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KDA Impact Report No. 8

Kda 2021 yir home slider

IMPACT REPORT — December 2021

YEAR IN REVIEW

A year-end reflection, one of our favorite times of the year.  

In many ways, 2021 felt like a continuation of 2020.  For every step forward we took, we often felt that three more steps were then taken backward. In another year of uncertainties, we focused our efforts on the digital realm and found that we continued to make an impact in Kern County and beyond.  

A few of our 2021 highlights include the following:

– We supported dozens of Kern County creatives through employment opportunities, grants, and scholarships. One example includes celebrating the return of the 44th annual Bakersfield Nutcracker accompanied by the Shafter Symphony Orchestra where we supported their performances through a KDA grant award.

– We moved forward together and explored the evolution of our social and cultural humanity through our unity classes. We were guided through constructive conversations while providing a safe space for delicate communication during our six-week Moving Forward series. We listened. We learned. We grew.

– We welcomed home a super star and gave her a stage to do what she does best, DANCE! Swan Lake LIVE, featuring Tiler Peck and Roman Mejia, at the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater was a magical moment in 2021 that we will never forget.

– We recognized the class of 2021 and their valiant efforts of navigating uncharted territory during their final year of high school through Seniors MOVE.

– We produced 10 films encouraging the world to read through dance with Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY and experienced 5,142 of watch time minutes from people all over the world.

– We gave away a free month of dance classes at a studio of the winner’s choice and helped to make dance dreams come true during our annual National Dance Day celebration. 

– And we inducted our newest inductees into the USA’s most prestigious honors society for dancers who excel in artistry, leadership, and academic achievement!

To date, we’ve served over 60,000 people through our programs and have been honored to be recognized in many ways, including our fifth Beautiful Bakersfield Award nomination and our second California Arts Council grant award. 

As we close 2021, we celebrate the steps we took together to move forward in many meaningful ways, but we also acknowledge that there is much more work to be done. We thank you for moving with us and are most thankful for your continued support. 

In the spirit of dance. . . 

Andrea Hansen, M.F.A.

KDA President

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MOVING FORWARD: 6 Engaging Session for Unity – Winter 2021

Kern Dance Alliance was proud to announce a continued partnership with Cultivating Better Tomorrows, a Woman and Minority owned Business with a passion for advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion in the performing arts community. KDA and Cultivating Better Tomorrows launched Moving Forward: 6 Engaging Sessions for Unity, a six-week series that focused on an array of different topics on Fridays beginning January 22 @ 12:00 PM PST via Zoom. 

Led by creatives, including Erica Lynette Edwards – a ballerina with the world-renown Joffrey Ballet for 15 years, Moving Forward explored the evolution of our social and cultural humanity with the intent to learn together. These impactful sessions supported authentic growth for individuals and companies. Cultivating Better Tomorrows is known for their safe, interactive, and judgement-free learning spaces. Moving Forward was free and open to all members of the community to join the conversation as we move towards a more inclusive future. Moving Forward was graciously funded by Chevron. 

January 22- MOVING FORWARD: The Power of Shared Language

January 29- MOVING FORWARD: Listening with Purpose, Compassion, and Empathy

February 5- MOVING FORWARD: Racial Equity: From Heroes Then to Action Now 

February 12- MOVING FORWARD: Intentionality

February 19- MOVING FORWARD: More than Words

February 26- MOVING FORWARD: Community Circles

SWAN LAKE LIVE from the Bakersfield Fox Theater – March 26, 2021

Kern Dance Alliance was proud to sponsor Live from the Bakersfield Fox: Swan Lake Act II Pas De Deux Featuring New York City Ballet’s Tiler Peck and Roman Mejia on Friday, March 26 at 6:30 pm PST. Following the live stream performance was a Q&A session with Ms. Peck and Mr. Mejia moderated by Kern Dance Alliance President, Andrea Hansen. In collaboration with the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater and Channel 23ABC, Swan Lake was available via 23ABC’s OTT/APP stream and on the 23ABC Facebook page. 

Choreographed in the 19th century, Swan Lake is a tale of forbidden love in a magical setting danced to the melodic music of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake. Live from the Bakersfield Fox: Swan Lake showcases the famous Act II Pas De Deux where the Swan Queen, Odette (played by Tiler Peck), and Prince Siegfried (played by Roman Mejia) meet for the first time in the enchanted forest. The performance delighted audiences with the most technical movements performed effortlessly by today’s most famous ballet dancers. 

It is no secret that the pandemic has greatly impacted the performing arts sector. Theaters across the country have gone dark, including the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater. Performing artists have been without work, and communities have lost the opportunity to see live shows. According to a Californians for the Arts survey, 72% of performing arts organizations terminated paid staff, and 50% terminated contractors. With reopening guidelines still in limbo, KDA, the Fox, and 23ABC worked to fill the void by bringing live shows back via streaming capabilities until theaters are permitted to operate at full capacity once again. 

While the effects of the pandemic have been detrimental, there is a silver lining! Swan Lake marked the first time Ms. Peck danced on the Fox stage. Ms. Peck reflects on her feelings about her Fox debut, “I have been fortunate to have had the opportunity to perform all over the world but have always wanted to perform in my hometown at the Fox Theater! This will be my first time dancing on the stage, and it means the world to me because Bakersfield is such a part of who I am. It’s where I was born, where my family lives, and where I first started learning how to dance. While most stages and theaters have been dark during the pandemic, it feels fitting that one of my first times performing live onstage again will be in my hometown!” Her Swan Lake partner, Mr. Mejia, also commented on this opportunity, “It means a lot to me to be performing at the Fox theater during these difficult times. It’s been a very long time since I’ve danced on stage or with a partner, so I am truly grateful for this opportunity.”

Swan Lake had a successful debut on the evening of the live stream.

On Facebook:

  • Total Reach: 3,428
  • Total Impressions: 3,454
  • Likes, Comments & Shares: 672
  • Post Clicks: 1,467
  • Clicks to Play: 513
  • Total Views: 3.3K

On 23ABC App:

  • At 6:30 p.m. 799 people reacted to the push notification
  • At 7 p.m. 805 people reacted to the push notification
  • At 8 p.m. 493 people reacted to the push notification
  • At 9 p.m. 424 people reacted to the push notification
  • Total direct app opens: 612
  • Total indirect app opens: 2,954

 *Direct opens occur when a user opens your app by directly responding to a push notification by swiping or tapping on the notification. 

 Indirect opens mean the number of opens that occur both directly and indirectly as a result of a push notification, minus the baseline opens that would be expected anyway. Every open that occurs soon after a push is a potential influenced open, whether it is the direct result of a push or not.

Swan Lake LIVE continues to be available online and can be viewed at www.kerndance.org/SPECIALEVENTS.

Seniors MOVE– Spring 2021

Kern Dance Alliance announced a new project, Seniors MOVE- a montage music video featuring high school seniors moving and grooving across Kern County. Seniors MOVE was designed to recognize the class of 2021 and their valiant efforts navigating uncharted territory during their final year of high school. Kern County high school seniors were invited to submit videos to KDA wearing their school logos and showcasing their best dance moves to be featured in a video with other Kern County high school seniors. KDA encourages the use of movement and dance to promote positivity, and the nonprofit organization is excited to give seniors a platform to display their talents while offering Kern County more ways to celebrate the class of 2021 after a year of quarantine.

High school seniors had a difficult year. They have had to master new technology for learning and cope with the stress of not having their caring educators nearby to help them through difficult and unprecedented times. Students have missed opportunities for camaraderie, including some of the most treasured senior-year moments like prom, athletics, senior awards, and many more. With in-person graduations after a year of being in school online, KDA felt it was imperative to create a campaign to celebrate the success of those whose high school memories were greatly affected by the pandemic.

“To the class of 2021: You have prevailed through many struggles in the last year, and you deserve to be recognized for your amazing achievements.” – Riley Thompson, KDA Board Member, BHS Class of 2021, Seniors MOVE Coordinator

Seniors from Bakersfield, Liberty, Centennial, Independence, and Stockdale and High Schools participated in this special project. 

The Seniors MOVE video was produced in collaboration with KDA 2021 Student Intern, Victoria Marchetti, and can be viewed HERE.

GIVE BIG KERN- May 4, 2021

Number of Donors: 35

KDA raised $3,017.00 with 35 donors via 38 gifts. 2021 gifts equated to the MOST we have ever raised since we began participating in Give Big Kern 5 years ago!  KDA hosted a 24-hour social media Give Big Kern campaign to encourage donations. 

BRAVO to all that donated, liked, clicked, and shared – we are humbled by your bighearted ways!!

STATE of the CITY Music Video – June 23, 2021

Kern Dance Alliance called for dancers and movers of ALL TYPES to be featured in the State of the City music video presented by the Mayor’s Office and the Greater Bakersfield Chamber. 31 dancers representing dance organizations across Kern County showed up a the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater on June 23 to show off their best moves and represent the best of the city!

The State of the City was televised on July 17 on KGET, as well as on the Chamber’s social media platforms.  The annual State of the City Forum is one of the community’s marquee business events. This event features Mayor Karen Goh and other city leaders providing insight on top issues facing Bakersfield, progress that has been made over the past year and where the city is heading in the future. 

The State of the City music video can be viewed HERE. 

Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY – Summer 2021

  • 5,142 of watch time minutes from people all over the world Books in Motion Views
  • 1000 Craft Kits Distributed
  • 1000 FREE Books Distributed
  • 300 hours of film editing
  • 145 minutes of streaming Books in Motion® films
  • 86 social media posts
  • 55 dancers
  • 10 films
  • 7 dance organizations
  • 5 sponsors
  • 4 dance celebrity readers
  • 3 location partners
  • 1 production company

Kern Dance Alliance, Kern County Library, and Kern Literacy Council  launched a digital version of our annual summer reading program, Books in Motion®: DANCE + LITERACY. As the pandemic limited opportunities for in-person experiences, the organizations pivoted to continue to bring beloved children’s books to life through digital dance performances. 

ABOUT BOOKS IN MOTION 2021 

Throughout the summer of 2021,  Books in Motion films were released online to inspire children to read through dance! Featuring beloved children’s books like the Pied Piper and Groovy Joe’s Dance Party Countdown, Books in Motion films included a narrated performance of a book and choreography children could learn to promote the book’s theme. Additionally, the films  featured a craft session to promote literacy goals via role playing at home. Finally, children were able to pick up a FREE book and a craft kit from Kern County libraries including Arvin, Beale, Delano, Kern River Valley, Ridgecrest, Taft, and Tehachapi! 

Books in Motion was produced in conjunction with Dance Camera West, a Los Angeles based production company specializing in creating dance for film. Dance Camera West was contracted to work in Bakersfield in the spring of 2021 where they filmed Books in Motion at various locations including The Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater, Kern County Museum, and The Padre Hotel. Books in Motion was directed by Kelly Hargraves, produced & edited by Amber Patee Adams, with director of photography by Ethan Sigmon. The films featured seven Kern County dance organizations including the Bakersfield City Ballet, DanceNation, DAT KREW, Heather Benes and the East Kern Ragtag Revels, McLaughlin Dance Collective/Civic Dance Center, Polynesian Spice, and Spotlight Dance Academy. 

Books in Motion is made possible by generous support from Chevron, the Robert Grimm Family Foundation, 23ABC, Kern Family Health Care, and the Arts Council of Kern. 

BOOKS IN MOTION PERFORMANCES

  • “Groovy Joe’s Dance Party Countdown” by Eric Litwin, art by Tom Lichtenheld, with permission from Hachette Children’s Group, performed by McLaughlin Dance Collective / Civic Dance Center and produced by Brian and Kristen McLaughlin. 

  • “Hip Hop Lollipop” written by Susan McElroy Montanari & Brian Pinkney, with permission from Schwartz & Wade Books, performed by Spotlight Dance Academy, and produced by Dance Camera West. 

  • “Hip Hop Lollipop” está escrito por Susan McElroy Montanari y Brian Pinkney, con permiso de Schwartz & Wade Books.and produced by Dance Camera West. 

  • “Froggy Goes to Hawaii” written by Jonathan London, illustrated by Frank Remkiewicz, published by Puffin Books, featuring Polynesian Spice, and produced by Dance Camera West. 

  • “The Pied Piper of Hamelin” written by Robert Browning, illustrated by Kate Greenaway, published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, featuring Heather Benes and the East Kern Ragtag Revels, and produced by Dance Camera West. 

  • “Hip Hop Lollipop” by Susan McElroy Montanari & Brian Pinkney, with permission from Schwartz & Wade Books, performed by DAT KREW, and produced by Dance Camera West.

  • “Groovy Joe’s Countdown Dance Party” by Eric Litwin, art by Tom Lichtenheld, with permission from Hachette Children’s Group, and performed by DanceNation and produced by Dance Camera West.

  • “Ballerina Gets Ready” by Allegra Kent, illustrated by Catherine Stock with permission from Holiday House Publishing, featuring Bakersfield City Ballet, and produced by Dance Camera West.

BOOKS IN MOTION CELEBRITY READER SERIES

New in 2021, Books in Motion also included a celebrity reader series featuring professional dancers that have authored children’s books. New York City Ballet principal dancer and Bakersfield native, Tiler Peck,  joined the lineup on July 7, 2021 at 1:30 pm PST where she and her Broadway star co-author, Kyle Harris, read their children’s book, Katarina Ballerina. Ms. Peck also tought basic movement and participated in a Q&A.

Additionally, “Boys Dance!” written by John Robert Allman and featuring American Ballet Theater Principal Dancer, Calvin Royal III, was read LIVE on Zoom on Friday, July 23 @ 10:30 am. John Robert Allman lives in New York City, where he works in marketing for television and theater. He is the author of A is for Audra: Broadway’s Leading Ladies from A to Z (2019), one of NPR’s “Favorite Books of 2019,” B is for Broadway: Onstage and Backstage from A to Z (2021), and two children’s dance books in collaboration with American Ballet Theatre, B is for Ballet: A Dance Alphabet and Boys Dance! (both 2020). 

Calvin Royal III began his formal dance training at the Pinellas County Center for the Arts in St. Petersburg, Florida. He was a finalist at the Youth America Grand Prix Competition, and was awarded the Ethan Stiefel Scholarship to train at American Ballet Theatre’s (ABT) Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School in 2006. Royal joined ABT II in 2008, ABT main company as a member of the corps de ballet in April 2011. In September 2017 he was promoted to Soloist and in September 2020 Royal was appointed Principal Dancer. He has soared across stages worldwide with ABT in productions of Swan Lake, Manon, Fancy Free, Apollo, and was slated to debut as Romeo in Sir Kenneth MacMillan’s Romeo and Juliet alongside ballerina Misty Copeland at the Metropolitan Opera House in May 2020 before the pandemic hit. Royal has been featured in works by Twyla Tharp, Christopher Wheeldon, Alexei Ratmansky, Kyle Abraham and Wayne McGreggor, and was nominated for numerous awards including the Clive Barnes Award, the winner of the Leonore Annenberg Fellowship a $50,000 grant to further his artistic development. Royal was the July 2020 cover star of Dance Magazine and has been featured in global campaigns for GAP, Tommy Hilfiger, Calvin Klein, Target, Ralph Lauren, Canali, starred in the 2019 Pirelli Calendar alongside Misty Copeland, and named the 2020/21 Artist-in-Residence at the Vail Dance Festival in Vail, Colorado. 

