public schools. She organizes professional development workshops and has taught in Taiwan, Australia, Denmark, and Rwanda. Chara serves for the dance and the Child international (daCi) organization as the Membership Relations for the daCi USA board and Board Member for daCi Utah. When Chara is not in a dance studio, she enjoys dancing, traveling to national parks and exploring them, as well as figure skating.

Jodi James Expand

Jodi James is a somatic movement educator, dance-artist, teacher and physical therapist.  She is an experienced movement teacher, helping her students hone their artistry while promoting efficiency, versatility and joy.  As a Somatic Movement Educator (SME), she utilizes the wisdom of the body and its endowment for movement to facilitate understanding, transformation, efficiency, and creativity to enrich the human experience - physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually.

She holds a Doctor of Physical Therapy from Northern Arizona University, Master of Fine Arts in Dance from Arizona State University, Master of Arts in Dance Kinesiology from the University of Utah, Bachelor of Science in Engineering/physics and Bachelor of Arts in Dance Performance/Choreography from Hope College. Further, she is a certified Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analyst from Integrated Movement Studies.  She has studied Body Mind Centering® through Moving Within and will graduate with her SME in July 2023.

Core Teachers

Anne Green Gilbert Expand

Anne Green Gilbert is the Founding Director of the Creative Dance Center, Kaleidoscope Dance Company, and the Summer Dance Institute for Teachers in Seattle, WA. She has conducted hundreds of workshops for children and adults across the USA and abroad as well as taught classes for all ages at CDC for over thirty-five years. Anne served as the first daCi USA Chair from 1997-2000, Secretary/Treasurer, 2000-2003, National USA Representative to the International daCi Board, 2003-2006 and Past National Representative, 2006-2009. Anne has traveled with Kaleidoscope to 5 National daCi Gatherings and 6 International daCi Conferences. Anne is the author of Teaching the Three Rs Through Movement Experiences (1977), Creative Dance for All Ages (1995/2015) and Brain-Compatible Dance Education (2006/2019), three DVDs, BrainDance (2003/2016) and Teaching Creative Dance (2002), and numerous articles. Her awards include the 2005 NDA Scholar/Artist Award, the 2011 NDEO Lifetime Achievement Award, and the American Dance Festival Balasaraswati/Joy Ann Dewey Beinecke Endowed Chair for Distinguished Teaching in 2016.

Find her online: www.creativedance.org/

 

Anna Mansbridge Expand

Anna Mansbridge, choreographer, dancer and educator, is originally from Australia and the UK, and now resides in Seattle, Washington. She holds a First Class Honors Degree in Dance and Education from Bedford College, UK, and an MFA in Choreography and Performance from Mills College, California, USA. Anna has been on faculty at the Creative Dance Center, founded by Anne Green Gilbert in 1981, teaching dance to people of all ages, since 1999. In 2014 she took over the Directorship of Kaleidoscope Dance Company, and in 2018 she founded Mosaic Junior Company. Anna also founded Seattle Early Dance in 2000, a company dedicated to recreating dances from the Renaissance and Baroque Periods. Anna has been on the daCi USA board since 2009, becoming Chair in 2017. She has attended national gatherings in Texas, Seattle and Utah, and international conferences in London, Taiwan, Copenhagen and Adelaide, Australia.

Find her online: www.seattleearlydance.org/anna.html

 

Heather Francis Expand

Heather Francis (MA, BA) is a dance teaching artist and instructional designer from Salt Lake City, Utah. She has taught math and dance in K-12 public schools and community settings and dance pedagogy, production, and performance at Brigham Young University. She enjoys integrating dance with core standards and community initiatives through choreographic residencies in public schools and private studios. She is the Research and Design Coordinator for the BYU ARTS Partnership and designs products and experiences in arts education for in-service teachers. Heather is the Chair-Elect of the USA Chapter of the dance and the Child international (daCi) organization.

Find her online: heatherfrancisdances.com

Instagram: @heatherfrancisdances

Kathryn Austin Expand

Dr. Kathryn White Austin has over 40 years of teaching experience in the private sector, University, public school system, and community education as well as frequent guest teaching, lecture demonstration, artist-in-residencies, and conference presentations to her credit. She is a past recipient of the Outstanding Dance Educator Award for the Private Sector by the National Dance Education Organization and is a former Teacher of the Year and an Arts Teacher of the Year nominee subsequently while teaching in Osceola County. Austin is an active member of several state and national dance organizations and is currently on the Board of Directors of the Florida Alliance for Arts in Education and Dance and the Child International-USA. She is one of the founding leaders of the daCi Youth Leadership program. Dr. Austin is also the Chair of NDEO's Mentorship Program for the Independent Sector. She is a Life Member and Fellow of the British Association of Teachers of Dancing, specializing in traditional Scottish Highland and National dances. Dr. Austin is a freelance choreographer having worked for Nickelodeon, Universal Studios - Florida, the Orlando Magic, the Florida Motion Picture Association, and various musical theatre productions. Austin is active in her home community and is an involved member of the First United Methodist Church of Winter Garden.

