Home JMU to offer free Dance for Parkinson’s classes to community
News

JMU to offer free Dance for Parkinson’s classes to community

Contributors

james madison university jmuThe JMU School of Theatre and Dance in partnership with JMU’s College of Visual and Performing Arts and School of Music will offer a series of free Dance for Parkinson’s classes during select Saturdays in the spring of 2019.

Classes will take place on February 16 and 23; March 16, 23 and 30; and April 6, 13 and 20 from 10:30 a.m. until 11:45 a.m. in the Forbes Center for the Performing Arts. Classes, which include movement and music, are based on the Dance for PD® approach developed by the reputable Brooklyn-based Mark Morris Dance Group, and are open to people with Parkinson’s, their families, friends and care partners.

“There’s a whole group of people who will benefit from these classes,” says JMU dance professor Kate Trammell, who earned a Wertheimer Fellowship to pursue certification in Dance for PD®. According to Trammell, classes will allow participants to experience the joys and benefits of movement and music while creatively addressing symptom-specific concerns related to balance, cognition, motor skill, depression and physical confidence. The classes engage the participants’ minds and bodies in an enjoyable, safe social environment.

Three JMU dance majors (sophomores Lauren Abrams, Ashton Clevenger and Chloe Conway) were chosen by Trammell to serve as teaching assistants for the classes, while two piano music education majors (sophomores Thomas Hassett and Abby Wiegand) will play live music during the classes thanks to a collaboration with Dr. David Stringham and Dr. Jesse Rathgeber, JMU music faculty members and co-founders of the Center for Inclusive Music Engagement.

The five students were awarded CVPA Undergraduate Research Grants to take an introductory-level Dance for PD® course in Toronto, Canada, which they attended with Trammell from January 31-February 1, 2019. “The Toronto training allowed me to learn and feel comfortable with how to run a class and create a safe environment for participants,” shares Clevenger. According to Wiegand, “The experience helped me become more comfortable with improvisation and the rhythmic accuracy needed to accompany a class well.” The students also attended training workshops at the Mark Morris Dance Group in October, funded by the CVPA Dean’s Office.

JMU professor of dance Kate Trammell has 30 years of experience teaching dance to people of all ages and abilities. The Mark Morris Dance Group has Dance for PD® programs in 250 communities in 25 countries. A number of leading neurologists and movement disorder specialists around the world include Dance for PD® classes among a shortlist of recommended activities for their patients.

Registration is required. To register, visit www.jmu.edu/theatredance/about/special-programs.shtml. For further information about the classes, contact Kate Trammell at [email protected].






Support AFP

Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

donald trump
Politics

America Last: War abroad, tyranny at home, and the theft of a nation

Dianna Russini
Etc.

Leave Dianna Russini alone: Sportswriters, coaches, happen to like hot tubs

I’m totally on the side of Dianna Russini in this generated controversy over her being caught holding hands, hugging and lounging in a hot tub with New England Patriots coach Mike Vrabel. Seriously, what sportswriter isn’t holding hands, hugging and lounging in hot tubs with coaches they cover? Just last week, for instance, Ryan Odom,...

uva baseball
Baseball

UVA Baseball: #13 ‘Hoos fall to Notre Dame, 5-3, evening weekend series

Notre Dame starter Jack Radel, solid all season, owned #13 Virginia on Saturday, shutting out the ’Hoos through six, in a 5-3 Irish win on Saturday.

blue false indigo Baptisia australis
Arts, Culture, Media

Garden Club of Virginia celebrates blue false indigo during Native Plant Month

we are all hokies waynesboro vigil
State News

Virginia Tech plans annual remembrance of 32 Hokies who died in 2007 mass shooting

government money
Politics

Seriously: It cost a million dollars to hang out with Donald Trump in Charlottesville

healthcare
Local News

Free oral cancer screenings available at Augusta County clinic on April 15