The celebrity reader series was available for free on Zoom and participants had to RSVP for the event at kerndance.org/BIM. 

BOOKS IN MOTION PARTNER BIOS

Bakersfield City Ballet is Bakersfield’s premier pre-professional ballet company. Their mission is to inspire and enrich our community and foster a love for the arts in youth through dance. As a pre-professional company, BCB serves as a stepping stone between studio training and a college dance program or professional contract. Their annual performances provide a live artistic cultural experience for our community, with an emphasis on classical and contemporary styles of dance.  Bakersfield City Ballet  is committed to making dance accessible to the widest possible audience through annual performances, educational programs, media, and other outreach efforts.  www.bakersfieldcityballet.org 

McLaughlin Dance Collective is a brand new company directed by Kristen McLaughlin. The company started as a way to guide Bakersfield dancers towards their dreams, give them an opportunity to share their gifts with their community, and bring joy to Bakersfield through community events. Civic Dance Center welcomes dancers of all ages and skill levels to come and share in the joy, learning, and development of dance. There are many classes to choose from, as well as many talented, professional, and knowledgeable instructors to teach them. www.civicdancecenter.com 

Polynesian Spice is a family owned and operated group that has been bringing island entertainment to Bakersfield for over 20 years. Their mission is to share their appreciation and love of the culture, songs, and dances of the Pacific Islands. As a halau (Hawaiian dance school)  comprised of family (ohana) and Polynesians at heart, their goal is to preserve and exhibit the authenticity of the Hawaiian culture and dance by sharing their Aloha Spirit throughout the community. They offer classes for all ages. They hope you will join them for a culturally educational experience and a fun way to exercise! www.polynesianspice.com

Ever since its grand opening in 2011, Spotlight Dance Academy’s main goal has been to provide quality dance education and a positive outlet in children’s lives at the lowest cost in Kern County. SDA takes pride in being a “non-traditional” dance academy, specializing in hip hop, jazz funk, Latin rhythms, and musical theatre dance. Ran by husband and wife team Sharida Rejon-Rodriguez and Bertin Rodriguez, SDA enjoys training and inspiring the next generation of performers.

Founded in 2014, D.A.T Krew (Dance Art Talent) Corporation is a non-profit organization whose goal is to inspire today’s youth through art and expression worldwide. It serves low income, underprivileged and at risk youth who represent our world today. In addition, DAT Krew is dedicated to saving the lives of today’s youth by providing a domain of tranquility which we believe is the cure for depression and mental illness. www.datkrew661.com

Heather Benes has been creating dance experiences in East Kern and the Antelope Valley since 1985, when she directed a full length Nutcracker ballet for Cerro Coso Community College. She opened Mojave Movement Arts Center in 1993, offering classes in ballet, jazz, and tap for students from Ridgecrest to Pearblossom. She also directed the dance program at the Palmdale Playhouse from 1999 to 2018, creating such works as The Snow Queen, Hansel and Gretel, The Pied Piper, Little Red Riding Hood, and several abridged versions of the Nutcracker. She earned an M.A. and an M.S. and has taught dance and dance-related subjects at a number of colleges and universities, including California State University, California, University of Kansas, University of California, Irvine, and Scripps College. During the Covid restrictions, she has been teaching private and semi-private classes at the OneCore Dance Studio in Rosamond. Ms. Benes has been a member of KDA for 6 years and a previous participant in Books in Motion. Heather Benes and the East Kern Ragtag Revels are excited to participate in the 2021 Books in Motion program!

DanceNation offers a variety of classes to all ages and levels. Styles include ballet, jazz, tap, hip-hop, lyrical, musical theater, acrobatics, turns & technique, stretch & conditioning, pointe, choreography, competition team and showteam. DN empowers dancers to explore their creativity, build confidence and advance to their fullest potential in mind, body and spirit. They strive to inspire the future of our studio and community by setting high standards for all faculty, dancers and parents while making life-long friends and families. www.dancenationca.com

BOOKS IN MOTION PRESENTING PARTNERS TESTIMONIALS 

We are so proud to continue to offer this program so that children may find a love for reading and dance! – Andrea Hansen, Kern Dance Alliance President 

One of the most valuable gifts you can give to your child is the ability to read. The ability to read unlocks the door to success in nearly all aspects of life and provides a lifetime of opportunities. Grow, dream, learn, laugh, experience, READ. Come check us out! – Sherry Wade, Kern County Library Regional Supervisor 

Reading aloud daily and the number of books in the home are two key factors in school success. Kern Literacy Council applauds all the partners in Books in Motion for keeping kids reading and dancing this summer. – Laura Lollar Wolfe Kern Literacy Council Executive Director 

BOOKS IN MOTION METHODOLOGY 

Books in Motion is geared for children in the early literacy stages (K-3rd grade) and is designed to tap into their imagination and encourage them to read. For some, reading is a concept that is too foreign to understand due to age and brain development. Books in Motion will bypass this intangible feeling by allowing children to see the magic of a book laid out with real characters coming to life. Children do not have to read the words – they can read the dancers’ movements to understand the story. By tapping into curiosity, children are motivated to explore literacy, which leads them back to the written words that brought the book to life. Books in Motion has reached over 6000 children and has given away nearly 3000 free books since 2017. 

  1. Create motivation and interest in reading- The Books in Motion bibliography taps into curiosity via dance performances. . . children will be motivated to explore literacy, which leads them back to the written words that brought the book to life.

  2. Create motivation and encouragement for movement through dance – Children learn choreography to reinforce their critical thinking of the story.

  3. Cover Common Core State Standards in Reading Literature for grades K-3rd grade- Books in Motion text covers Common Core Standards for Reading Literature including but not limited to: Ask questions to demonstrate understanding of a text; recount stories from diverse cultures; determine the central message and explain how it is conveyed through key details; describe characters in a story and explain how their actions contribute to the sequence of events.

  4. Instill a sense of connection and ownership of reading through listening and viewing of stories- Children dance choreography corresponding with the Books in Motion text. Children produce art reflecting the session’s teachings. Children take a free Books in Motion book home.

  5. Foster creative abilities of youth through cultural arts learning- Books in Motion supports literacy development through unified thematic experiences of dance, crafting, and story-telling.

  6. Activate Youth Voices- Books in Motion actives youth voices during the craft session with children speaking about the book and creating a craft that coincides with the session’s teachings.

  7. Critical Thinking- The Books in Motion evaluation promotes critical thinking by asking questions about the book.

BOOKS IN MOTION RESULTS

BIM was viewed by people of all ages. Survey results are, of course, reflective of those who took time to fill out the separate online survey link, and may not be representative of the entire viewing population.  However, we review every single response and take the feedback to heart!  Our key takeaways from the survey are that we introduced people to new books that they loved, and the dance and book were their favorite part. 

Highlights

Number of respondents: 16 surveys, reflecting +33 viewers

Average age of children watching: 5.6 years old

Gender of children watching was ⅔ female

68% of respondents were inspired to read!

Question reponses:

Did you know the story before you saw this performance?

Knew it and love it: 12.5%

Knew it: 12.5%

Didn’t know it: 75%

After seeing the performance do you feel like you know the story?

Know it and love it: 75%

Know it: 18.75%

Know it and didn’t like it: 6.25%

Don’t know it: 0%

Did today’s performance inspire you to read?

Yes: 68.75%

No: 12.5%

N/A: 18.75%

What was your favorite part of the event?

Book/Dance: 75%

Dance Lesson: 6.25%

Craft: 18.75%

Sample feedback:

Books, dancing, and crafts are the best way to spend a summer day!

Thanks for all your work! Enjoyed watching each of the shows! AMAZING!



National Dance Day – September 18, 2021

In collaboration with the American Dance Movement, Segerstrom Center for the Arts, and the Kennedy Center, Kern Dance Alliance celebrated our national dance holiday with an online dance party and giveaways on Saturday, September 18, 2021. 

In honor of National Dance Day, KDA made dance dreams come true. KDA encouraged dancers to dream big and submit their wishes via the following contest rules: 

  1. Tell us your dance wish and why it is so important to you by commenting on this post, tagging us in a story, or emailing us at info@kerndance.org.
  1. If you are posting your wish on social media, be sure to tag @kerndance and use the hashtags #kdaNDD2021 and #NationalDanceDay2021.
  1. All submissions must be posted by 11:59 PM PST on 9/18/2021.
  1. KDA will be selecting multiple dreams and making them come true! So join us in celebrating National Dance Day and tell us your dream.
  1. KDA will announce the Dance Dream Giveaway winners the week of 10/1/2021.

KDA awarded two dance dance dreams:

  1. Two leotards were gifted to a young Kern County dancer.
  2. A master class with a famous dance instructor was gifted to a Kern County dance educator. 

NHSDA Induction Ceremony – December 19, 2021

KDA in celebrated our newest National Honor Society for Dance Arts – NHSDA / Kern Dance Alliance Secondary Chapter inductees during a luncheon at Bakersfield Country Club on December 19, 2021! Riley Thompson and Noor Elkereamy were accepted into the USA’s most prestigious honors society for dancers who excel in artistry, leadership, and academic achievement! 

Riley Thompson is a graduate of Bakersfield High School and a current freshman at Cal Lutheran where she is studying musical theater and dance. She is the youngest board member to ever join KDA, a consistent volunteer for community service projects, a honors student, and just recently completed her first college dance concert. 

Noor Elkereamy is a student at Stockdale High School, a principal with the Bakersfield City Ballet and a studies dance with Civic Dance Center.  She spent last summer training at the School of American Ballet in New York City.  She is a regular volunteer with KDA, a GATE student, and was most recently seen on stage as the Sugar Plum Fairy in the annual Bakersfield Nutcracker. 

KDA Community Grants + Scholarship Program

KDA was pleased to award the following grants and scholarships to deserving Kern County dance artists and organizations:

DAT Krew – Generał Operating Support

Bakersfield City Ballet – Choreography Conference 

Shafter Symphony Orchestra- Bakersfield Nutcracker

 Beautiful Bakersfield Awards

Kern Dance Alliance was humbled to be nominated in the 2021 Beautiful Bakersfield Award’s Arts and Culture category. This was the fifth nomination for KDA since 2016.  It is an honor to serve Kern County and an even greater honor to be nominated in a category with those that consistently enrich our beautiful city! 






 

 

California Arts Council Grant

Kern Dance Alliance received a $15,000 grant award from the California Arts Council as part of its Arts and Cultural Organizations General Operating Support program. 

The California Arts Council announced 441 grant awards totaling $13,046,887 in project and operational support for nonprofit organizations and units of government throughout the state of California. KDA was the only arts agency in Kern County to receive an award and they will use the award to support their ongoing programs and services aimed at providing social, emotional, physical and financial support for creatives  and the greater Kern County community. This is the second time KDA has been awarded a grant from California Arts Council since the organization’s launch in 2015.

Assemblymember and Vice Chair of the Assembly Budget Committee, Vince Fong, has been instrumental in assisting KDA by approving arts funding in California. “All California Arts Council grant applicants must demonstrate local legislative support. KDA is fortunate to have the support of our local legislators, including Assemblyman Fong, who votes for arts funding to positively impact the creative economy in California and Kern County.” – Andrea Hansen, President of Kern Dance Alliance.

“The California Arts Council is proud to support the work of Kern Dance Alliance, and to recognize their resilience and dedication during this unprecedented time,” said California Arts Council Executive Director Anne Bown-Crawford. “We look forward to the opportunity to bring even more support to the field in 2022, with two grant cycles and much more funding available, thanks to the Legislature’s boosted investment and belief in arts and culture as a means for positive social change.”

To view the official California Arts Council award announcement, please visit http://tiny.cc/CACGrantees2021.

 

 

Kern Dance Alliance is an organization that emphasizes the importance of dance in our community. KDA is constantly evolving and adapting to its community, creating programs fit for all kinds of people allowing them the chance to experience the magic of dance. I’ve enjoyed my time as a Student Intern, working on projects such as “Seniors MOVE” and can’t wait to create my own program someday. Even in the hard times we face today, KDA is fully invested in the development of dance arts in Kern County. The impact my KDA experience provided did not only affect me but my community as well. – Jack Bellue, 2021 KDA Student Intern

 

 

 

 

Kern Dance Alliance has shown me how important the arts are to Kern County. The organization’s mission to foster the arts in our community is truly incredible. Having the opportunity to be involved as a student intern for KDA has given me the chance to participate in the many events Kern Dance Alliance has created for Kern County. From experiencing behind the scenes of “Books in Motion” to projects such as “Seniors MOVE”,  I love being apart of the positive impact Kern Dance Alliance is to our community. I am lucky and honored to have been apart of this memorable year with KDA. – Victoria Marchetti, 2021 KDA Student Intern

 

2020 Fox Marquee

KDA Impact Report No. 7

Kda 2020 yir home slider

IMPACT REPORT — December 2020

YEAR IN REVIEW

2020 started out BIG—a new year, a new decade, and another chance to serve.

While celebrating 5 years, KDA anticipated reaching the most people EVER through unique, in-person programs, and we planned on hosting our first gala at the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater.  

Instead, 2020 had other plans.

We launched our 2020 season on March 1.  On March 19, we were forced to suspend our spring programs.  The pandemic was affecting everyone worldwide, and Kern County was no different.

Like so many others, we were devastated to witness the impacts of COVID-19 on our community.  As the pandemic swept the world, we watched our 2020 season vanish before our eyes. 

But through the darkness, KDA fought to find light.  KDA agreed our role was to keep serving.  

One month after announcing the suspension of our programs, we launched a series of new programs aimed at offering support for artists and our greater community.

At the beginning of 2020, we set out to reach more people than we ever had.  To our surprise, we met that goal.  In 2019, we reached 12,333 community members.  In 2020, that number DOUBLED to 23,129. Harnessing the power of teleconferencing software allowed us to not only serve Kern County, but we found people participating in our programs from all over the world! 

In a year like no other, KDA chose to pivot.  And for that reason, our services have provided many with hope. KDA is optimistic that studios will be filled again, performances will thrill audiences, and community programs will be back to move us all!  

Of most importance is an acknowledgment of our donors, members, volunteers, supporters, and friends that have continued to GIVE to KDA in many ways.  We could not have lasted five years without you, nor make it through 2020 without your big-hearted ways! 

There have been a lot of lowlights in 2020, but we are choosing to focus on the highlights in hopes that 2021 will offer something brighter.  Step by step, we are in this together, and KDA is here to help!

In the spirit of dance. . . 

Andrea Hansen, M.F.A.