Ashley Boyack Expand

ASHLEY BOYACK received her BFA in modern dance from the University of Utah. She began teaching for the University of Utah Tanner Dance Program in 1991. In 2010 she earned a  Masters in Arts and Teaching from the University of Northern Colorado. Then Ashley, her 4 boys and husband, Morgan moved to Lawrence, Kansas. She joined the Lawrence Arts Center, where she served as the Artistic Director of the Youth Dance Theater. She also performed as a guest with the 940 Dance Company, created the preschool dance and modern dance curriculum, co-created the boys sports dance class curriculum, and served as the Lawrence Arts Center Dance Education Specialist. In 2016 she was honored with the Sorenson Legacy award for outstanding teaching in dance education. Ashley currently teaches full time at the University of Utah Tanner Dance program where she is Director of Professional Development. As director she has organized and conducted countless professional development workshops for teachers all across the state of Utah, Oklahoma, Canada, and Kansas.

Marilyn Berrett Expand

Brigham Young University Emeritus Professor Marilyn Berrett (MA-BYU, BFA-U of U) developed her lifelong passion for teaching creative dance as a child and youth - dancing , choreographing, and teaching with Virginia Tanner in Children’s Dance Theatre.  During her 38-year career at BYU, she artistically directed dance companies, choreographed contemporary/modern dance works, musical theatre and film.  In 2002 she founded and directed BYU Kinnect, an outreach company presenting educational dance performances and workshops to over 16,000 public school students annually. Berrett has presented at daCi local, national and international conferences for the past twenty years.  She served as Chair of the Department of Dance at BYU from 2010 – 2017 and retired in 2018.

 

Marilyn now enjoys her roles as grandmother, independent dance artist, elementary dance artist educator, and modern/contemporary dance master teacher endorsed in Martha Graham Technique.  Marilyn has been privileged to present professional development workshops throughout the world since 1978.  Pre-pandemic she presented annual workshops in creative dance for children and youth educators in Shanghai, China with treasured colleague Jiamin Huang.

 

As one of daCi’s founders, Berrett has long been passionate about guiding students of all ages to discover, explore, create, and express their unique ideas through dance.  She is honored to teach at the 2023 daCi  USA Gathering.

Linda Graham Expand

Linda retired June of 2019, after serving for 36 years as a member of the Hope College Department of Dance [Chair from 2004-2015]. A graduate of the National Academy of Arts, she received her BFA [Theatre] and MFA [Choreography/Performance] from the University of Illinois. A former member of Dayton Contemporary Dance Company, she co-founded and co-directed Aerial Dance Theatre until 2005. She set works on the Joffrey Ballet [Arpino Apprentices], Dayton Contemporary Dance Company and the Grand Rapids Ballet, among others. Her choreography has been produced in the USA, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Austria, Spain, Mexico & France and for the Emmy Award winning children’s television program “C’mon Over.” She also co-created, choreographed, and produced community events such as Global Water Dances (Holland), flash mobs (i.e., Tulip Time, West Michigan Petapalooza), and choreographed musicals, operas, and 100+ original works. A recipient of a Michigan Dance Association Choreographer's Award, Michigan Dance Council Maggie Allesee New Choreography Award, National Association of Regional Ballet Monticello Fellowship for Young Choreographers (2 times),"Partners In Dance" award from the Grand Rapids Ballet, she also received a Creative Artist Grant (1997) from ArtServe Michigan. In January of 2019 she was honored with the Provost’s Award for Academic Service from Hope College. In 2015 she established the National Academy of Arts archive at the Sousa Performing Arts Library (U of IL).  

In retirement, she formed EveryDay Dances [www.everydaydances.com] through which she continues to choreograph, guest teach and present, fostering curiosity, creativity, and connection through embodied movement art experiences. She is interested in exploring the intersection of movement as communication between humans and animal, the history, and benefits of training to illuminate communication, and dance/movement to tell stories, cultivate imagination, empower individuals, and transform communities. 

Joy Guarino Expand

Joy Guarino has been the Chair of daCi USA from 2020-23. She is the Director of Global Engagement and a Professor of Dance at SUNY Buffalo State University. Working in higher education for the past thirty-five years, she coordinates experiences that bring creative curricula and engaging opportunities to benefit faculty, staff, students, and local, national, and international community organizations with the goal of forming meaningful partnerships and collaborations. Joy has presented her research on kinesthetic learning, global learning for all, service-learning, and civic-engagement nationally and internationally. She impresses upon her students that a culture’s values are embodied in its dance forms and guides them to embrace dance as a conduit to cultural humility and an empathetic global perspective. Joy views international experiences as a pathway to cultural awareness, civic engagement, and mutual respect. She embeds local and international service-learning partnerships into the curriculum and has led numerous short-term study abroad experiences.

Steven Iannacone Expand

Steven Iannacone, dancer/choreographer/teacher, performed and toured internationally as a company member of Nikolais Dance Theater (NYC) and the Phyllis Lamhut Dance Company (NYC). He also worked for Murray Louis, Louis Falco, George Faison, Talley Beatty, Vinette Carol and was an active guest artist and solo performer. His teaching and faculty appointments include Ballet Akademien (Gotebory, Sweden), the Catholic University L.N. (Brussels, Belgium),  Vlaamse Dansacademie (Brugge, Belgium), escuela de la Ballet Folklorico (Mexico City, Mexico) and Hope College (Holland, MI) as Associate Professor of Dance since 1995; and also at “stage”, workshops and residencies throughout Europe and North America. He founded “InTheBody”, an international collaborative choreography project, and was Artistic Director of dANCEpROjECt, a resident company of the Knickerbocker Theatre and Hope College.

