2nd Edition

Teaching What You Want to Learn A Guidebook for Emerging and Established Dance and Movement Teachers

By Bill Evans Copyright 2027
268 Pages 63 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

268 Pages 63 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This new and expanded edition of Teaching What You Want to Learn includes 124 essential essays based on the foundational values of Evans’ pedagogy: Embracing Change, Cultivating Community, Honoring Personal Uniqueness, Seeking Specificity, Facilitating Active Learning and Dancing as an Expression of the Human Spirit. It is an eloquent and practical guide for both emerging and established... Read more

Chapter I. THE BACKSTORY

Chapter 2. NOTES TO SELF

Chapter 3. UNDERPINNINGS   

Chapter 4. CORNERSTONES

Chapter 5. WORDS MATTER  

Chapter 6. BODY WISDOM
Chapter 7. TEACHING GUIDELNES AND STRATEGIES
Chapter 8. BODY SPECIFICITYAND FUNCTUIONAL ANATOMY
Chapter 9. ANATOMICAL IMAGERY

Chapter 10. CONVERTING THEORY INTO ACTION
Chapter 11. FEEDBACK, ASSESSMENT AND SYLLABI

Chapter 12. SUPPORTING DIVERSE LEARNERS, co-written with guest author
Falon Baltzell

Chapter 13. TEACHING DANCE AND MOVEMENT THROUGH THE MULTIPLE INTELLIGENCEES, co-written with guest author Don Halquist

Conclusion: The Spice of Life
Appendix A Citing Primary Sources
Appendix
B Resource Texts
Appendix C Teacher’s Wisdom: Bill Evans, Dance Magazine, June 2007
Appendix D Why I Dance: Bill Evans, Dance Magazine, January 2010
Appendix
E Applying Concepts from the Laban/Bartenieff Movement System
Appendix F Applying Concepts from the Franklin Method of Dynamic Alignment through Imagery 
Appendix G Body: My Take on Bartenieff Fundamentals
Appendix H Shape: How the Body Changes its Form
Appendix I Effort: Movement Qualities 
Appendix J Space Harmony: The Geometry of Movement



Biography

Bill Evans has danced—tap, ballet and modern dance-- throughout his 86 years of life. He founded a professional company that toured throughout all 50 states in 1975, and founded a summer institute of dance, which is still ongoing, in 1977. Evans is emeritus professor at the University of New Mexico and SUNY Brockport. He is a recognized leader in dance and somatic movement education and founded the world’s first somatic dance festival in 2013.

"BRAVO, BILL! You have given all of us educators a valuable gift by delineating your open humanitarian approach to teaching! You have passed on vital information that needs to be available for all new teachers of dance, as well as for long-time professionals who might not have re-examined their own teaching lately!”

—Peggy Hackney, world leader in Laban/Bartenieff Movement Studies and author of Making Connections: Total Body Connectivity through Bartenieff Fundamentals


“An abundance of insight, gathered over a lifetime of teaching, choreographing, and performing. Evans provides a treasure trove of examples of incorporating effective practices and language, including that of images, prompts, anatomical clarity, all given to support deepening our students’ experience of themselves dancing. Evans’ personal journey through a long career of teaching dance while maintaining and generating enthusiasm and openness is an inspiration to fellow teachers to continue to grow and learn. His insights are specific, life affirming and useful. A rich resource for both new and experienced dance teachers. An inspiration. Wise and generous.”
—Claire Porter, renowned Guggenheim Fellow, choreographer, writer and performance artist


“Teaching What You Want to Learn, is a series of short, accessible and enlightening essays that celebrate the transformational power of critical thinking. Evans advocates for teaching the whole dancer by nurturing their intellect, emotions and physicality. A personal favorite are the For Your Consideration questions at the end of each essay that invite the reader to reflect on their own learning experience and how to enact change. A must read for anyone who values the learning process and is interested in teaching dance!”

—Edisa Weeks, Bessie recipient, choreographer, performer and professor of dance at Queens College, New York, USA