KDA President

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KDA launched our 2020 season on March 1, anticipating our largest impact to date via new and returning programs.  As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, KDA informed the community on March 19 with our decision to postpone our 2020 programs until further notice. With so much uncertainty of what the immediate future held we took the necessary precautions to ensure the health and safety of our community programs.  We closely considered the guidelines put forth by the Center for Disease Control, California Department of Public Health, and Kern County Public Health in making these decisions. We also took into consideration the fact that our programs are successful because of the partnerships we have formed with many organizations who must also follow the health and safety guidelines.  With the closures of hospitals, schools, and public venues, our programs could not run as scheduled. The following KDA 2020 programs were canceled due to the pandemic:

  • HealingMOTION, a dance/movement therapy program for cancer patients and survivors at Adventist Health AIS Cancer Center
  • MightyMOVERS a dance/movement therapy program for pediatrics patients at Dignity Health- Bakersfield Memorial Hospital
  • MemoryMOVES, a dance/movement therapy program for Alzheimer’s and dementia patients at the Alzheimer’s and Disease Association of Kern County (ADAKC)
  • Paso a Paso…Life is a Dance, a confidence building program for Latina high school students at Garces Memorial High School
  • Dancing With The Stars LIVE, the national tour at Mechanics Bank Arena
  • Doggie Dance Master Class + Performance at Temblor Brewing Company 
  • National Honors Society for Dance Arts Induction Luncheon for Kern County high school seniors at Stockdale Country Club
  • National Dance Day at California State University, Bakersfield
  • Ten Tiny Dances at the Greater Bakersfield Chamber Downtown Street Party
  • MOVE benefitting KDA at the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater

2020 Silver Lining 

KDA has been methodological in considering our approach to staying relevant during the pandemic.  Because we had to cancel many of our 2020 programs, we reevaluated how we could continue to serve Kern County.  

We were able to pivot several of our 2020 proposed programs that were meant for an in-person experience and, instead, were able to offer the same quality programs in a digital format.  SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS, ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY, Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY, and the JUST DANCE: Digital Dance Class Series were all successfully executed within a digital medium – something we never would have considered possible pre-pandemic. 

Additionally, we launched KDA Cares, a multi-faceted program aimed at providing support for Kern County dance and arts organizations. KDA truly cares about helping our Kern County community through these times and we are optimistic that studios will be filled again, performances will thrill audiences, and community programs will continue to move us all!  KDA Cares is focused on helping our community to thrive again. 

The pandemic has forced KDA to think outside the box and we are proud to offer a glimmer of hope that we can still serve even during the most difficult of times.  Those that have participated in our 2020 digital programs have offered the most heart-whelming gratitude and have stated that KDA has provided a degree of normalcy during an abnormal time. 

One month after KDA announced the postponement of our spring 2020 programs and due to the growing COVID-19 pandemic, KDA announced a new campaign, KDA Cares: COVID-19 Support, an initiative aimed at supporting Kern’s dance + arts communities, while providing Kern County with opportunities to move at home.  KDA played a role California’s creative economy by providing dance studios with resources to stay open and dance artists with compensation.  

Additionally, to keep in step with our mission, KDA rolled out a series of pop-up digital dance classes and webinars throughout the remainder of the COVID-19 quarantine. KDA is optimistic that studios will be filled again, performances will thrill audiences, and community programs will be back to move us all!  Step by step, we are in this together and KDA is here to help!

KDA provided several systems of support via a variety of resources for dance businesses and artists.  KDA offered funding via a grants + scholarships program, office hours with KDA Board Members for professional assistance, and studio support in the form of advertising and marketing aid. www.kerndance.org/RESOURCES 

KERN COUNTY DANCE STUDIOS ARE OPEN FOR BUSINESS!

KDA underwent a robust advertising campaign to acknowledge Kern County dance businesses providing classes throughout the COVID-19 quarantine. Dance studios pivoted away from traditional dance classes in studio and offered quality content online. KDA provided a listing of studios offering online classes on our website. www.kerndance.org/STUDIOS

Three Kern County dance organizations were awarded the KDA Cares Dance Organization Advertisement Grant – Bakersfield City Ballet, DANCENATION, and Dancer’s Turnout Academy.  In collaboration with KGET-Channel 17, KDA offered grants to create a commercial to air during 1-month of exclusive advertising.  A $5000 package that had the potential to reach over 150,000 households, Kern County dance studios were not charged for the commercial.  

JUST DANCE: Digital Pop-Up Series

29 Classes

11,156 Reached 

KDA was not able to offer in-person programs, but we were still on the MOVE!  We strive to help our community thrive through physical movement. Research also tells us that physical activity is good for mental health.  Where there is a need, we find a way!  We believed there was no better time to help people get back to their love for dance, learn how to dance for the first time, or dance in their living room just for fun. There is so much love for dance and movement in Kern County and we wanted to continue to reach those looking to move and groove from home. 

Sponsored by Valley Strong Credit Union, Kern County dance teachers from a variety of dance studios provided FREE LIVE classes for all ages and abilities via social media and teleconferencing software.  JUST DANCE was the chance for Kern County to move and groove from the comfort of their homes while helping to mitigate the feelings of isolation, stress, anxiety and depression felt from quarantine. KDA partnered with dance educators from across the country to teach 29 different classes. A full list of classes can be found on the KDA Cares website.  www.kerndance.org/CLASSES 

KDA CARES in the Press

NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance offering virtual dance classes as part of “KDA Cares: COVID-19 Support”

The Bakersfield Californian – Kern Dance Alliance launches campaign for free online dance classes, other services

ABC/KERO – KDA offering free online dance classes

FOX/KBAK – Kern Dance Alliance offering digital classes, grants, and more amid pandemic

Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY- Summer 2020

3,637 Books in Motion Views

900 Craft Kits Distributed 

332 FREE Books Distributed

43 Dancers

7 Library Distribution Centers 

4 Dance Organizations

Program Overview:

Books in Motion® is a FREE literacy program that encourages reading through dancing! Originally intended as an in-person experience, Kern Dance Alliance, Kern County Library, and Kern Literacy Council launched a digital version of our annual summer reading program Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY.  As COVID-19 limited opportunities for in-person experiences, the organizations pivoted to continue to bring dance and literacy to life through digital dance performances. 

Throughout the summer of 2020, various Books in Motion performances were released online to inspire children to read through dance!  Featuring beloved children’s books like 12 Dancing Princesses and Elephants Cannot Dance, Books in Motion videos featured a narration and performance of the book, as well as choreography children could learn to promote the book’s theme while keeping fit through movement and dance!  Additionally, the videos featured a craft session utilizing pipe cleaners to create dancers so that children could continue to role play at home.  Finally, children were able to pick up a FREE book and a craft kit from seven Kern County libraries via curbside pickup throughout the county.  Library branches included Arvin, Beale, Delano, Kern River Valley, Ridgecrest, Taft, and Tehachapi. 

Books in Motion is geared for students in the early literacy stages (K-3rd grade) and is designed to tap into their imagination and encourage them to read books. For some, reading is a concept that is too foreign to understand due to age and brain development. Books in Motion bypasses this intangible feeling by allowing children to see the magic of a book laid out on with real characters coming to life. Children do not have to read the words – they can read the dancers’ movements. By tapping into curiosity, children will be motivated to explore literacy, which leads them back to the written words that brought the book to life.

The 4th annual Books in Motion program was a collaboration with four contracted Kern County dance organizations: Bakersfield City Ballet, McLaughlin Dance Collective/Civic Dance Center, Polynesian Spice, and Spotlight Dance Academy.

Books in Motion was generously funded by Chevron, the Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Virginia and Alfred Harrell Foundation and Kern Family Health Care. 

Books in Motion Links (all videos can also be found at ww.kerndance.org/BIM):

Bakersfield City Ballet: 12 Dancing Princesses by Bridgette Berrager 

Polynesian Spice : Hilda Must Be Dancing by Karma Wilson

McLaughlin Dance Collective/Civic Dance Center: Saturday Night at the Dinosaur Stomp by Carol Diggery Shields

Spotlight Dance Academy: Elephants Cannot Dance by Mo Willems

Director Testimonials:

Books in Motion has reached over 6000 children and has given away nearly 2500 free books since our inception in 2016. This is program is an amazing collaborative effort with organizations that truly care about literacy in our community. We are so proud to continue to offer this program to Kern County children so that they may find a love for reading and dance! – Andrea Hansen, Kern Dance Alliance President 

One of the most valuable gifts you can give to your child is the ability to read. The ability to read unlocks the door to success in nearly all aspects of life and provides a lifetime of opportunities. Grow, dream, learn, laugh, experience, READ. -Sherry Wade, Kern County Library Regional Supervisor 

Reading aloud daily and the number of books in the home are two key factors in school success. Kern Literacy Council applauds all the partners in Books in Motion Digital for keeping kids reading and dancing this summer. -Laura Loller Wolf, Kern Literacy Council Executive Director

Program Accolades:

In a year where nearly everything had been unexpected, KDA was extremely proud of the work in pivoting Books in Motion from a live, in-person experience to a digitized platform.  

  • Books in Motion dance organizations stepped up to the challenge of creating dance for film! Most dancers/choreographers are used to creating dance for stage. Envisioning dance for film requires an extra skill set and we are so grateful to Bakersfield City Ballet, McLaughlin Dance Collective/Civic Dance Center, Polynesian Spice, and Spotlight Dance Academy for their creativity and work! Dance organizations not only created the dance, they enlisted production crews, editors and sound technicians to bring their books to life.
  • A large aspect of shifting Books in Motion to a digitized experience included gaining the approving of the rights from the publishers to record the narration of the book and make them available in a public domain.  The Kern County Library was instrumental in this process.  If we had not received the approval from the publishers, the digital version of Books in Motion would not have been possible. 
  • In 2019, Books in Motion served 1,442.  One year later, the digital platform allowed us to double the number of people we reached to 3,637!  Making Books in Motion available via Youtube, our website and social media accounts allowed us to reach a much larger number than we had anticipated.  Thats a lot of inspired reading through dance!
  • The Books in Motion results confirmed that children were yearning for summer activities that  were not only educational but also fun and physical.  Children and families reported that books, dancing and crafting were one of the best ways to spend their summer.  Additionally, we found that the Books in Motion curriculum to be successful with 75% reporting that the performances inspired them to read. 

Books in Motion Press:

Kern Dance Alliance was pleased to receive media coverage for our summer 2020 Books in Motion tour:

July 29, 2020 NBC/KGET Channel 17: Books in Motion program combines dance with reading

August 5, 2020 The Bakersfield Californian: Fancy footwork brings back Books in Motion with a digital spin

August 5, 2020 FOX/KBAK Channel 58: Kern Dance Alliance launches virtual literacy and dance program

Measurable Results:

The goals of Books in Motion include the following:

• Create motivation and interest in reading

• Create motivation and encouragement for movement through dance

• Cover Common Core State Standards in Reading Literature for grades K-3rd grade

• Instill a sense of connection and ownership of reading through listening and viewing of stories

• Support literacy development through unified thematic experience of art, dance, and story-telling

Due to the nature of the online experience, KDA did not receive as many completed assessments as the in-person program.  Access to the assessments were provided in each video, on the website and social media. While the collection of assessments were low, we still found the data to be exceptionally helpful. KDA received 8 completed assessments. 

Ages of children assessed:  2-10 years old

Assessment zip codes: 93301, 93306, 93309, 93312, 93311, 93555

Which performance did you see?

12 Dancing Princesses – Bakersfield City Ballet- 12.5%

Hilda Must Be Dancing – Polynesian Spice – 50%

Saturday Night at the Dinosaur Stomp – McLaughlin Dance Collective/Civic Dance Center – 12.5%

Elephants Can’t Dance – Spotlight Dance Academy – 25%

Did you know the story before you saw this performance?

Know it and love it – 12.5%

Know it – 12.5%

Know it and didn’t like it – 0%

Don’t know it – 75%

After seeing the performance do you feel like you know the story?

Know it and love it – 75%

Know it – 25%

Know it and didn’t like it – 0%

Don’t know it – 0%

Did today’s performance inspire you to read?

Yes – 75%

No – 0%

N/A- 25%

What was your favorite part of the event?

Book/Dance – 87.5%

Dance- 0%

Craft- 12.5%

What did you like most about the book, dance, or craft?

    • Getting to dance too! 
    • The creativity used to turn the book into a song!
    • the part where the squirrels ask to learn the elephant dance. All the dance moves.
    • Fun & colorful. Nice activity with movement. Cute craft!
    • Everything was great, but I really love crafting.
    • I liked how it incorporated a different style of dance. The story was a good one and the craft was easy enough to do.
    • The illustrations are beautiful!
    • happy kids dancing and having fun

Anything else you’d like to share with us?

    • Loved the creativity!!
    • AMAZING
    • Thanks for all your work! Enjoyed watching each of the shows!
    • Books, dancing and crafts are the best way to spend a summer day!,
    • I love you KDA!

The future of Books in Motion:

We learned a lot about shifting Books in Motion from in-person to a digital platform.  While the decision remains to be made regarding the platform at which Books in Motion will be offered, there is no doubt we will carry this program into it’s 5th year in 2021!

NATIONAL DANCE DAY- September 19, 2020

1,692 Reached 

11 Winners 

KDA hosted a National Dance Day celebration on September 19, 2020.  We had anticipated an exciting celebration similar to our 2019 event at California State University, Bakersfield  but 2020 turned out to be a little different.  While we did not host an in-person celebration, we DID host an all day online party filled with raffles, giveaways, and more!  

KDA raffled off 1-hour private lessons via our social media accounts with seven dance industry professionals:

Tiler Peck- New York City Ballet, Ballet @tilerpeck

Michelle Elkin- Musical Theater @michelleelkin 

Comfort Fedoke- So You Think You Can Dance, Hip Hop @comfortfedoke

Saleemah Knight- USC Kaufman School of Dance, Commercial Dance/Jazz @saleemaheknight

Joshua Blake Carter- Giordano Dance Chicago, Jazz @jbcchoreography

Chelsie Hightower- Dancing With The Stars, Ballroom @chelshightower

Sean Carmon- Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater/The Lion King National Tour, Modern @hookedonsean

Additionally, KDA raffled one dance photo shoot with Lisa W. Dance Photography, a free lesson at Dancer’s Turnout Academy and DANCENATION, and one grand prize winner won a private lesson with a dance professional of their choice, $150 towards a dance-related expense and a free KDA membership. 