 

He performed and toured regularly with both companies and his work has been presented at the Festival for Dane and Non-Verbal Communication in St. Vinćent, Croatia (“Meat”/solo), Dance Box in Osaka, Japan (“Unwritten Letter”/solo), Town Hall in Tokyo, Japan (“White”/solo), Belfort Stadhuis in Brugge, Belgium (“Garden of Earthly Delights”/ensemble) and The Budva City Festival, the Culturni Centar Zagreb, Ljubljana Summer Dance, Quebec Ete Danse, Villa D’este and many other international venues. He was “guest artist-in-residence” at The Roof in Duisburg, Germany creating and performing with Avi Kaiser (Israel) and Sergio Antonino (Italy); together they produced the full evening “Nightshift” and the site specific “Rheinorange” for the Wilhelm Lembruck Museum on the banks of the Rhein River. As Artistic Director to GrossoModo he has twice been designated “Visitante Distinguido” by the Office of the Mayor of the City of Queretaro for facilitating cultural exchange between Mexico and the U.S.

 

Joshua Mora Expand

Joshua Yago Mora received a BA in Modern Dance at Brigham Young University after which Joshua co-founded Triptych Figures and collaborated in the launch of Speakers’ Corner--a platform for art and discussion based on activism. Joshua was a part of several project based works, and most recently was a company member of Jacksonville Dance theater. Joshua was recently awarded the Educator in Excellence Award in January of 2023 by Utah Dance Education Organization (UDEO). Currently an MFA candidate in Modern Dance at the University of Utah, Joshua is passionate about the effect of both personal intersections and the intersections of powers on the body and how the relational (self to self, self to others, and self to community) might aid in a collective healing. Art and dance as a way of healing, sensing, and activism fuels a lot of the guiding questions of Joshua’s artistic research.

Rachel Swenson Expand

Rachel Swenson is a licensed Idaho K-12 teacher serving as a dance teaching artist for Idaho Commission on the Arts and the Utah Arts Council as well as a dance specialist and the Creative Director at Idaho Fine Arts Academy, a grades 6-12 public arts school of choice in West Ada School District. She teaches both the art-of-dance and how to incorporate dance as an integrative learning tool through project-based choreography with students that focuses on connections to dance history, current events, life skills, environmental issues, and social issues. Swenson is the co-director/co-founder and curator of the Idaho Screendance Festival. She has performed professionally in various venues in Utah and was a guest performer for Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company. She has also performed for choreographer Meghan Durham Wall for the Paradigm Dance Project and Jim Moreno's Proving Ground Dance Company. Performing the works of Hanya Holm and Alwin Nikolais have been highlights of her professional experience. 

Throughout her career, Swenson has worked in many K-12 schools in Utah and Idaho, including as an Art Works for Kids teaching artist at Knowlton Elementary and William Penn Elementary schools in Utah; as a visual arts teacher at Christine Donnell School of the Arts in Idaho; and as a creative dance teacher for the Virginia Tanner Dance Arts in Education program at University of Utah. Swenson has extensive experience providing professional development for educators, including Idaho’s Arts Powered Schools, West Ada School District, BYU Arts Partnerships, Utah Valley University, EduFest, the Utah State Office of Education, Dance and the Child International, Utah Arts Council’s Arts Networking Conferences, Artworks for Kids, Tanner Dance Program, Idaho Dance Education Organization, and the National Dance Education Organization. 

Swenson has been awarded over sixteen grants for dance education from Idaho Commission on the Arts, the National Endowment for the Arts, the Jeker Foundation, the Inukai Family Foundation, Idaho Film Collection, and VSA Idaho and is the recipient of the 2019 Teacher of the Year for Idaho Fine Arts Academy and the 2017 NDEO Executive Directors Award for Outstanding Advocacy. In her commitment to advocating for equality in arts education in public and private schools, Swenson has been active in establishing and serving state and national organizations. She is the founding President and current President of the Idaho Dance Education Organization and is the Northwest Region Representative for the National Dance Education Organization, where she was also a contributing committee member for the NDEO “Priorities Pamphlet.” Swenson has also served on multiple committees for the State Board of Education and West Ada School District for revisions of arts education standards and textbook adoptions. 

Swenson earned a B.F.A. in Modern Dance and an M.Ed. in Education from the University of Utah. Swenson is pursuing an Interdisciplinary specialization as a doctoral student within the Ed.D. Dance Education Program at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York City, New York. She was a 2019-2020 Susan H. Fuhrman Endowed Scholarship Recipient and Arnhold Dance Education Institute Research Assistant. She is a recipient of the Arnhold Institute scholarship for the 2020-2021 and 2021-2022 school years. Her research interests include social-emotional learning in collaborative choreography, creative cognitive processes, cultivating creativity, the cultural hierarchy of arts education, dance literacy, and improving arts education leadership.

