idocde » Editorial
BIG UPDATE! a NEW Symposium and more…
reflections on the 2022 IDOCDE symposium
The April Issue – symposium description is here
The March Issue
The February Issue
The November Issue
making place for making place
Nancy Stark Smith
The May Issue: Onwards with IDOCDE!
IDOCDE Virtual Meetings starting soon!
The December Issue
The September Issue
on symposium scheduling and languaging against the odds
on beaver dams and the 7th IDOCDE symposium
in lieu of transparency, approaching the 2019 IDOCDE symposium
Tracing Forwards –––––– the question of (human) nature
New Year, New Symposium, New Story
Tradition, Evolution and Diversity – Share Your Legacy
updates, updates, updates
... how many hours in a day
The Cassiopeia score and other matters; power, pedagogy, and the imparting of knowledge
revelations, reflections, confessions; post-symposium update
Months Bleed into New Months
Martin's Alphabet
You are here – I am here
Something New
Ashes to Ashes, Water to Words
Le vierge, le vivace et le bel aujourd'hui ... [1]
a fictional season
on beauty: an unexpected debate
What I Did Not Miss This Summer
I Can Not Not Move. Can You?
IN THE SPACE OF STUDY – notes on The Legacy Project and the 2017 IDOCDE Symposium
Scores for Rest
Everlasting Words
what you give will remain yours forever
the limit of the limitless
ATTENDANCE
What can dance bring to culture?
Documentation and Identity – New lives of memories...
Solo thinking does not exist
The Importance of Being [Un]Necessary
Hot Stones Notwithstanding
Documenting what is in a flux
Symposium Preparations Under Way
Moving images are often read as “the truth”...
The Technology Coordinator
Potential for Relationship, Subversion and Emergence
A quantum LEAP to REFLEX
Abundance of Exchange – no me but for you!
Teaching Form[less]?
Questioning it all?
After a few months of ephemerality…
Failing Successfully!
Her sweet boredom…
teaching dance, flying airplanes and surgery procedures
re-creation – by the writing dance teacher
Revisiting Our Reality
The End
Roll the bones!
And now?
Treasure Hunt
News from the Arsenal
Body time & Politics
Morning training opening at K3
Symposium 2013 Vienna
Time is ticking...
"If tomatoes are a fruit, isn't ketchup...
Symposium 2013: Call for proposals
Teaching at ImPulsTanz: Call for applications
idocde meeting Stolzenhagen August 13-17, 2012
More videos please!
Hello… What are you doing here?

teaching dance, flying airplanes and surgery procedures

Questions of hierarchy are of importance when we are dealing with complex situations. Complex situations are often made of a whole set of basic aspects we don’t want to miss, occurring in combination with unpredictabilites: events happening at the same time, unforeseen reactions, or other outside factors complicating the issue.

Examples that come to mind for these kind of complex situations are surgery procedures, flying airplanes, and sometimes dance classes.

While teaching dance, we move in a three dimensional web of thinking, moving and sensing, perceiving individuals and the group as a whole, comparing what we perceive with what we want to reach, assessing the reasons for deviation from the goal, setting measures. At the same time students pursue their own goals that you probably are not aware of. They might have a different understanding of the words you use. The interaction among students and the students with you bringing in a whole different set of social rules, expectations, experiences. Not even to start with the individual history of our bodies, our physical experiences that shape our understanding of movement and dance, and asthetic and personal values and many other things, such as the institution who hired you and other outside factors-

Leaning back and reading this, it becomes clear why we not always reach what we want in class. Although the consequences usually do not concern life and death so directly as mistakes of pilots or surgeons do!

Recently I heard an interview with Dr. Atul Gawande on the radio. Dr. Gawande introduced a checklist for surgical procedures, thus massively improving success rates, without actually changing something in a close „medical sense“.

At the base of checklist thinking there is the assumption that humans not only can, but will act inconsistently and fail – even experts. But there is another aspect at least equally important that comes along with the kind of checklists that Dr. Gawande promotes, which is directed towards the fact that several humans work together:

‚Like making sure everyone in the operating room knows each other by name. When introductions were made before a surgery, Gawande says, the average number of complications and deaths dipped by 35 percent.

"Making sure everybody knew each other's name produced what they called an activation phenomenon," Gawande explains. "The person, having gotten a chance to voice their name, let speak in the room — were much more likely to speak up later if they saw a problem."’

(see http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122226184)

So Dr. Gawande draws on shared intelligence by true team work. Still, the number of 35 % dip in complication is quite astonishing, isn’t it? If you look at the checklist (scroll down in the link above), my reactions to the checklink items vary from „well, that goes without saying, doesn’ it“ to „is that really essential in a hectic and pressured situation?“

Of course, a surgery procedure is only partially comparable to a dance class. For once, surgery is very goal oriented, while most dance classes, where learning is supposed to take place, have more aspects of process orientation. Maybe a translation of what Dr. Gawande does into (dance) education would be student centered learning – in the sense that participants in a dance class are encouraged to draw on their experience and capacities, and to use individual learning styles to meet the challenges presented. The overused terminus of empowerment comes to my mind.

I suspect there are equivalents to the points on Dr. Gawande’s checklist for a dance class still unexplored. By that I mean little knacks or ideas that are not necessarily related to the content of a dance class that open up doors and potentials. --

What do you do to get your participants on board, to create an environment for an inspired learning process? Do you use knowledge you gained as an expert in other fields? I am curious to hear, and hope to get some ideas about it at the 2nd IDOCDE Symposium coming up August 1-3 at ImPulsTanz Vienna. See you there!

Kerstin Kussmaul

Idocde founder

July 3rd, 2014