KDA tracked the social media impressions and analytics with the following results:

Facebook:  

    • Average of 200 people saw our individual post on Facebook
    • Largest post had 992 people view with 36 shares

Instagram:

    • 22 new followers on the day of National Dance Day
    • 20,000 people saw our page 
    • 500 people viewed our stories with a 95% completion rate (meaning that they watched all of our stories and did not exit or skip them) 

Overall Demographics: 

    • 80% of people were from Bakersfield CA
    • 2.7% from LA 
    • 1.7% from Delano 
    • 1.3% from Tehachapi
    • 1.3% From New York

The 2020 KDA National Dance Day winners were:

Grand Prize- MAYA WRIGHT

Dance Photo Shoot- ISELA TREVINO

Dancers Turnout Academy Dance Lesson- DESI LORELLI

DANCENATION Dance Lesson-  ANGELIQUE DIAZ

Tiler Peck- JILLIAN WUERTZ

Michelle Elkin- SOFIA PASUMBAL

Comfort Fedoke – MAKENA WEIR

Saleemah Knight – MORGAN WEIR

Joshua Blake Carter- LILEE BROOME

Chelsie Hightower – STEPHANIE SHEFFIELD

Sean Carmon- DELANEY PARKER

SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS – Fall 2020 

Participants Enrolled in the Program: 15

Volunteers Assisted withe the Program: 5

KDA launched the 7th annual, FREE virtual version of our annual STEM program,  SHINE for Girls. SHINE is an innovative, curriculum-based after-school program that utilizes dance to teach math for middle school girls. As COVID-19 limited opportunities for in-person experiences, KDA pivoted to combine formal dance training with rigorous math instruction to improve girls’ math scores and spark their interest in STEM via a virtual platform.  

SHINE provided five sessions that combined math and dance to teach math competency on Saturdays for one hour. Following the one hour of instruction, SHINE girls had the opportunity to participate in 1 on 1 tutoring and mentoring sessions provided by the SHINE mentors.  SHINE was taught by Kern County high school and college female mentors that have been vetted by the SHINE program as outstanding tutors and mentors. The fall 2020 SHINE session also featured five women in STEM guest speakers, including Dr. Lynnette Zelezny – CSUB President, Alissa Carlson – KGET Chief Meteorologist, and Dawn James – Microsoft Corporation Americas Energy Lead, to inspire the next generation of women in STEM leaders. 

New in 2020, SHINE Mentors created videos to encourage girls to increase their math competency through dance.  Videos featured the lesson of the week paired with a 15-30 second dance explaining the lesson.  All videos can be viewed at www.kerndance.org/SHINE and are directly linked below.

SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS, Week One – EXPRESSIONS

SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS, Week Two – EQUATIONS

SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS, Week Three –  FRACTIONS

SHINE covers national math standards from 6th-8th grade, while improving overall girls’ confidence and attitudes towards math through a positive feedback loop, resulting in higher test scores and participation in classes. Short-term objectives of empowering 6th-8th grade female students with both the confidence and mathematical skills to embrace math leads into the long-term goal of creating a pipeline of next-generation leaders in STEM fields. 

Supporting local youth in education pursuits

Harnessing self-esteem and confidence on stage and in the classroom

Inspiring young women to pursue STEM fields

Nurturing a love of mathematics

Empowering women across America

An online application was open and required for all Kern County SHINE girls.  SHINE 2020 required students to have access to a computer/laptop and WiFi to connect to the virtual SHINE sessions. 

Now, more than ever, we believe our young girls need mentorship during distance learning and we welcome the opportunity to get Kern County girls up and dancing while they learn math! – Andrea Hansen, KDA President

SHINE was a 5 week program that ran on Saturdays from 10:00-11:30, September 19 – October 17, 2020. 

At the culmination of the program, the girls, mentors, and their families participated in a virtual graduation. Special guests included Bakersfield Mayor Karen Goh and Assemblyman Vince Fong as key note speakers. Girls were presented with graduation certificates, letters of encouragement from their mentors, a goodie bag, SHINE t-shirt, a commemorative certificate from the Mayor’s office. 

To date, KDA has graduated 163 girls from the KDA SHINE program. As the only branch in California and on the West Coast, KDA is proud to offer the SHINE program free of charge to all participants thanks to the generous funding of sponsors and private donations including Chevron, Stria, California Resource Corporation.

Results. . . 

Fall 2020: September 19- October 17

Fall served 15 girls and 5 mentors

Session results according to SHINE pre/posttest results:

Girls reported:

    • 100% of girls scored higher on their post-test problems after experiencing a SHINE lesson.
    • 100% of SHINE girls stated that the program helped improve their math skills and confidence.

Parents reported:

    • 100% of parents felt that SHINE had helped their girl improve in their math and confidence.

Parents also felt their girls had gained life skills.  The following are those kills ranked the highest: 

    1. Confidence 
    2. Encouraging their girls to try their best
    3. Math skills

Apart from measurable results, KDA has learned the greatest from SHINE girl + mentor testimonials at the culmination of each session: 

This is the BEST program I have ever been a part of!! I cant wait to come back again next time. -SHINE Girl 

SHINE for Girls is the program I wished I could’ve been a part of as a young teen! I remember being that age and not knowing what I really liked or how to feel comfortable in my own skin at school. Now we’ve created this program perfectly made to help girls deal with those exact feelings! Through mentorship and tutoring we show girls what it looks like to be a woman in STEM, and how they can get there too! We also use dance as a way to enforce their math skills and help build the confidence to put themselves out there and SHINE both on stage and in the classroom. – Jessica Reyes, SHINE Lead Mentor

ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY- Fall 2020

Participants Enrolled in the Program: 21

Dance Student Interns: 10

Kern Dance Alliance (KDA) and the League of Dreams (LoD) were proud to host the 4th annual ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY program this fall.  ADAPTIdance is Kern County’s ONLY adaptive dance program that serves people with disabilities, ages 5-22 and is produced in collaboration with the LoD, a nonprofit adaptive sports league.  ADAPTIdance participants learn inclusive and creative dances that are accessible and adaptable for movers with and without disabilities.

As COVID-19 limited opportunities for in-person experiences, KDA and LoD pivoted to continue to offer adaptive dance classes.  While ADAPTIdance was a virtual experience in 2020, the program continued to offer excellent instruction paired with meaningful mentor experiences. ADAPTIdance ran on Saturdays, October 3-31, with three different classes offered based upon age, ability, and experience. ADAPTIdance wias led by ADAPTIdance Lead Volunteer, Sakina Hansford who was trained by AXIS Dance Company, one of the nation’s most acclaimed performance ensembles of disabled and non-disabled dancers. In addition to Ms. Hansford, student dance interns from different Kern County dance studios assisted in teaching the classes, including KDA student interns- Myka Steele and Riley Thompson. 

Registered ADAPTIdancers were given a dance tool-kit the week prior to the start of the program that was full of props to assist the dance classes in creating a fun and engaging experience.  The five-week program hosted weekly classes that were goal-oriented and driven towards success.  At the culmination of the program, ADAPTIdancers were invited to a safe, socially-distant final performance featuring the ADAPTIdance student interns at the Riverwalk in Bakersfield.  The final performance was a chance for the entire ADAPTIdance program to come together, in person, while adhering to COVID-19 state and federal guidelines.   

The goals that were obtained during ADAPTIdance were 1.) To provide access to creative movement and dance training for all students regardless of disability, income level, or prior dance experience 2). To provide a forum for physical activity that is a model for kids of all abilities to collaborate as equals while developing skills in cooperation and a respect for self and others; 3.) To educate about disability, collaboration, and inclusion through the medium of dance and the presentation of positive role models and images of people with disabilities. 

KDA and LoD have worked really hard to make this year’s virtual version of ADAPTIdance to be MORE than just another Zoom session.  Classes have been meticulously thought out to promote not only dancing, but also social and emotional learning.  ADAPTIdance student interns are focused on creating meaningful relationships with our ADAPTIdancers and cannot wait to see them in weekly classes this October. -Andrea Hansen, KDA President

The League of Dreams is excited to once again partner with Kern Dance Alliance for ADAPTIdance. This program has been vital to our athletes over the years because of the uniqueness and the excitement of the program. Although ADAPTIdance will look different this year, we know that the outcomes will be great because of the time and efforts that have been thoroughly thought out by the League of Dreams, Kern Dance Alliance and our volunteer instructor and interns. We cannot wait for our dancers to feel the positive social, emotional and physical impacts of the virtual program.” – Jessica Mathews, League of Dreams Executive Director 

Registration was open and required for all ADAPTIdancers. New dancers had to provide a diagnosis confirmation or first page of an IEP and be between the ages of 5 and 22.  ADAPTIdance 2020 required students to have access to a computer/laptop and WiFi to connect to the virtual sessions. ADAPTIdance was made possible by grants from Chevron, Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Cynthia Lake Charitable Trust, and Valley Strong Credit Union.  

GIVE BIG KERN- May 5, 2019

Number of Donors: 18

KDA raised $1153 during GIVE BIG KERN on May 5, 2020!! KDA hosted a 24-hour social media Give Big Kern campaign to encourage donations. 

BRAVO to all that donated, liked, clicked, and shared – we are humbled by your bighearted ways!!

KDA CELEBRATES 5 YEARS

On May 1, KDA celebrated 5 years of moving Kern County.  We’ve watched over 50,000 community members participate in our programs since 2015 and we’ve never been MOVED more.  We anticipated hosting our first gala at the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater on November 13, but had to postpone the celebration due to the pandemic.  Nonetheless, we still found ways to celebrate five years throughout 2020 by giving back to Kern County in various ways via our programs and services.  We will continue to commemorate the last five years while creating fun celebrations until our sixth birthday on May 1, 2021! Stay tuned to 2021. . . 

KDA PSA (Public Service Announcement)

We created our first public service announcement with our friends at KGET! In honor of five years, it was time to go prime time.  We teamed up with several KDA Members, supporters, and friends to produce a 30 second commercial that continues to air on NBC/KGET-Channel 17.  Our message?  KEEP MOVING KERN COUNTY! We have found this message to be especially inspiring throughout the days of the pandemic and stay at home orders.  While we encourage movement and healthy living, now (more than ever) we encourage Kern County to keep moving ahead, even in the bumpiest of times.  

A very special thank you to all that helped to create our PSA, including. . . 

ADAPTIdance Dancer, Yasmin Sanchez

Adventist Health Bakersfield and Chief Nursing Officer Heather VanHousen

Bakersfield Mayor Karen Goh

Ballet Folklorico Ihtotiani de Shafter

Daniel Auyon-Carrillo

Grimmway Farms and Brett Grimm

KDA Board Member Tiara King and Caleigh King

KDA Board Member Valerie Hashim and Chuck Hashim

Kelly Hargraves

KGET Maddie Jenssen 

KGET Administrative + Production Staff/Crew

New York City Ballet Principal Dancer and Bakersfield-native, Tiler Peck

Poise Pilates Barre and Carly Jenkins

Sully’s and Tim Sullivan 

VIEW IT HERE (or down there): KDA Public Service Announcement

KDA on the HISTORIC FOX THEATER MARQUEE

We mentioned we anticipated hosting our first gala, MOVE, at the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater on November 13.  All systems were a go and we were working especially hard to secure donors, sponsorships and in-kind donations at the beginning of 2020.  We had our eyes set on raising the most we had ever raised in five years in one night, yet those plans were put on ice until it safe to proceed again in the future.

Nonetheless, we still found a chance to celebrate five years by putting our name in lights on the Historic Bakersfield Fox Theater marquee on the night MOVE was set to launch.

   

KDA 12 Days of Giving– December 1-12

KDA embarked upon twelve days of gift giving to keep Kern County active and motivated during the holiday season.  The KDA 12 Days of Giving was also a fundraising campaign that KDA hoped would MOVE the community to give back as well!

KDA made a list and checked it twice, we were giving gifts of hope, and it sure felt nice! Inspired by the 12 Days of Christmas,  KDA announced a new gift giveaway for twelve days.  Beginning December 1st, gift giveaways ranged from personal massager kits, portable dance barres, Hydroflasks, dance shoes, Starbucks gift cards, and private lesson with Kern County dance educators.  

The KDA 12 Days of Giving is an initiative aimed at giving back to Kern County. It is our goal that the 12 days of gift giveaways will inspire dancers + artists to stay motivated to keep training, while encouraging the greater Kern County community to keep MOVING!” – Andrea Hansen, KDA President

To enter to win a gift from the KDA 12 Days of Giving, people had to visit the KDA Instagram and Facebook accounts.  A new gift was announced daily via our social media handles.  To be entered to win the gift, participants had to submit their name in the caption of the post or email info@kerndance.org with their name and the title of the gift they wished to win.  Winners were announced after the 12 Days of Giving campaign ended on December 12. 

The KDA 12 Days of Giving also doubled as a fundraising campaign for KDA.  We hoped to raise $12,000 in 12 days. As a non profit dance advocacy organization supporting dance + the arts in Kern County, we have some big plans, and they need financial support to keep moving Kern County. KDA is all-volunteer organization, where every dollar raised is spent directly on our programs and services. Donations support KDA programs that use dance to teach math and literacy, improve life with dementia, encourage respite from the difficult effects of cancer, aid with disabilities, inspire impoverished communities, and motivate dancers to dream big. www.kerndance.org/GIVE. 

For it is in giving that we receive.” – St. Francis of Assisi

Results. . . 

KDA engaged in an aggressive social media and email campaign to not only give away gifts for 12 days, but also to raise $12,000 in 12 days.  KDA Board Member, Sarah Hadley, created her own rendition of the “12 Days of Christmas” by singing the “KDA 12 Days of Giving” and KDA Board Members and Student Interns each made their own 30 second video expressing their reasons to encourage giving to KDA!

The following gifts were given away to 82 winners:

    • One dance photoshoot 
    • Two Pivo cameras 
    • Three Poise Pilates Barre private lessons 
    • Four pairs of dance shoes 
    • Five portable barres 
    • Six massager kits 
    • Seven $20 Discount Dance gift cards
    • Eight $10 Starbucks gift cards
    • Nine Hydroflasks 
    • Ten foam rollers 
    • Eleven-person social media branding package 
    • Twelve private lessons 

Over 40 donated to our fundraiser of raising $12,000 in 12 days.  We are so thankful to have raised over $4000 that will go towards our 2021 season!!

KDA Community Grants + Scholarship Program

KDA was pleased to award the following grants and scholarships to deserving Kern County dance artists and organizations:

KDA Grant:

Bakersfield City Ballet: The Nutcracker Tea

KDA Scholarship:

Noor Elkereamy: American Ballet Theater Summer Intensive 

Beautiful Bakersfield Awards- October 24, 2020

KDA was nominated for a fourth Beautiful Bakersfield Awards in the category of Arts and Culture.  Additionally, KDA President, Andrea Hansen, was nominated in the Humanitarian- Individual category.  While KDA, nor Andrea Hansen, received an award, the recognition as a contender in the category was truly an honor! 

 

KDA Receives 1st Kern County Black Chamber of Commerce Grant

KDA was honored to receive our first Kern County Black Chamber of Commerce grant in recognition of our work in creating diversity, equity, and inclusion in dance + the arts in Kern County.  