Vincent Thomas Expand

Vincent E. Thomas, dancer, choreographer and teacher, received his MFA in Dance from Florida State University and a BME in Music from the University of South Carolina. He has danced with Dance Repertory Theatre (FSU), Randy James Dance Works (NY/NJ), EDGEWORKS Dance Theater (DC), and Liz Lerman Dance Exchange (MD). His choreography has been presented at various national and international venues including DUMBO Festival (NY), Velocity Festival (DC), Modern Moves Festival (DC), Philly Fringe (PA), Edinburgh Fringe Festival (UK-Scotland), Barcelona and Madrid, Spain, Avignon, France, Athens, Greece, Bari, Italy, Copenhagen, Denmark, Shanghai, Taipei, and Singapore. He received rave reviews for his performance of “Come Change” (2012) and “iWitness” (2014) in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in Scotland. Vincent was the Movement Coach/Choreographer for Everyman Theater’s Brother’s Size by Tarell Alvin McCraney in Baltimore, MD (2012), Mosaic Theatre’s Unexplored Interior by Jay Sander in Washington, DC (2015), and Everyman Theater’s Los Otros by Ellen Fitzhugh in Baltimore, MD (2017), and Associate Choreographer for Williamstown Theater Festival’s Most Happy in Concert in Williamstown, MA (2022) directed by Daniel Fish. He is the Artistic Director/Choreographer of the national touring What’s Going On project. Vincent was awarded the 2011-2012 Towson University Student Government Association Faculty Member of the Year, a 2014-2015 NextLook Artist for the University of Maryland College Park and Joe’s Movement Emporium, a 2012-13 American Dance Institute Incubator Artist (MD), a 2016 Baker Artist Award finalist, the 2017 Pola Nirenska Award for Outstanding Achievement in Dance (DC), the 2019 University System of Maryland Regents Faculty Award for Excellence in Research, Scholarship & Creative Activity, the 2020 MDEA Living Legacy Award, a 2021 William G. Baker, Jr. Memorial Fund Awardee, a 2022 Baker Award Finalist, and a 2023 Richland District Two Black History Month Honoree. He is an Urban Bush Women BOLD Facilitator, faculty member for the UBW Summer Institutes (NY), and Professor of Dance at Towson University (MD). 

His multi-dimensional company VTDance builds on the use of contemporary dance, improvisation, text/ movement, a variety of sound sources, and collaborations with other artists, including dancers, musicians, poets, visual artists, and others [to be discovered]. These ideas coupled with witty, poignant, athletic and gestural movement are the rich palette for VTDance. www.vtdance.org

Teresa VanDenend Sorge Expand

Teresa VanDenend Sorge, EdM is a dancer, dance educator and Founding Director of Koresh Kids Dance. An outreach initiative of Koresh Dance Company, Koresh Kids Dance serves nearly 500 Philadelphia public school children each week. For nearly a decade she was a full-time lecturer at Muhlenberg College in the department of Theatre and Dance specializing in dance education and developing a dance education laboratory. She remains a part time lecturer at Sidney Kimmel Medical College in Philadelphia using creative dance and choreographic practices to encourage empathy and kinesthetic awareness for medical students. Teresa recently moved to Cincinnati where she teaches dance at NKU and Miami Valley Ballet Theatre. Teresa has created a dance collective with collaborator Rowan Salem and they were recently awarded an Artswave grant for their upcoming project, Synergy Series. Teresa’s choreography and scholarship has been shared at multiple venues and in many community settings, including the Philadelphia Fringe Festival, The Cincinnati Art Museum, the Mayo Clinic, Northern Kentucky University, National Guild for Community Arts Education, Arts and Literacy Conference at UPenn, and National Dance Education Organization. Teresa attended Anne Green Gilbert’s SDIT, as well as the Institute for Restorative Arts with Buildabridge International, where she served as teaching faculty and Artist on Call. Teresa holds a BA in Dance Education and Dance Performance/Choreography from Hope College in Holland, Michigan and a Master of Education in Dance degree from Temple University. She is a 2023 candidate for Master of Fine Arts in Dance at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and the mother of two dynamically creative children.

Maribeth Van Hecke Expand

Maribeth Van Hecke is a mover, producer and loves collaboration and problem solving. After graduating from Hope College with degrees in Dance and Creative Writing, she studied with Inlet Dance Theater in Cleveland, OH, and performed with Talespinner Children's Theater. She has collaborated with StrikeTime Dance Theater on the creation and choreography of their work each year since 2015, and traveled to Adelaide, AUS for DaCI International with the company as a choreographer. Maribeth is the current Producer for Mason Street Warehouse and Performance Manager at the Saugatuck Center for the Arts. Check out the summer season here: www.sc4a.org.

Options Teachers

Lindsey Hanson - Musical Theatre Expand

Lindsey Hanson is an Assistant Professor of Dance at Hope College in Holland, MI. She holds an MFA in Dance from Montclair State University and a BA in Dance from Hope College. She has had an extensive career as a dancer and actress, performing on esteemed stages such as The Kennedy Center, Radio City Music Hall, and Broadway's Marriott Marquis. Some favorites include performing as the White Queen in Third Rail Projects’ immersive production Then She Fell, as a Copacabana dancer on Amazon’s The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, as a dancer and aerialist on several cruise lines, and making her Broadway debut in The Illusionists. Other TV credits include Hulu's Difficult People, Sesame Street, America’s Got Talent, and various commercials. Her award winning dance film, Sanctuary, investigates dance in collaboration with the architecture of a worship space.

Find her on Instagram: @lindseyhansoncollective

Gregory Patterson - Disco Expand

Gregory Patterson, Associate Professor, Chair of Dance Department, and Artistic Director of Patterson Rhythm Pace Dance Company, has been teaching at Oakland University since 1991.  After graduating from the University of Michigan’s graduate program, Professor Patterson developed a noteworthy career in dance performance, teaching and choreography.  Dancing professionally for over thirty-five years, he has been a member of Harbinger Dance Company, Eisenhower Dance Ensemble, Ann Arbor Dance Works, Rigmarole Dance Company, and he has performed as a guest artist with both the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company and the Doug Elkins Dance Company from New York.

Professor Patterson has taught, choreographed and performed in Greece as part of the University of Detroit and Oakland University’s Classical Theatre Study Program.  In 1997, Professor Patterson’s signature piece Who’s the Boss, an excerpt from a larger work, was performed in Russia as part of an Eisenhower Dance Ensemble (EDE) appearance with the Pushkin Ballet.  As a company member of EDE, Professor Patterson also performed with the company while in Russia and assisted Laurie Eisenhower (Artistic Director) with setting an original work on the Pushkin Ballet dancers. Professor Patterson’s performing career has also taken him on tours of Mexico, Germany, and Canada.

As a choreographer, Professor Patterson established his dance company in the summer of 2000, when his choreography was chosen as a finalist for the Leo Choreography competition at the Jazz Dance World Congress in Buffalo, NY. Since then, his dance company, Patterson Rhythm Pace (PRP), has been both a vehicle and an inspiration for his new work.  PRP has steadily gained recognition for its evening performances of original works and collaborative projects with other local artists.  In 2001, Professor Patterson received the Maggie Allesse New Choreography Award for his work Traffic.   In addition, his choreography has been commissioned by many companies including, Eisenhower Dance Ensemble, Bal-Chi Dance Company of Chicago, Orchesis Dance Company at Western Michigan University, Michigan Dance Collective Dance Company of Traverse City, and the University Performing Dancers at Bowling Green State University, not to mention several dance studios throughout Ohio, Indiana and Michigan.  In 2004, Professor Patterson choreographed Strauss’s Die Fledermaus for the Michigan Opera Theatre, a company he has also performed with in the past. Professor Patterson’s love for musical theatre has led him to choreograph productions for Bowling Green State University, the Jewish Ensemble Theatre, and many other regional high schools and theaters.  He was very honored to be invited to remount, Rainbow Round My Shoulder, on a regional dance company. This dance was originally choreographed and created by internationally renowned choreographer, Donald McKayle.

In addition to teaching, performing, and choreographing, Professor Patterson is a certified Master Pilates instructor.  In 2007, he developed the conditioning track at Oakland University which is currently a required part of the curriculum for dance majors.

In 2009, Professor Patterson received the Travis Professorship Award, which aided his dance company to premiere his work in New York at the Citibank Ailey Theatre in 2010.

Currently, Professor Patterson is the immediate former Chair of the Michigan Dance Council, a state wide organization that advocates for dance. In addition, he serves on the Board of Directors for both Eisenhower Dance Detroit and the Michigan Dance Council.

Fine him online: facebook.com/gapdancer/

Elizabeth Kattner Expand

Elizabeth Kattner Ph.D. is a dance educator, scholar, and choreographer. She performed widely in the US and Europe in both ballet and Baroque dance. Currently, she serves as Assistant Director of the School of Music Theatre and Dance at Oakland University and coordinates the Dance Education program. She has given professional development workshops for K-12 teachers at Michigan Dance Festival, SHAPE Michigan, Baltimore County Schools, and for the Detroit Public Schools Community District. Her research has been presented internationally in Berlin, Dublin, Manchester, and Toronto, and has been published in Ballet Review, Dance Research Journal, Journal of Dance Education, and the program notes of the Grand Rapids Ballet, and the State Ballet Berlin. She serves on the editorial board of Dance Education in Practice and International Journal of Education and the Arts. Her book, Finding Balanchine’s Lost Ballets was released by University Press Florida in November 2020.

Katy Van Soest Expand

Katy Van Soest is currently an elementary visual arts teacher for Zeeland Public Schools in West Michigan. She teaches over 400 students weekly ages young fives through fifth grade. After receiving her BA from Hope College, she began teaching 3rd grade, kindergarten and young fives in Grandville in 1998. After not having art in elementary school, Katy developed a passion for the arts as a young child. On Saturday mornings, she fell in love with visual art when she began drawing and painting still lifes in her first sketch book. Throughout her career, Katy has helped plan Fine Arts festivals, art shows, created art for the Little Read and helped develop 3rd grade arts collaboration that connects art with live dance with Hope College’s Strike Time Dance. You may contact her at kvansoes@zps.org

Dorothy Eisenstein Expand

Dorothy is a certified yoga instructor and is currently designing yoga and wellness workshops for dancers. She has served on the faculty of Northwestern Michigan College in Traverse City for twenty-five years. In addition to teaching the academic courses in dance, she presented educational workshops and performances for the college including annual dance concerts, collaborative performances with the music department, and interdisciplinary workshops with the Dennos Museum Center. Dorothy has designed and presented movement sessions for annual state-wide conferences and has served as a guest artist for numerous dance schools and companies. Dorothy received her BFA in Dance from the University of Illinois and a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies with a movement and dance specialization from Wesleyan University. She has performed with dance companies in Ontario, New York, and Michigan, and as a roster artist with Young Audiences of Michigan. She has served on the faculties of University Liggett School, Eastern Michigan University, and the Wolf Trap Institute for Early Learning through the Arts.

Jessica Fashun Expand

Jessica’s purpose is to inspire people to live wildly satisfying and healthy lives. Through movement we find health, is her motto. Jessica is a movement educator and she loves to help her clients find joy in their bodies through the modalities of Nia® and Pilates. She has a unique ability to help you get out of your head and into your body, leaving judgment and comparison at the door so that you can learn to move your own Body’s Way, find your most optimal health and smile while doing it.