KDA is deeply aware of the pain caused by racism. We recognize that dance has frequently not been a welcoming or even safe place for BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color).  In fact, dance has been historically racist in many explicit ways, and the legacy of that must be fought every day. KDA supports our Black dance community and since our launch in 2015, our activism has been rooted in our actions displayed through our programs and services.  Racism has no place in dance, and we will continue to work to bring the joy of movement to every part of our beautifully diverse community.

KDA strives for diversity and, as a result, hosts a variety of annual programs that are focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion.  KDA worked with Erica Edwards, an accomplished consultant and public speaker who champions change to advance the art of dance, on May 4 and 11 by hosting a 2-part series, “Discussing Diversity in Dance”.  As a result of the success of both sessions, KDA was honored to bring Erica back for a more focused topic, “Defining an Anti-Racist Learning Environment” on June 12.  Participants from the sessions were  unanimous in agreement that they would like to partake in more discussions hosted by Erica Edwards.  As a result, KDA is working to provide a multi-series discussion for our community in 2021.

Kern Dance Alliance is an amazing non profit organization that impacts our community in so many positive ways. I have had the opportunity to be student intern this past year and it has been incredible even throughout our circumstances we are in. KDA still made the most out of their programs even when they were done virtually. I got the chance to help with Adaptidance and it still was very successful. I am so glad that even in times like right now we were still able to pull through and make it another successful year of impacting our community through dance. It was truly a memorable year. – Myka Steele, 2020 KDA Student Intern

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KDA Impact Report No. 6

IMPACT REPORT — December 2019

YEAR IN REVIEW
In 2019, KDA reached over 12,000 community members through our programs and services! We launched Kern County’s FIRST dance/movement therapy program for cancer patients and survivors and received a nomination for a THIRD Beautiful Bakersfield Award. We presented over 16 dance events and provided grants and scholarships to deserving dancers and organizations. KDA was awarded our FIRST California Arts Council grant, we were highlighted in 31 news and radio segments and featured on TWO magazine covers. We invite you to read our 2019 Year In Review. . . a wrap up of our programs and partnerships.

KDA is busy preparing for the launch of our 2020 season! Are you interested in receiving the 2020 KDA Season Brochure? sign up HERE!

https://youtu.be/wFJURFLiTTw

KDA 2019 Centerpiece Programs

MemoryMOVES: DANCE + THERAPY- Spring 2019

Program Dates: April 3 – May 22, 2019 (8 weeks)
Location: Alzheimer’s Disease Association of Kern County (ADAKC) 

Number of Participants in Program: 22-34 

Program Overview: 

MEMORY Moves was an 8-week Dance Therapy program working with the Alzheimers and Dementia population at ADAKC. The program utilized a Dance/Movement Therapist (DMT) to work with a group of between 22-34 participants. Groups met on Wednesday mornings from 10:00-11:00am. Groups integrated all ADAKC clients in one large group, with a range in level of functioning and range of motion. 

MemoryMOVES was generously funded by Chevron and the  Robert Grimm Family Foundation. 

Group Structure: 

All MEMORY Moves groups began with the therapist orienting the group to time and place (i.e. “today is Wednesday, April 3, at 10:00am,”) and a check-in question to assess clients’ mood on that particular day and time. Following this, the therapist led the group in a warm up that remained the same over the 8 week program, addressing mobility and helping to bring clients into the present moment through use of rhythm and repetition. This was followed by small group work, during which participants divided into groups of 5-7 to address interaction. Other activities included movement sequencing, during which clients spontaneously came up with dance movements that were put together in a “dance” which was repeated several times to address the goal of short-term memory. Props, such as scarves and bean bags, were also used in all groups, in order to help orient clients to the physical environment through use of tactile props. 

Data: 

Data was collected at two points over the course of 8 weeks, at week 4 and week 8. Questionnaires measuring affect, participation, and changes in client behavior during the course of the group were completed by staff for each participant in the group. 

Results ver 8 weeks:

Week 4 Week 8 
Displayed brighter affect: 87.5% of clients Displayed brighter affect: 95% of clients
Increased Participation: 70.8% of clients Increased Participation: 81.8% of clients
Displayed Behavior Different from “Baseline: 45.8% of clients Displayed Behavior Different from “Baseline: 1% of clients

Behavior changes from “baseline,” as reported by staff: 

  • “Calmed down” 
  • “Good participation” 
  • “Participation improved” 
  • “More interactive” 
  • “Very active and interested” 
  • “Tried to participate with injury to arm” 
  • “Client participated” 
  • “Was happier than usual”  
  • “Participant usually wanders but stayed in the circle.” 
  • “Participated more than usual”

Clients Reported… 

Several clients said “thank you” after group and expressed the importance of moving and dancing. 

Anecdotes of Note:

  • After one group, a client followed the therapist to the door as she was leaving. When the therapist turned around, the client stated “I just wanted to say thank you. The last song you played took me back 50 years and I had tears in my eyes…good tears!” 
  • After one group, staff reported that a client who normally roams around the room was able to sit still throughout group. 

HealingMOTION: DANCE + THERAPY – Spring 2019

Program Dates: April 3 – May 22, 2019 (8 weeks)

Location: AIS Cancer Center, Adventist Health
Participants Enrolled in Program: 4 

Program Overview: 

HealingMOTION was an 8-week pilot dance therapy program working with cancer patients and survivors. The program utilized a Dance/Movement Therapist (DMT) to work with 4 enrolled participants split into two separate groups. Groups met on Wednesday afternoons from either 2:30-3:30pm (breast cancer patients/survivors) or 3:45-4:45pm (other forms of cancer.) Groups were formed via advertising and outreach to the community, and patients and survivors were able to register themselves for groups. 

Group Structure: 

Each group began with a check-in to assess how individuals were feeling each particular week. This was followed by a therapist-led, choreographed warm-up to help participants breathe and ground themselves. As groups were small, the direction of the group was collectively determined by the therapist and participants. Goals of stress-reduction, increased energy and happiness were determined, and the groups took on the structure of learning and choreographing up-beat choreography that served to reduce anxiety and raise energy and happiness. 

Data Collection: 

Data was collected via self-report before and after each group for each participant. Self-reports measured levels of physical pain, depression, anxiety, and feelings of self-worth using likert scales. The final question asked “In a word, how do you feel right now?” 

A pre and post-session evaluation counts as one data point. Nineteen (19) data points were collected from five (5) participants over 8 weeks. Participants were present at 12/16 possible group sessions (2 each week). 

Results over eight weeks: 

Physical Pain:
– Pain was reported 13/19 times total at levels above 0 (68% of the time.) Out of 13 instances of reported pain: 

Pain Decreased Pain Remained the Same Pain Increased
23% of the time 62% of the time 15% of the time

Depression: 

  • Depression was reported 11/19 times total at levels above 0 (57.8% of the time) Out of 11 instances of reported depression: 
Depression Decreased Depression Remained the Same Depression Increased
64% of the time 29% of the time .09% of the time

Anxiety: 

  • Anxiety was reported 15/19 times total at levels above 0 (79% of the time) Out of 15 instances of reported anxiety: 
Anxiety Decreased Anxiety Remained the Same Anxiety Increased
80% of the time 6.6% of the time 13% of the time

Self-Worth :
– Feelings of self-worth were reported 19/19 times total at levels above 0 (100% of the time.) Out of 19 instances of reported self-worth:

Self-Worth Increased Self-Worth Remained the Same Self-Worth Decreased
53% of the time 42% of the time 5% of the time

“In a word, how do you feel right now?” 

Before Session After Session
Excited Relaxed
Pretty good Pumped
A bit tired Energetic
Ok A lot better
Tired Better than when I first got here
More energetic Great
Better than yesterday Energized – feel good! Thank you
Overwhelmed Lighter
Optimistic Grateful
Grateful Excited
Grateful Lighter
Tired Appreciative
Great Relaxed
Tired Relaxed
Good Happy
Tired Happy
Relaxed, happy Great
Tired Good
Tired Relaxed

Anecdotes: 

  • Overall, participants expressed gratitude at the opportunity to dance together. On more than one occasion, participants chose to stay for both sessions. 
  • One participant expressed that she hoped the “small numbers” of participants would not deter organizers from continuing the program. 
  • Participants appreciated the chance to be physically active, as all of them had led active lives prior to their cancer diagnosis, and felt it was something they had lost in their lives.
https://youtu.be/LSe2hlgcjGk

National Honors Society for Dance Arts Induction Ceremony- April 28, 2019

KDA celebrated our second class and third inductee into the National Honor Society for Dance Arts – NHSDA / Kern Dance Alliance Secondary Chapter. Congratulations to Stockdale High School Senior, Hannah Judd, on her acceptance into the USA’s most prestigious honors society for dancers who excel in artistry, leadership, and academic achievements.  Miss Judd received her honors cord and pin, as well as a NHSDA plaque during the NHSDA luncheon at Stockdale Country Club on April 28, 2019. 

KDA continues to accept nomination applications and looks forward to future inductions

Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY- June 1-August 1, 2019

Attendance: 1,442 Children + Families

538 FREE Books Provided

62 Dancers

21 Performances

14 Locations

7 Dance Organizations

Program Overview:

Books In Motion: Dance + Literacy Program is a FREE children’s summer literacy program that links dance and reading by focusing on Common Core Standards for Reading Literature. Families had the opportunity to visit Kern County Library branches to watch a dance performance based upon a well-known children’s book. Children also learned choreography, created a craft that coincides with the book’s theme, and took a FREE book home. Between June 8-August 1, families could watch 21 performances by seven different dance studios at 14 Kern County library branches.

The 3rd annual Books in Motion program was a collaboration with seven contracted Kern County dance studios: Bakersfield City Ballet, Dancer’s Turnout Academy of Dance Downtown Dance Arts Center Mallory Academy of Dance Heather Benes + Mojave Elementary School, Spotlight Dance Academy, and Palmdale Junior Ballet is now Tri Valley Arts Theatre Dance.

In collaboration with Kern Literacy Council and Kern County Library, Books in Motion was generously funded by the California Arts Council, Arts Council of Kern, Chevron, Stria, the Robert Grimm Family Foundation and Kern Family Health Care.

Program Accolades:

Books in Motion En Español

2019 marked the first year Books in Motion featured an entire performance in Spanish.  Spotlight Dance Academy toured Color Dance to the Lamont Library and provided the participants with an entire Spanish-speaking experience!

Repeat Attendance 

KDA was thrilled to see many community members attend a variety of performances.  Children and their families were delighted to not only attend multiple performances of the same book, they also attended various performances of the other books on tour. 

News Reports

Kern Dance Alliance was pleased to receive media coverage for our summer 2019 Books in Motion tour:

Bakersfield Californian: Books in Motion dance literacy program returns to libraries in June

NBC/KGET :  Books to come to life at Kern County Libraries for the month of June

ABC/KERO: Books in Motion at Kern County Libraries

ABC/KERO: Books in Motion at Kern County Libraries

NBC/KGET: Kern Dance Alliance receives state arts grant

California Arts Council Grant

Kern Dance Alliance received a grant award from the California Arts Council in support of the 3rd annual Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY program. 

The California Arts Council announced a grant award of $13,440 to KDA as part of its Youth Arts Action program. This is the first time KDA has been awarded a grant from California Arts Council since KDA launched in 2015.

Youth Arts Action supports projects for youth from infancy through age 24 that operate outside of school time, in artistic venues and community settings as well as on school sites. This program encourages relevant, dynamic, and innovative community building and learning through youth-focused arts and culture projects. 

“KDA is honored to be a recipient of a California Arts Council grant,” said Andrea Hansen, KDA President. “We are incredibly proud of our efforts to make dance and the arts more accessible in in our community and to be recognized as California artists creating impactful programs in Kern County.”

KDA is one of 244 grantees chosen for the Youth Arts Action program. The award was featured as part of a larger announcement from the California Arts Council, with grant funds totaling a projected $24,508,541 for 2018-19, the highest investment in statewide arts programming since the 2000-01 fiscal year.

Assemblyman Vince Fong was instrumental in assisting KDA with our grant process. “All California Arts Council grant submissions must demonstrate support. KDA is fortunate to have the support of our local legislators including Assemblyman Fong who wrote a letter of support on behalf of KDA and Books in Motion.” said Andrea Hansen. 

“Arts and culture are inextricably linked to our humanity,” said Nashormeh Lindo, California Arts Council Chair. “They serve as a universal touchpoint for understanding and addressing our societal issues—dismantling inequity, healing trauma, reframing justice, inspiring truth and shaping futures. The Council is humbled to support the vital work of Kern Dance Alliance and its passionate efforts to make a better California for us all.”

The mission of the California Arts Council, a state agency, is to advance California through the arts and creativity. The Council is committed to building public will and resources for the arts; fostering accessible arts initiatives that reflect contributions from all of California’s diverse populations; serving as a thought leader and champion for the arts; and providing effective and relevant programs and services.

Kern County Museum, Endeavor Elementary School and Dr. Douglas Fletcher Elementary School

KDA received requests for additional Books in Motion performances beyond the official summer tour schedule.  Additional Books in Motion performances were booked at the Endeavor Elementary Summer School, during the children’s camp at Kern County Museum, and during Family Ready Night at Dr. Douglas Fletcher Elementary School.

BOOKS IN MOTION PERFORMANCES: 

June 8 @ 10:45 am, Rosamond Branch, “Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card” – Tri Valley Arts Ballet Academy

June 8 @ 1:15 pm, California City Branch, “Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card” – Tri Valley Arts Ballet Academy

June 11 @ 1:00 pm, Northeast Branch, “Color Dance” – Spotlight Dance Academy

June 12 @ 11:00 am, Mojave Branch, “Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card” – Tri Valley Arts Ballet Academy

June 12 @ 12:30 pm, Lamont Branch, “Color Dance” – Spotlight Dance Academy (en español)

June 12 @ 1:00 pm, Southwest Branch, “Goldilocks and the Three Bears”- Dancer’s Turnout Academy

June 13 @  3 :00 pm, Beale Branch, “Color Dance” – Spotlight Dance Academy

June 14 @ 12:30 pm, Beale Branch, “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” – Dancer’s Turnout Academy

June 17 @ 1:00 pm, Mojave Branch, “Stone Soup” – Heather Benes + Mojave Elementary School

June 19 @ 11:00 am, Baker Branch, “Color Dance” – Spotlight Dance Academy

June 19 @ 3:00 pm, Delano Branch, “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” – Dancer’s Turnout Academy

June 28 @ 12:30 pm, Wilson Branch, “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” – Dancer’s Turnout Academy

June 28 @ 3:00 pm, Holloway Gonzales Branch, “12 Dancing Princesses” – Downtown Dance Arts

July 1 @ 12:00 pm, Beale Branch, “12 Dancing Princesses” – Downtown Dance Arts

July 5 @ 11:45 am, Beale Branch, “Goldilocks and the Three Bears” – Dancer’s Turnout Academy

July 8 @ 3:00 pm, Arvin Branch, “Giraffes Can’t Dance” – Mallory Academy of Dance

July 11 @ 12:00 pm, Northeast Branch, “12 Dancing Princesses” – Downtown Dance Arts

July 17 @ 1:00 pm, Southwest Branch, “Giraffes Can’t Dance” – Mallory Academy of Dance

July 18  @ 1:30 pm, Southwest Branch,  “12 Dancing Princesses”- Bakersfield City Ballet

July 23 @ 11:45 am, Beale Branch, “12 Dancing Princesses” – Bakersfield City Ballet

August 1 @ 11:00 am, KERN COUNTY MUSEUM, “12 Dancing Princesses” – Bakersfield City Ballet

August 1 @ 1:00 pm, Beale Branch, Giraffes Can’t Dance” – Mallory Academy of Dance

NUMBERS SERVED:

1,442 Children + Families Reached

538 FREE Books Provided

62 Dancers

21 Performances

14 Locations

7 Dance Organizations

ATTENDANCE by BOOK:

Color Dance –  105

Giraffes Cant Dance –  208

12 Dancing Princesses – 575

Stone Soup –  26

Goldilocks and the Three Bears –  427

Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card –  61

ATTENDANCE by LOCATION:

Rosamond- 19

California City – 17

Northeast – 26

Lamont – 5 (FREE LUNCH PROGRAM)

Mojave – 25

Southwest – 90

Beale – 37

Beale – 126 (FREE LUNCH PROGRAM)

Mojave – 26

Baker – 37

Wilson – 45 (FREE LUNCH PROGRAM)

Holloway Gonzales – 72

Beale – 70 (FREE LUNCH PROGRAM)

Beale – 93

Arvin – 20

Northeast – 70 (FREE LUNCH PROGRAM)

Southwest – 105 

Southwest – 163

Beale – 151 (FREE LUNCH PROGRAM)

KCM – 40

Beale – 83

MEASURABLE RESULTS:

The goals ofBooks in Motion include the following:

• Create motivation and interest in reading

• Create motivation and encouragement for movement through dance

• Cover Common Core State Standards in Reading Literature for grades K-3rd grade

• Instill a sense of connection and ownership of reading through listening and viewing of stories

• Support literacy development through unified thematic experience of art, dance, and story-telling

To achieve the Books in Motion goals, assessments were created based upon the following Common Core Standards for Reading Literature, K-3rd grade for Color Dance, 12 Dancing Princesses, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Stone Soup, Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card, Giraffe’s Can’t Dance:

Kindergarten RL.K.1-RL.K.7 Ask and answer questions about key details in a text; retell familiar stories; identify characters, settings, and major events in a story; describe the relationship between illustrations and the story in which they appear.

1st Grade RL.1.1-1.7 Ask and answer questions about key details in a text; retell stories and demonstrate understanding of their central message; describe characters, settings, and major events in a story; identify words and phrases in stories or poems that appeal to the senses; use illustrations and details in a story to describe its characters, setting, or events.

2nd Grade RL.2.1-2.7 Ask questions as who, what, where, when, why, and how to demonstrate understanding of key details in a text; recount stories and determine their central message, lesson, or moral; describe how characters in a story respond to major events and challenges; describe how words supply rhythm and meaning in a story, poem, or song; use information gained from the illustrations and words to demonstrate understanding of its characters, setting, or plot. 

3rd RL.3.1 Ask questions to demonstrate understanding of a text, referring explicitly to the text as the basis for the answers; recount stories, including fables, folktales, and myths from diverse cultures; determine the central message and explain how it is conveyed through key details in the text; describe characters in a story and explain how their actions contribute to the sequence of events; explain how specific aspects of a text’s illustrations contribute to what is conveyed by the words in a story. 

KDA received 522 English completed assessments. 

KDA received 19 Spanish completed assessments.

Would you attend Books in Motion again?

95% of Books in Motion participants indicated they would attend a future Books in Motion performance. 

Have you read this book before?

K-1st Grade Color Dance –  0 out of 27 participants or 0% had heard Color Dance before

K-1st Grade Giraffes Cant Dance – 32 out of 70 or 46% had heard Giraffes Cant Dance before

K-1st Grade 12 Dancing Princesses – 24 out of 129 or 19% had heard 12 Dancing Princesses before

K-1st Grade Stone Soup – 2 out of 3 or 67% had heard Stone Soup before

K-1st Grade Goldilocks and the Three Bears –  84 out of 98 or 86% had heard Goldilocks and the Three Bears before

K-1st Grade Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card –  1 out of 9 or 11% had heard Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card

2nd—3rd Grade Color Dance  – 4 out of 25 participants or 16% had heard Color Dance before

2nd—3rd Grade Giraffes Cant Dance – 15 out of 34 or 44% had head Giraffes Cant Dance before

2nd—3rd Grade 12 Dancing Princesses – 15 out of 55 or 27% had heard 12 Dancing Princesses before

2nd—3rd Grade Stone Soup – 3 out of 7 or 43% had heard Stone Soup before 

2nd—3rd Grade Goldilocks and the Three Bears – 64 out of 75 or 85% had heard Goldilocks and the Three Bears before

2nd—3rd Grade Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card –  0 out 1 or 0% had heard Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card before

Comprehension questions answered correctly:

K-1st Grade Color Dance – 17 out of 27 or 63% answered comprehension questions correctly

K-1st Grade Giraffes Cant Dance – 34 out of 70 or 49% answered comprehension questions correctly

K-1st Grade 12 Dancing Princesses – 109 out of 129 or 84% answered comprehension questions correctly

K-1st Grade Stone Soup – 3 out of 3 or 100% answered comprehension questions correctly

K-1st Grade Goldilocks and the Three Bears – 91 out of 98 or 93% answered comprehension questions correctly

K-1st Grade Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card – 9 out of 9 or 100% answered comprehension questions correctly

2nd—3rd Grade Color Dance – 6 out of 25 or 24% answered comprehension questions correctly

2nd—3rd Grade Giraffes Cant Dance – 25 out of 34 or 74 answered comprehension questions correctly

2nd—3rd Grade 12 Dancing Princesses – 21 out of 55 or 38% answered comprehension questions correctly

2nd—3rd Grade Stone Soup – 7 out of 7 or 100% answered comprehension questions correctly

2nd—3rd Grade Goldilocks and the Three Bears – 71 out of 75 or 95% answered comprehension questions correctly

2nd—3rd Grade Amelia Bedelia’s First Library Card – 1 out of 1 or 100% answered comprehension questions correctly

*k-1st grade assessment questions were multiple choice

*2-3rd grade assessment questions were fill in the blank

https://youtu.be/WdXFY59HB0I

NATIONAL DANCE DAY- September 21, 2019

Attendance: 157 ticket buyers.  421/524 tickets sold. 

KDA hosted Kern County’s second annual National Dance Day celebration on September 21 at CSUB.  A collaboration with the CSUB Dance Team, the day lasted 9 hours with 18 dance classes at $2 a class.  Classes were taught by Kern County dance educators and the classes ranged from Zumba, Contemporary, Toddler Tap, Yoga for Dancers, Foxtrot, Dance for Disabilities and many more!  All classes were very full, with several of the classes selling out prior to the event.  National Dance Day received excellent coverage from the press, with KDA social media experiencing over 30,000 hits that weekend.  NDD had 157 ticket buyers with 421/524 tickets sold. 

CSUB President, Dr. Lynnette Zelezny, Mayor Karen Goh, and Assemblyman Vince Fong all participated in the day’s activities. 

As a special treat, Nigel Lythgoe (So You Think You Can Dance/Dancing WIth The Stars) sent a personal celebration video to KDA, wishing all a Happy National Dance Day!  

It was a terrific celebration of dance and we look forward to 2020.

https://youtu.be/MuMPPv_HJZA
https://youtu.be/0cjZXZPNfA0

SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS – Fall 2019

Participants Enrolled in the Program: 23

Volunteers Assisted withe the Program: 13

SHINE for Girls (SHINE) provides innovative, curriculum-based after-school programming for middle school girls. Utilizing kinesthetic learning, SHINE combines formal dance training with rigorous math instruction to improve girls’ math scores and spark their interest in STEM. SHINE covers national math standards from 6-8th grade, while improving overall girls’ confidence and attitudes towards math, resulting in higher test scores and participation in classes.

To date, Kern Dance Alliance has graduated a total of 148 SHINE Girls and Mentors.  As the only branch in California and on the West Coast, KDA is proud to offer the SHINE program free of charge to all participants thanks to the generous funding of sponsors and private donations including Chevron, Junior League of Bakersfield, The Women’s and Girls’ Fund of Kern County/Kern Community Foundation, Cynthia Lake Charitable Trust, Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Bakersfield Californian Foundation, Sean and Jennifer Maguire, and Garces Memorial High School. 

SHINE is an 8 week program that ran on Saturdays from 10:00-12:30, September 7 – October 26, 2019. 

Fall 2019 marked the second session where two SHINE Mentors were previously SHINE girls- proving the pipeline of the program.  Through the continuity of the program and the 3-levels of mentorship, girls can enter the program in middle-school and stay in the SHINE pipeline all the way through their first jobs in STEM by becoming a student, mentor, coordinator, and finally a member of the national network of empowered women. By creating a pipeline of women in STEM across the country, SHINE hopes to increase the number of women in STEM by 1% in the next decade.

The SHINE graduation key note speaker was California State University Bakersfield President, Dr. Lynnette Zelezny. Dr. Zelezny delighted attendees with an inspiration speech about how math and dance impacted her life at the young age of 9.  She detailed how math has been central to her career and how it has empowered her as a woman in STEM.  Dr. Zelenzy went the extra mile by joining the SHINE girls in a Zumba dance and encouraged the girls to reach for the stars! 

Results…

Fall 2019: September 7-October 26

Fall served 23 girls and 13 mentors

Session results according to SHINE pre/posttest results:

Girls reported:

  • 100% loved working with their mentor
  • 84% agreed SHINE improved their dance skills
  • 79% of girls feel more confident both IN and OUT of math class
  • 68% of girls math skills were improved

Parents reported:

  • 90% of parents felt that SHINE had helped their girl improve in their math and confidence

Parents also felt their girls had gained life skills.  The following are those kills ranked the highest: 

  1. Confidence 
  2. 2. Cooperation/Teamwork 
  3. 3. Dedication 
  4. 4. Encouraging their girls to try their best

Apart from measurable results, KDA has learned the greatest from SHINE girl + mentor testimonials at the culmination of each session:  

This is my second year being a SHINE mentor and I love being a part of this wonderful organization. It is such a unique way of motivating young girls through math and dance. I had the opportunity to see the girls grow and feel confident in their math and social skills. -Angie Cruz, Mentor

Being a SHINE Mentor has been an extremely impactful and wonderful experience for me. Throughout the program I had the opportunity to connect with and really get to know the girls, and it was truly amazing to watch them grow more comfortable with themselves and others. For being someone who is pretty shy around people I do not know, SHINE helped me to face my fear of not knowing what to say in conversations, and to just relax and know it will all work out. I have always loved dancing and STEM, and this opportunity to try my hand at teaching both has given me an invaluable, more in-depth perspective into both. I have truly loved my time as a mentor for SHINE! -Hailey Throll, Mentor

I first heard about Shine through my mom who is friends with Andrea. I was very skeptical about how well this would work, and about being in charge of a group of girls that weren’t that much younger than me. When I got here on my first day I was seeing the faces of the girls that were shy and silently struggling with a wide variety of things. As the program went on I felt a sisterly bond with these girls who made me smile and laugh and made me look foreword to waking up early on a Saturday. I have seen many girls go through this program and I remember their faces and names and stories, and they continue to make me smile. That is what this program is about and that is our goal, that aside from improving math skills and making new friends, the girls walk away knowing they made someone smile. Shine is a program that has continually inspired me, but more than that the Shine girls are the ones who inspire me the most. – 

Francesca Beccari, Mentor

I am so grateful that I was able to be part of a program like SHINE where we get to help empower girls and learn about ourselves along the way. Service in general makes you feel some type of special way and it was so great to be able to use my knowledge/experience of math and dance to help young girls. I really loved it and never had a reason to complain when it came to waking up early on Saturday because I was able to some of my favorite things-math, exercise, and spending time with great people. 

The young women I worked with taught me so much. They taught me about patience, perseverance, how to tend to different personalities, and they even showed me some of the things or ways that I taught that could be improved. I feel that I was able to have a bond with them and at the beginning of each tutoring session I tried to ask a “Question of the Week” that didn’t pertain to math or dance. They would be questions like “What is your favorite movie?” or “What is your favorite type of music or song this week?” I tried to remember their answers to get a better understanding of who they are and things they like. It always makes me feel good when people remember small details or hobbies that I mentioned to them and so I tried to implement something similar in my groups. Throughout the rest of the day or before SHINE started I would try and have conversations with my girls or with other SHINE girls so that they knew I took a genuine interest in their lives/experience at SHINE. 

I think I will always be passionate about dance, math, and STEM in general but I definitely feel that I was able to see how the two could be combined and that was really great and something I wish I had growing up. As someone choosing to pursue graduate studies, I think SHINE has peaked my interest in the integration of the arts and STEM and in fact I may explore some research about how we can think of the arts as a way to learn math and how we can use math to learn more about the arts. 

I personally loved my volunteer work with SHINE and would love to do it again if provided with the opportunity but I don’t think I will be here in Bakersfield next year. I think one thing that could change would be to have mentors meet before or after each SHINE session to discuss what went well/what could be improved and maybe we could go over specific responsibilities (which mentors would be in which group?). There were some days where a mentor needed help because they were confused about how to implement an activity or discussion and they may have felt more confident with some discussion before the activity. Overall, I had a really amazing experience and I am excited to tell more people about this program.  -Brianna Wright, Mentor

ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY- Fall 2019

Participants Enrolled in the Program: 52

Volunteers Assisted withe the Program: 25

Dance Student Interns: 11

KDA and the League of Dreams offered the 3rd annual ADAPTidance program, an adaptive dance experience for people with physical and developmental disabilities, on Saturdays- October 5-November 9, 2019. ADAPTIdance participants learned inclusive, creative dance that is accessible and adaptable for movers with and without physical and developmental disabilities. The program culminated with a performance at the historic Bakersfield Fox Theater on November 13. 

ADAPTIdance was taught by dance educator, Sakina Hansford, who was trained by the world’s leading dance + disability dance company, AXIS Dance Company. 11 dance Interns from dance studios across Kern County assisted in also teaching the classes. ADAPTIdance served 52 dancers with cognitive and developmental disables. 

The goals that were obtained during ADAPTIdance were 1.) To provide access to creative movement and dance training for all students regardless of disability, income level, or prior dance experience 2). To provide a forum for physical activity that is a model for kids of all abilities to collaborate as equals while developing skills in cooperation and a respect for self and others; 3.) To educate about disability, collaboration, and inclusion through the medium of dance and the presentation of positive role models and images of people with disabilities. 

ADAPTIdance is the only dance and disability program available for people with disabilities in Kern County and was made possible through generous support from Chevron, Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Depringo, and Garces Memorial High School.