Jessica did her Nia Technique instructor training in 2006 and she is in her 18th year of teaching Nia. She has taught all over the Midwest in yoga studios, dance studios, fitness clubs, on college campuses; she has taught children, teens, athletes, couch potatoes, self-professed exercise haters, cancer survivors and everyone in between. Nia really is for EVERY BODY! Nia is a transformational fitness practice that combines the fun and freedom of dance, the power of martial arts, and the strength and stress-reduction of the healing arts.

Jessica is also a Balanced Body Pilates Mat and Body Barre instructor. She brings the discipline and love she has had for this mind/body practice to all her movement classes. She also teaches traditional Brazilian dance and has lived in Brazil with her family while on a Fulbright to study Afro-Brazilian music, dance and culture.Jessica has a deep love for music and theatre as she had a 25 yr. career in music education and performing. She loves travel, dance, paddle boarding, and hanging out with her family. Her passion for movement and music runs deep in her blood. Movement is Medicine for the body, mind and soul, and she invites you to move with her.

Perspectives Teachers

Angela Gonzalez-Urbina Expand

My name is Angela Gonzalez-Urbina. I have been dancing for 23 years and I began teaching in 2006. I was born and raised in Holland where I currently reside with my husband and twin sons.

Ballet Folklórico Sol Azteca hails from Holland, MI and its mission is to preserve authentic Mexican folkloric dance, costumes, and music.  I love to share this beautiful art form with audiences throughout the West Michigan area!

The majority of the dancers are Holland Public Schools students with a few friends from surrounding area schools joining in on the fun.  Holland Public Schools is proud to have a Folklórico Dance K12 district club. Members are taught and mentored by Holland High students and myself. Dancers’ ages range from 4 years of age and up.  We have now started an adult group so if you’re interested, let us know!  Teachers, high school mentors, and parents volunteer their time to our group and that combination has made our group a success!

Find her online: Angela Gonzalez LinkedIn

Sukie Keita Expand

Sukie Keita is a social practice dance artist and educator who has been inspiring people to dance for decades. She began her performance career in New York City, appearing in an eclectic range of productions including an off-Broadway house musical and a music video with Whitney Houston. It was meeting Katherine Dunham and taking her first classes in Dunham Technique at a teacher-training conference in 2000 that changed the course of her career, and she became hooked on the Dunham Way of Life. After pursuing an MFA in Dance at the University Of Arizona, Sukie earned her Dunham Technique teaching certification in 2012. She performed with several dance companies in Arizona including OTO Dance and New Articulations, while leading middle and high school dance programs. Sukie went on to establish the BA Dance Education program at Grand Canyon University, and a second degree, the BA Dance. Today, she serves with the Institute for Dunham Technique Certification as portfolio chair. Sukie enjoys presenting workshops in Dunham Jazz and building conversations that support decolonizing and culturally responsive approaches to dance pedagogy. Sukie lives and teaches dance in Phoenix and continues to create, produce, and consult through www.Sukie.Dance.

Find her online: www.Sukie.Dance

Juliana Amelia Paes Azoubel Expand

Juliana Azoubel (Juliana Amelia Paes Azoubel) Dance artist and Professor of Dance at the Federal University of Minas Gerais since 2014, Mrs. Azoubel has also served at the Federal University of Parana from 2009-2013, and as a teacher/lecturer at the School of Grupo Corpo from 2015 to present. She is the Artistic Director of Grupo Aruanda and is pursuing her Ph.D. in Dance at TWU. Professor Azoubel holds a BFA in Dance and an M.A. in Latin American Studies (University of Florida) and is Stott Pilates Certified Instructor. Sharing her career between Brazil and the US, She has served multiple times as an artist in residence at the University of Florida and has performed in Europe and South America. Her interests blend ethnography, traditional and contemporary dance, social, cultural, pedagogical, community, diasporic, intercultural performance, feminist approaches, and migration aspects of dance making.

Along with her lifetime artistic and teaching career, and mastery of several Brazilian Dance forms for all ages, Professor Azoubel has published Academic articles and books. Her scholarship is also present in Elementary, Middle, and High School, and Young Adult Education in Brazil where her writings have contributed to decolonizing curricular practices, intercultural practices, and the interconnections of artistry, pedagogy, and dance scholarship. 

Professor Azoubel is one of the authors of the creation of the Centro de Formacao em Danca do SESC, a dance community project housed in the city of Belo Horizonte that serves as a national model for inclusion and diversity in Dance in Brazil. In her current stay in the United States, since 2019, she has been the recipient of several awards and prizes including the Langston Dance Fellowship, and several Dance scholarships at TWU. In Brazil and internationally, she has been recognized for her committed scholarship towards intercultural performance and creative ways of teaching dance to all ages, abilities, and diverse settings.