Children’s Dance Education and Outreach Event – November 13, 2019

Number of Participants: 80

Number of Dancers: 74

Number of Volunteers: 23

Number of Audience Member: 415

KDA was pleased to host the fifth annual Children’s Dance Education and Outreach Event at the Fox Theater on November 13, 2019.   Generous support from Chevron, Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Fox Theater Foundation, CARE, Grimmway Farms, Western Graphics, and Sub Station Downtown provided KDA with the opportunity to create an afternoon of smiles and joy for all that participated in the event!

  • 80 children from the Boys and Girls Club, CASA, Bakersfield Homeless Center, The Mission of Kern County/Lee and Krystyna Jamieson Recovery Home for Women & Children, Garden Pathways, and Bakersfield City School/Hort Elementary attended an exciting afternoon of dance at the Fox 
  • 74 dancers from all over Kern County performed and taught the children to dance 
  • 23 volunteers participated in the event
  • Children participated in a live dance performance by several Kern dance companies (Experience Dance, Spotlight Dance Academy, Bakersfield Dance Company, American Dancer’s Workshop, Dancer’s Turnout Academy, Bakersfield City Ballet, SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE= SUCCESS, and ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY)  
  • Children learned about the history of the Fox (Fox Theater Board President, Gilbert LaRoque, gave a kid-friendly history)
  • Children participated in a dance class and learned choreography
  • Children then performed the choreography on the famous Fox stage 
  • Children participated in a Q/A session with the dancers 
  • KDA offered scholarships to the children for an entire year of dance training at a dance studio of their choice
  • Children were treated to snacks donated by Grimmway Farms and were given commemorative Children’s Dance Education + Outreach shirts donated by Western Graphics 
  • Lunch for the performers and volunteers was partially donated by Sub Station Downtown
https://youtu.be/fIZiDmyuMwQ

KDA 2019 Special Events

The Russian National Ballet in Swan Lake- February 3, 2019

Number of Attendees: 900

KDA and Turnaround Artists were pleased to present The Russian National Ballet in Swan Lake at the Fox Theater Bakersfield. The Russian National Ballet has been bringing timeless ballet classics to the stages of North America since 1999 with a focus on upholding the grand national tradition of the major Russian ballet works.  KDA members received discount tickets to the show. 

Two to Tango- February 14, 2019

Number of Attendees: 44 (sold out)

KDA hosted Two to Tango, a Valentine’s Day Dinner and Dance, at The Mark Restaurant.  The evening featured 3 courses of carefully crafted cuisine coupled with the finest wine, and were swept off their feet while learning the Tango from Bakersfield Tango’s, Marilyn Stone. 

Idyllwild Arts Academy MASTER CLASS + AUDITION- February 17, 2019

Attendance: 15

KDA was pleased to host one of Idyllwild Arts prestigious dance faculty to conduct a master class and audition for admittance to the Academy and Summer Program. Idyllwild Arts Academy provides pre-professional training in the arts and a comprehensive college preparatory curriculum to a diverse student body of gifted young artists from all over the world. Voted the #1 High School for the Arts in America by Niche, it is the only Residential Arts High School on the West Coast. 

Taught by Israeli-born, Hai Cohen, the Modern dance master class was well received by all dancers.

Three students were offered acceptance into the year-round school and 6 were offered acceptance to to the two-week summer intensive program.

Dancers Lena Smallwood, Riley Thompson, and Eden Marquez attended the summer program and provided raving remarks about their summer experience. 

PRIVATE PERFORMANCE: Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater- April 8, 2019

KDA sent three KDA Members + guests to attend a private performance of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater at the Music Center on April 4, 2019.  Two weeks prior to the event, KDA hosted an online Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater trivia contest via our social media platforms.  Several KDA members participated; however; KDA Members Shanna Trainor, Evelyne Thomas, and Andrea Chesley, won the competition!  Those not selected as winners received a consolation prize.

JUST DANCE: Pop-Up Summer Series for Adults: Summer 2019

Tickets Sold: 448/674

Kern Dance Alliance launched JUST DANCE, a pop-up summer dance class series for adults. In collaboration with over a dozen Kern County dance instructors stemming from multiple dance studios, Kern County adults had the opportunity to try 20+ dance classes for FREE with a suggested donation to KDA. 

Kern Dance Alliance strives to help the community thrive through physical movement. Local adults have expressed a yearning for a place to express themselves through dance; and JUST DANCE does JUST THAT! A variety of classes for all levels were offered, including Ballet, Belly Dance, Jazz, Tap, Zumba, and Country Line Dance!  Whether it was an adult’s first time standing at the ballet barre or an individual has years of dance experience, KDA hoped to inspire more adults to dance their way through the summer. 

JUST DANCE: Pop-Up Summer Series for Adults SCHEDULE

Saturday, June 29 @ 11:00 AM – Contemporary Partnering w/ Kellie St. Pierre at Civic Dance Center

Tuesday, July 2 @ 9:00 AM- Beginning Ballet w/ Suze DeArmond at Dancer’s Turnout Academy

Friday, July 5 @ 9:00 AM – Zumba w/ Suze DeArmond at Dancer’s Turnout Academy

Saturday, July 6 @10:00 AM- Advanced Hip Hop w/ Andrew Rosales at Experience Dance Studio

Saturday, July 6 @ 11:00 AM- Beginning B-Boying w/ Andrew Rosales at Experience Dance Studio

Saturday, July 13 @ 9:00 AM- Beginning Ballet w/ Andrea Hansen at KDA Dance Studio/Garces High School

Saturday, July 13 @ 10:15 AM- Int/Adv. Contemporary w/ Andrea Hansen at KDA Dance Studio/Garces High School

Thursday, July 18 @ 6:30 PM – Country Line Dance w/ Joel Hoffman at Temblor Brewing Company

Saturday, July 20 @ TIME TBA- Int./Adv. Jazz w/ Alicia Angelini at Civic Dance Center

Saturday, July 20 @ TIME TBA – Musical Theater w/ Alicia Angelini at Civic Dance Center

Tuesday, July 23 @ 6:00 PM- Int./Adv. Contemporary Hip Hop w/ Naomi Rivera at Experience Dance Studio

Saturday, July 27 @ 12:00 PM- Beginning Belly Dance w/ Maryann Kopp at My Dance and Fitness Studio

Wednesday, July 31 @ 7:00 PM- Barre Fitness w/ Kyli Delis at Dancer’s Turnout Academy

Saturday, August 3 @ 10:00 AM- Int/Adv Hip Hop w/ Luther “GI” Gray at My Dance and Fitness Studio

Saturday, August 3 @ 11:00 AM- Beginning Hip Hop w/ Brushay Taylor at My Dance and Fitness Studio

Wednesday, August 7 @ 7:10 PM – Beginning Tap w/ Brenlea Smith at American Dancer’s Workshop

Saturday, August 10 @ 11:00 AM- Int/Adv. Ballet w/ Erica Ueberroth at Civic Dance Center

Saturday, August 10 @ 12:45 PM – Int./Adv. Lyrical w/ Erica Ueberroth at Civic Dance Center 

Tuesday, August 13 @ 7:10 PM – Int./Adv. Tap w/ Brenlea Smith at American Dancer’s Workshop

Saturday, August 17 @ 9:30 AM- Int./Adv. Contemporary w/ Nicole Helton at KDA Dance Studio/Garces High School

Saturday, August 24 @ 6:00 PM- Jazz Funk w/ Shelby Walls at Dance Nation

Saturday, August 24 @ 7:30 PM- Heels 101 w/ Shelby Walls at Dance Nation

Ten Tiny Dances Bakersfield Young Professionals- Downtown Street Party- October 11, 2019

Attendance:  250

Ten Tiny Dances® was produced on October 11, 2019 at the fifth annual Bakersfield Young Professionals Downtown Street Party in conjunction with the Greater Bakersfield Chamber!!

Ten dancers showcased choreography in the tiniest of spaces, a 4×4 stage!  This special event featured ten dance artists representing local and nationally recognized talent including: Alicia Angelini, Kelci Cerri, Nicole Helton, Andrea Nehesi, Naomi J. Rivera, Kali Spinner Maxwell, Kellie St. Pierre, Erica Ackerley Ueberroth, Shelby Walls, and New York City-based Schoen Movement Company dancers Alexandra Doyle and AJ Tasley Parr. Performances represented a broad range of dance styles including belly dance, ballet en pointe, hip hop, and tap dance. 

Ten Tiny Dances® is a performance series dedicated to fostering inventive dance/performance art and providing an accessible performance experience for a diverse audience…all on a 4 by 4-foot stage.

Ten Tiny Dances® is dance/theater performance in confined space, which challenges artists to invent ways of collapsing known and recognizable vocabulary as well as to invent new vocabulary that responds to the possibilities of 16 sq. ft. It interrupts the usual expectations for dance vocabulary, performance, and viewing, and affects the way people move and are perceived in space. As well as the delight that comes from innovation, the event also offers an experience of tension for the audience as they ponder and witness how each performer meets and deals with the challenge of the space. This tension is matched with a sense of intimacy. Dancers and audience members alike share the Ten Tiny Dances® experience of confined space and artistic innovation. 

Ten Tiny Dances® was created in Portland, Oregon in 2002 and continues to be produced in cities across America.  Kern Dance Alliance was granted permission by the founder Mike Barber in 2018.  2019 marks the first year Bakersfield will host a Ten Tiny Dances® event.  

Ten Tiny Dances® was generously supported by the Arts Council of Kern, Garden Pathways, The Padre Hotel, The Ovation Theatre, Schoen Movement Company, Diamond Peak Construction, and GoldenWalk.

A Movement Flight- Temblor Brewing Company October 12, 2019

Attendance: 200

Kern Dance Alliance and Temblor Brewing Company presented A Movement Flight, performed by New York City-based and internationally renowned Schoen Movement Company. A Movement Flight brought dance out of the concert hall and into the brewery by featuring critically acclaimed dancers, including local dance talent, Kellie St. Pierre. Complemented by the tastiest Temblor brews, guests enjoyed flights of beers and a delicious dinner. Local music talent, Vince Galindo, added to the evening with delightful and charming sounds. 

Guests exclaimed that their eyes were open to the possibilities of dance beyond the stage.  Guests also remarked that the initial $35 fee stood between them and their attendance, they were grateful the event was made free.  

Local dance talent, Kellie St. Pierre, was thrilled to be a part of the project.  She had not performed in 2.5 years (she had thought a devastating injury had ended her professional career) and was grateful to get back on stage.  Her passion for dance has been re-ignited and she expressed that she was grateful to KDA for the opportunity. 

Charitable donations were made to Kern Dance Alliance with guests purchasing the MOOve Burger, a delicious, house-made Santa Carota Beef burger crafted with all the fixin’s. Temblor’s tasty craft brews were included in each purchase ($50) of the MOOve Burger! 

A Movement Flight was open to the public and was generously sponsored by the Arts Council of Kern County, Bynum LLC, Padre Hotel, and Santa Carota Beef. 

KDA Community Grant Awards

Bakersfield City Ballet– $500 to support Youth America Grand Prix

Shafter Symphony Orchestra– $500 to support the Nutcracker Ballet Orchestra

Traianny Mahon– Student scholarship to support training at Mallory Academy of Dance

KDA Intern’s Corner

 Kern Dance Alliance is an incredible organization that does so much good for the community and I’m grateful to have had the opportunity to be a student intern this year. Being the intern has allowed me to be more involved in my community and make a difference for so many people. This past year as an intern I have participated in a variety of events, such as: Books in Motion, Shine, National Dance Day, Adaptidance, and the Fox Children’s Event. Being able to spread creativity and joy around my community through dance is so important to me. Dance has been such an instrumental part of my life and I am glad I get to share my love for it with others and hopefully help them discover their love for dance as well. I’m so thankful to have spent this last year on the board as a student intern and to be a part of an incredible organization like KDA. -Riley Thompson, 2019 KDA Student Intern


 Being a part of KDA has shown me how much Kern County means to this organization. I love being a part of KDA because of how passionate we are about bringing the art of dance into the community. Being involved in an organization that makes a positive impact in other’s lives is something I love to be a part of. KDA programs genuinely want to see other generations excel and I am so lucky I get to play a role in our mission’s work. As a bonus, I am receiving college credit from CSUB for my KDA internship! -Angelique Diaz, KDA Student Intern- PR + Social Media

KDA 2019 Presentations

California Dance Education Association Annual Conference- January 21, 2019

Attendance: 75

KDA Board Members, Andrea Hansen and Anne Draucker, traveled to CSU Fullerton for the annual California Dance Education Association annual conference. KDA presented “MOVING COMMUNITY”, synopsis of the KDA model in Kern County and our impact to dance educators and arts supporters from across California. 

Bakersfield City Ballet Fundraiser- January 26, 2019

Attendance: 175

KDA President, Andrea Hansen, was invited to speak at the Bakersfield City Ballet fundraiser at Lengthwise Brewing Company.  Andrea spoke to the audience about the importance of supporting BCB with a call to action to attend upcoming BCB events. 

Bakersfield High School Driller Service Academy Presentation- February 19, 2019

Attendance: 60

KDA was invited to speak to the Driller Service Academy at Bakersfield High School about KDA’s non-profit model and impact in Kern County.  Dancer’s Turnout Academy provided dance entertainment, while KDA Student Intern, Riley Thompson, assisted with the presentation.  Fun Fact:  KDA boasts a number of Bakersfield High School alumni! 

Downtown Bakersfield Rotary Presentation- February 28, 2019

Attendance: 159

KDA was invited to speak at the Downtown Bakersfield Rotary about KDA’s impact in Kern County.  Mallory Academy of Dance provided the dance entertainment. 

East Bakersfield Rotary Presentation- March 11, 2019

Attendance: 40

KDA was invited to speak at the East Bakersfield Rotary about KDA’s impact in Kern County.  Bakersfield City Ballet provided the dance entertainment.

Leadership Bakersfield Arts Day at the Fox Theater- April 3, 2019

Attendance: 32

KDA was invited to speak at the Leadership Bakersfield Arts Day about KDA’s impact in Kern County.  KDA Member, Brooke Jordan, provided the dance entertainment.

Distinguished Young Woman of California Life Skills Day- July 22, 2019

Attendance: 34

KDA was invited to speak at the Distinguished Young Woman of California Life Skills Day about becoming involved in community and how KDA impacts Kern County.  Young women were led through an improvisational movement workshop and listened to KDA President, Andrea Hansen, speak about the importance of giving back.

KDA Extras. . .

KDA Celebrity Reader at Louden Elementary School- March 22, 2019

Attendance: 35

KDA was invited to be a Celebrity Reader at Louden Elementary School during “Read Across America”.  KDA President, Andrea Hansen, read Giraffe’s Cant Dance to 35 3rd graders. 

Instruments Ballet Academy Performance at St. Francis Elementary School- April 1, 2019

Attendance: 200

KDA assisted Instruments Ballet Academy in securing a performance at St. Francis Elementary School during their California tour.  A Christina-based professional dance company, Interments Ballet Academy performed uplifting liturgical dance performances for 200 school children. 