Enya-Kalia Jordan Expand

Enya-Kalia Jordan is a choreographer, researcher, scholar, teaching-artist, and multiple award recipient from Brooklyn, New York. She received a Bachelor of Arts from SUNY Buffalo State in 2017. Enya-Kalia received a Master of Fine Arts from Temple University and founded the college's chapter of the National Honor Society for Dance Arts in 2019. In 2023, she was named an “Artistic Visionary” honored as Temple University’s 30 under 30 distinguished Alumna. In 2020, she began her doctoral studies at Texas Woman’s University, researching the decolonization of dance studies writing, Black embodiment, and Black womanhood. In 2023, she was awarded doctoral candidacy. She was also awarded the 2022-2023 Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Spouses Education Scholarship for high academic and leadership potential for her Ph.D. work and community activism. In 2022, she presented her research at the Collegium of African Diasporic Dance at Duke University, National Dance Education Organization’s Professional Development Day and Annual Conference, Dance and the Child International conference, and the Decolonizing Tertiary Dance Education conference hosted by Stockholm University. Jordan is a teaching-artist with Dancewave, Amanda Selwyn's Notes in Motion Outreach Theatre, Abron’s Center for the Arts, and the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Dance Africa program. Currently, she is the Manager of Dancer Development & Diversity at MSG Entertainment. She has also been invited to teach at Bates Dance Festival, been an assistant professor at SUNY Erie, and lecturer at the University of Virginia. Enya-Kalia has performed with Buffalo State's Dance Theatre Company, Kariamu & Company, Kimmel Center's Philadelphia Festival of the Arts, Carlos Jones, Merian Soto, Camara Arts West African Dance Company, and dances with RACHEL: dancers. She has performed and/or presented work at the University of West Indies International Dance Conference in Barbados, Pennsylvania State at Abington, Collegium of African Diasporic Dance at Duke University, Dance For the Child International conference in Salt Lake City, Kun-Yung Lin’s Inhale Performance Series, Temple University’s Conwell Dance Theater, BAAD! Ass Women in Dance Festival, EstroGenius Festival, Bates Dance Festival, Dancewave, and many more.

Rachel Price-Graft Expand

Rachel loves sharing her passion for dance with others. Rachel has been dancing since the age of 3 years old. It all started with Ballet, then she took Pointe for many years and also did liturgical dance. She has been line dancing for over 18 years. Rachel has been teaching Zumba® for over 12 years, she also teaches Yoga, Line Dancing and BOSU. Rachel is a Community and Alumni Dutch Dance Director and a Dutch Dance Costume Director. Rachel also loves teaching others about holistic wellness whether that be with essential oils or hemp oil products. She is also a Certified EarSeeds Practitioner. When she isn't found dancing she loves spending time with her husband and their two sons. Her hobbies also include dressmaking, sewing, cooking, baking, and canning.

Lianna Norris Expand

Lianna Norris is an experienced dance professor and choreographer with a passion for Hip Hop Dance and Hip Hop Culture. With over 10 years of experience, she has worked with dance teams, studios, artists, and individuals, providing high-quality choreography and instruction.

As a professor at Hope College, Lianna shares her knowledge of Hip Hop dance and culture, helping students develop technique, rhythm, and individual expression. She has taught and choreographed at prestigious colleges, worked on a BET+ feature film, and created award-winning choreography. Lianna's dedication to young dancers extends to judging competitions and providing valuable critiques. She believes in continuous learning and stays updated with dance terminology in her areas of interest. Overall, Lianna Norris is a dedicated professional committed to nurturing aspiring dancers and promoting the art of dance.

Click here to download a PDF of teacher bios.

Hope College Campus

Hope College Map

Housing and Meals

 

Standard Residence Hall

These buildings offer a traditional residence hall ambiance and are well equipped with lounges and laundry facilities. The rooms are double occupancy with shared bathrooms on every floor. Standard residence halls are non-air-conditioned. Linens are provided.

Chaperones are required for all groups which involve youth participants (18 and under). Groups must provide 1 adult chaperone for every 10 youth participants. Adult chaperones are responsible for the supervision of participants from arrival to departure, and must be housed with the participants.

  • Double occupancy: $30/night
  • Single occupancy: $48/night
  • Linens: $25 (includes sheets, pillow, blanket)
  • Meal plan (9 meals): $105/week (12+) or $50/week (11 & under)

There is an option to arrive on Tuesday, July 25th, but not to stay Sunday evening. Contact Nicki Flinn for more details.

Haworth Inn and Conference Center

(225 College Avenue Holland, Michigan 49423)

The Haworth Hotel (located on Hope College Campus) has a limited number Single King Rooms held for the daCi USA Gathering at $299.00 per night

With the group code, guests can go to www.haworthhotel.com and make their reservations online www.haworthhotel.com and make their reservations. The group code should be entered as the group code when prompted.

You can also call 616-395-7200 and speak to a guest service representative to make a reservation. Group Code: 2307DACIRB. Rooms must be booked no later than April 15, 2023.

Marriott Downtown Holland and City Flats are a short walk to campus.

Local Airbnb’s within walking distance may be an option. 

There are several hotels in the greater Holland area, but they will need transportation, they are not in walking distance.

Dress Recommendations

 

For most classes, participants should be prepared with comfortable clothing that gives them access to their full range of motion. The clothing should be appropriate for higher temperatures and close contact and weight sharing with other dancers. 

It is a good idea to travel with a pair of dance socks as some studio floors are stickier than others. You will want a good pair of walking shoes for traveling around Holland and Hope College campus as well.

All dancers should wear coverups to and from class and when on the Hope College campus and in town. Your daCi T-Shirt is a perfect option for that!

Shoes or special footwear are only required for select options and perspectives classes. Check the schedule when it is released to determine if specific clothing or shoes will be required.

Call for Performances

 

The National Gathering schedule includes evening performances by individuals and groups who are daCi members and registered for the conference. To accommodate as many groups as possible, we ask that solos be no more than four minutes and group performances no longer than six. Groups will be given priority over solos. However, we will strive to accommodate all requests.

Groups and individuals must submit electronically using the google form linked below. In the submission form, you will be asked to provide the following:

  • Link to a video of the dance 
  • Photo of costumes (if the video performance doesn't include them)
  • Music file with the best sound quality possible (MP3 or MP4 files)
  • Concert registration information
  • Technical requirements
DACI Dancing

Acceptance Criteria for Group/Solo Performances 

  • Performers must hold a daCi individual or group membership and must register for the National Gathering. 
  • Movement, content, style, and costumes must be age-appropriate. 
  • Content connects to the National Gathering theme of “Anchored in Hope: Expanding Horizons” in some way. 
  • Choreography should demonstrate an inclusive, process-oriented approach (i.e. children’s thoughts and contributions have been incorporated throughout the choreographic process, thus staying true to daCi’s objectives). 
  • Solos will be a maximum of 4 minutes and group pieces a maximum of 6 minutes. 
  • We will try to accommodate all performance requests.

The submission deadline is February 15th. Performers will be notified on March 1.

Registration and Pricing 

Early Bird

Jan 1 – April 30

Regular/Full

May 1 – June 30

Non-Member Pricing

 

Early Childhood (0-6 years) Free Free Free
Youth/College Students $200.00 $245.00 $295.00
Adults $275.00 $325.00 $375.00
Chaperone $100.00 $125.00

Adult participants can hold an individual membership or be one of the adults listed on a group membership registered for a family ($75), dance group ($75), or organization/institution ($100).

College students can be affiliated with an individual student membership ($30) or as part of their university/college institutional membership ($100), which provides membership status to five individuals with each membership.

Youth participants should be affiliated with a daCi USA family or dance group membership ($75).

Chaperones do not need to have membership in daCi USA to register for the conference as a chaperone.

Cancellation Policy: $75 of registration is non-refundable. The last day to cancel and receive a refund for the remaining registration amount is Friday, June 16th. If you cancel later than Friday, June 16th  you will have to work with conference organizers to find out if any refund for dorms/meal plans is available. Cancellations should be requested in writing and emailed flinn@hope.edu. If the Gathering is canceled, a full refund will be given. daCi USA cannot be held responsible for any cancellation or change in charges assessed by airlines, travel agencies, or other institutions in the event of program cancellation.

Register for the Conference
Membership Information
Frequently Asked Questions

Scholarships

 

The daCi USA Board of Directors is delighted to announce a grant from the Cooper-Newell Foundation to support scholarships for the 2023 daCi USA Gathering in Hope, Michigan. The Board is committed to assisting as many attendees as possible who apply to the scholarship fund. To meet this goal, the scholarship will cover the Gathering Registration Fees, as described above. Scholarships will be awarded on a first-come, first-serve basis so it is advisable to apply as early as possible.

The scholarship fund is available to all participating members of daCi USA, or those affiliated through group/family or institutional memberships, who register to attend the Gathering. This includes Youth/College Students, Adults (19+), and Chaperones. One-to-one dance partners of participants with disabilities are eligible to apply for scholarships.

Application Process

Fill out the google form at the link below to submit your application. The priority deadline for applications is January 1st. The final deadline is March 1. Applicants will be notified about the awards on January 1 and April 1. 

Completing the application takes about 10 minutes if you have the following items ready.

  • Personal Contact Information
  • Knowledge of the status of your daCi USA Membership 
  • If traveling with a group, you need knowledge of whether your studio, school, or teacher has a current daCi USA Membership 
  • Statement of financial need (200 words or less)*
  • Description of how the applicant’s attendance at the gathering will enhance the applicant’s broader life experiences. (200 words or less)

*Chaperones need only complete the statement of financial need on the application. They do not need a description of how the Gathering will enhance their broader life experience.

Contact Mady Cantor at mcantor@brynmawr.edu and Carol Day at Carolanneday@gmail.com if you have further questions about scholarships or need any assistance.

daCi 4

Participating as a Chaperone

There should be at least one chaperone for every 10 youth participants at the National Gathering. Chaperones take responsibility for responding to youth participants' needs throughout the conference. Chaperones help young dancers find their classes and navigate the dorms, dining hall, and campus.

The chaperone fee includes the following:

  • Opening Performance and Ice Cream Social on Wednesday evening
  • Class Observations
  • Thursday & Friday evening performances
  • Gathering Showing on Saturday
  • Closing Dance Party on Saturday evening

Things to do in Holland!

 

Plan to arrive a day or two early or stay after the conference to experience all that Hope has to offer, including brilliant mountains, hiking trails, museums, libraries, theatres, and restaurants. Browse the Holland Chamber website for information about activities in and around Holland.

White sandy beaches on Lake Michigan – Holland State Park and Tunnel Park, berry picking, dune rides in Saugatuck, and parks galore.

Explore Hope College Campus

Pool, basketball courts, exercise equipment, and racquetball courts in the Dow Physical Education Center Central green area for informal gatherings or to relax and unwind

Donate to daCi USA!

Are you the owner or employee of a corporation, organization or small business that would like to donate to daCiUSA?

Please contact us with your ideas for sponsorships or partnerships! Collaborative financial support aligns with our daCi mission!

Contact us!
Donate Now

Contact Us

  • General Questions: Nicki Flinn - flinn@hope.edu
  • Scholarships: Mady Cantor - mcantor@brynmawr.edu & Carol Day carolanneday@gmail.com
  • Performances: Cally Flox - cally_flox@byu.edu
  • Registration/Payments: Nicki Flinn - flinn@hope.edu
  • Membership: Sean Guymon - webmaster@daCiUSA.org
Frequently Asked Questions about the Gathering

*dance and the Child international (daCi) is a nonprofit organization aiming to promote growth and development in dance for children and youth internationally, irrespective of race, color, sex, religion, and national or social origin.

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