Endeavor Elementary School Dance Day- June 21, 2019

Attendance: 418

KDA provided a Dance Day at Endeavor Elementary School for 418 school children during their 2019 summer school.  The event featured two Books in Motion performance (Goldilocks and the Three Bears) by Dancer’s Turnout Academy, as well as a dance history segment and choreography performed by Dancer’s Turnout Academy. 

Family Reading Night at Fletcher Elementary School- October 22, 2019

Attendance: 120

KDA provided a Books in Motion performance, Color Dance, performed by Spotlight Dance Academy at the annual Family Reading Night at the Fletcher Elementary School.  Children enjoyed a live performance and partook in learning the Books in Motion choreography. 

Adventist Health Community Block Party- November 2, 2019

KDA had the pleasure of providing dance classes for the 1st annual Community Block Party at North High School, hosted by Adventist Health Bakersfield.  KDA Members, Joel Hoffman- Line Dance (Bakersfield Line Dancers) and Suze DeArmond- Zumba (Dancer’s Turnout Academy) provided two super fun classes for over 50 participants!

KDA On The Cover

KDA 2019 Media Imprint

2019 KDA Season Announcement

January 29, 2019, Bakersfield Californian- Get toes tapping for Kern Dance Alliance’s new community-focused season 

January 30, 2019,  NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance announces February events

Philanthropy on Tap

January 21, 2019, Bakersfield Californian- Philanthropy on Tap: Lifting our glasses to Kern County’s hardworking nonprofits

Bakersfield City Ballet Fundraiser

January 23, 2019, Bakersfield Californian – Pints en pointe for Bakersfield City Ballet fundraiser

Swan Lake

February 3, 2019, Bakersfield Californian- Fancy footwork for Super Bowl Sunday with ballet at Fox Theater

Two to Tango

January 28, 2019, Bakersfield Californian- It takes two to tango, more to mingle this Valentine’s Day

Idyllwild Master Class + Audition

January 30, 2019,  NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance announces February events

KDA Dance/Movement Therapy Programs

March 28, 2019, NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance dance therapy spring programs

April 26, 2019, ABC/KERO-Free dance classes for cancer patients

Give Big Kern

June, 2019, Kern Community Foundation-Give Big Kern- Report to the Community

Beautiful Bakersfield Awards

June 1, 2019, Bakersfield Californian-  Beautiful Bakersfield awards recognize contributors to the community

Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY

May 28, 2019, Bakersfield Californian: Books in Motion dance literacy program returns to libraries in June 

May 31, 2019, NBC/KGET :  Books to come to life at Kern County Libraries for the month of June

June 28, 2019, ABC/KERO: Books in Motion at Kern County Libraries

June 28, 2019, ABC/KERO: Books in Motion at Kern County Libraries

July 5, 2019, NBC/KGET: Kern Dance Alliance receives state arts grant

Just Dance: Pop-Up Summer Series for Adults

June 26, 2019,  Bakersfield Californian-‘Just Dance’ for free this summer with new KDA pop-up series

July 3, 2019, NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance hosting pop-up dance class summer series

August 16, 2019, NBC/KGET-Pop Kern: Dance classes for adults

National Dance Day

September 18, 2019, Bakersfield Californian Strut your stuff with KDA for National Dance Day

September 18, 2019 NBC/KGETNational Dance Day celebrations hosted by the Kern Dance Alliance

September 19, 2019, FOX/KBFX-Celebrate National Dance Day with a 9-hour dance event

September 21, 2019 NBC/KGET- Locals celebrate National Dance Day with Kern Dance Alliance 

September 21, 2019, FOX/KBFX- Kern Dance Alliance & CSUB host National Dance Day on Saturday 

Ten Tiny Dances

October 8, Bakersfield Californian- Kern Dance Alliance hosts two events this weekend

October 9, NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance community events

A Movement Flight

October 8, Bakersfield Californian- Kern Dance Alliance hosts two events this weekend

October 9, NBC/KGET-Kern Dance Alliance community events

October 11, 2019- ABC/KERO- Beer and a show at Temblor Brewing this weekend

Children’s Dance Education and Outreach Event

November 4, 2019, NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance seeking volunteers

Call to 2020 KDA Board Members + Student Interns

November 4, 2019, NBC/KGET- Kern Dance Alliance seeking volunteers

 

newsletter_web_art_122018

KDA Impact Report No. 5

NEWSLETTER — December 2018

YEAR IN REVIEW
Over 8500 community members reached, new programs launched, scholarships provided, and a second Beautiful Bakersfield Award nomination- 2018 was full of rewarding and impactful experiences for Kern Dance Alliance.  KDA invites you to read our 2018 Year In Review – a wrap up of all our programs and partnerships all in the name of service to the arts in Kern County.

KDA is busy preparing for the launch of our 2019 season! Are you interested in receiving the 2019 KDA Season Brochure- sign up HERE! Also, don’t forget, KDA is seeking new Board Members and Student Interns– applications are due January 11, 2019.




SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS

SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE = SUCCESS – Fall 2018
Participants Enrolled in the Program: 25 
Volunteers Assisted withe the Program: 10 

SHINE for Girls (SHINE) provides innovative, curriculum-based after-school programming for middle school girls. Utilizing kinesthetic learning, SHINE combines formal dance training with rigorous math instruction to improve girls’ math scores and spark their interest in STEM. SHINE covers national math standards from 6-8th grade, while improving overall girls’ confidence and attitudes towards math, resulting in higher test scores and participation in classes.

To date, Kern Dance Alliance has graduated a total of 132 SHINE Girls and Mentors.  As the only branch in California and on the West Coast, KDA is proud to offer the SHINE program free of charge to all participants thanks to the generous funding of sponsors and private donations including Chevron, Junior League of Bakersfield, The Women’s and Girls’ Fund of Kern County/Kern Community Foundation, Cynthia Lake Charitable Trust, Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Bakersfield Californian Foundation, Sean and Jennifer Maguire, and Garces Memorial High School. 

SHINE is an 8 week program that ran on Saturdays from 10:00-12:30, September 8 – October 27, 2018. 

Fall 2018 marked the first session where a SHINE Mentor was previously a SHINE girl- proving the pipeline of the program.  Through the continuity of the program and the 3-levels of mentorship, girls can enter the program in middle-school and stay in the SHINE pipeline all the way through their first jobs in STEM by becoming a student, mentor, coordinator, and finally a member of the national network of empowered women. By creating a pipeline of women in STEM across the country, SHINE hopes to increase the number of women in STEM by 1% in the next decade.

Results…

Fall 2018: September 8-October 27
Fall served 25 girls and 10 mentors

Session results according to SHINE pre/posttest results:

80% of girls feel more confident both IN and OUT of math class
100% of girls feel proud of what the accomplished during the program

Apart from measurable results, KDA has learned the greatest from SHINE girl + mentor testimonials at the culmination of each session:  

I received my first A on a math test- EVER!!  I am so excited.  If it weren’t for SHINE, I would have never been so successful in my math class. – SHINE Girl 

I find that every time I do shine, even though I am here to teach the girls, I find them teaching me as well. I have learned to be more patient and inclusive with everyone and that it is more important to have fun and enjoy what you are doing and work hard. My interest in carrying on with dance has heightened I would love to study it as a minor in college and continue with classes! I absolutely love my shine girls and with that this group could stay longer! Francesa Beccari, MENTOR

I absolutely love being a SHINE mentor. To reach out to young girls, boost their confidence, and encourage them to pursue STEM carriers. Also being able to accomplish this with the help of dance, I just love it! Every Saturday I’m excited to go to SHINE and see all of the girls smiling faces. Another thing I always look forward to is the tutoring session. When tutoring the girls, I often see that moment when the concept just clicks and I can tell that they understand. Given the opportunity this year to choreograph the SHINE dance with Hannah, I learned that I like to choreograph. I always knew that I liked to teach others but I never truly considered doing choreography. It was fun being able to teach the dance and tutor my six girls. I definitely felt like I developed a bond with my SHINE girls. I would try to ask them a different random question each week and I would made up silly ways to remember math concepts. As for my interests in STEM, teaching, dance, and arts; I realized that I want to reach out to more girls. Girls at my high school, girls at my sisters school, girls at my old junior high. I want to empower young girls to pursue their dreams and not sell themselves short. I think that more girls should be exposed to STEM and to the idea that girls can do anything a guy can do. – Victoria McFarland, MENTOR

Over the eight weeks we have been working with the girls, they have each blossomed in their own way. Many would stay distanced from others or silent, but gradually became more social and playful with each other. Their growth in their confidence is even evident in their participation during the tutoring sessions, such as when they had started asking more questions without hesitation when they were confused. From the first week’s test and tutoring to the last week’s post-test, my girls started looking at problems from a different perspective and had a completely different attitude towards the tests. I was incredibly proud when we noticed their improvements over the course of the program; it felt so rewarding.

Personally, this program has led me to consider other professions I would not have otherwise, including teaching STEM subjects. I had always assumed that I am a poor teacher and struggle to explain concepts, but tutoring these open-minded girls have allowed me to find confidence in my abilities. I honestly was not expecting this, but my confidence has increased as well. The girls were encouraging and I can tell that I have made a difference.

Honestly, I will miss my girls after this final week. I have developed a connection with them and I truly hope they succeed in what they do. Every session, they will have random little conversations with me about a new joke they came up with or something cool they did in one of the activities. – Jessica Wollesen, MENTOR


Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY

Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY- June 1-August 1, 2018

Books in Motion: DANCE + LITERACY links dance and literacy by focusing on Common Core Standards for Reading Literature for children, K-3rd. In collaboration with the Kern County Library, Kern Literacy Council, and Barnes & Noble (Bakersfield, CA), families had the opportunity to visit Kern County library branches and watch a dance performance based upon a well-known children’s book. Post-performance, children engaged in kinesis by learning choreography and created a craft that coincides with the book’s theme. At the culmination of the session, children were divided into groups based upon age/level and posed questions to evaluate their comprehension. Lastly, children were able to take their own copy of the book home. Books in Motion was offered for FREE to all participants. Books in Motion performances ran June 1 -August 1, 2018.

Kern County dance organizations; Dancer’s Turnout Academy of Dance, Downtown Dance Arts Center, Ev-leen’s Dance Studio, Mallory Academy of Dance, Mojave Movement Arts Center, Spotlight Dance Academy applied to be the official Books in Motion performers. Dance organizations were responsible for choosing a story from the Books in Motion bibliography, creating a performance reflecting the story, and choreographing a 1 to 2-minute dance that relates to the story to teach the participating children.

Books in Motion was generously sponsored by the Bakersfield Californian Foundation, Arts Council of Kern, Chevron, Terra-Gen, and the Cynthia Lake Charitable Trust. 

Results:

KDA received 326 completed assessments- 99% reported that they would like to attend Books in Motion again. 

866 Children + Families Reached
367 FREE Books Provided
43 Dancers
21 Performances

14 Library Branch Performance Locations 

1 Barnes and Noble Performance Location

K-1st Grade “Where the Wild Things Are”- 72% assessment questions correct 

K-1st Grade “Dino Dancing”- 66% assessment questions correct
K-1st Grade “Giraffe’s Can’t Dance”- 50% assessment questions correct
K-1st Grade “Kitchen Dance”- 64% assessment questions correct 

K-1st Grade “The Lion and the Mouse”- 100% assessment questions correct 

2nd—3rd Grade “Where the Wild Things Are” – 97% evaluation questions correct 

2nd—3rd Grade “Dino Dancing” – 98% assessment questions correct
2nd—3rd Grade “Giraffe’s Can’t Dance”- 77% assessment questions correct 

2nd—3rd Grade “Kitchen Dance”- 59% assessment questions correct 

2nd—3rd Grade “The Lion and the Mouse”- 99% assessment questions correct 


4th Annual Children’s Dance Education and Outreach event at the Fox Theater

Children’s Dance Education and Outreach Event – November 14, 2018

KDA was pleased to host the fourth annual Children’s Dance Education and Outreach Event at the Fox Theater on November 14, 2018.   Generous support from the Arts Council of Kern, Chevron, Stria, Fox Theater Foundation, Grimmway Farms, Western Graphics, and Sub Station Downtown provided KDA with the opportunity to create an afternoon of smiles and joy for all that participated in the event!

  • 108 children from the Boys and Girls Club, CASA, Bakersfield Homeless Center, Jamison Center, and Garden Pathways attended an exciting afternoon of dance at the Fox
  • Over 70 dancers from all over Kern County performed and taught the children to dance 
  • 40 volunteers participated in the event
  • Children participated in a live dance performance by several Kern dance companies (Experience Dance, Spotlight Dance Academy, Ballet Folklorico Ihtotiani de Shafter, Dancer’s Turnout Academy, Bakersfield City Ballet, Mallory Academy of Dance, Brooke Jordan, Andrew Rosales, SHINE for Girls: MATH + DANCE= SUCCESS, and ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY)
  • Children learned about the history of the Fox (Fox Theater Manager, Matt Spindler, gave a kid-friendly history)
  • Children participated in a dance class and learned choreography
  • Children then performed the choreography on the famous Fox stage
  • Children participated in a Q/A session with the dancers 
  • KDA offered scholarships to the children for an entire year of dance training at a dance studio of their choice
  • Children were treated to snacks donated by Grimmway Farms and were given commemorative Children’s Dance Education + Outreach shirts donated by Western Graphics 
  • Lunch for the performers and volunteers was partially donated by Sub Station Downtown


MemoryMOVES:DANCE + THERAPY

MemoryMOVES: DANCE + THERAPY- Spring 2018 

Participants Enrolled in Program: 35

MEMORY Moves was a 7-week pilot dance therapy program working with the Alzheimers and Dementia population at ADAKC. The program utilized a Dance/Movement Therapist (DMT) to work with 35 enrolled participants split into four separate groups over 7 weeks. Groups met over Mondays and Tuesdays from 9:30-10:30 and 11:00-12:00pm (April 9-May 22), with two groups meeting each day. Groups were determined based on level of functioning with help from ADAKC staff who were familiar with the clientele. Groups ranged from fairly high functioning, where participants were more ambulatory and had retained higher cognitive functioning, to lower functioning, where the majority of participants used wheelchairs, and were in more advanced stages of Alzheimers and dementia.

MemoryMOVES was generously funded by Chevron, Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Cynthia Lake Charitable Trust,  Kaiser Permanente, Homewood Suites, and Dignity Health. 

Results:

Over 7 weeks:

  • 100% of clients displayed noticeable mitigation of symptoms associated with Alzheimer’s and/or dementia. Improvements included wider range of mobility, increased memory recall, decrease in agitation and confusion, and brighter affect. 
  • 100% of clients demonstrated increased range of motion.
  • All 4 groups experienced higher levels of group cohesion over the 7 week program, measured in lower levels of agitation on entering group, and heightened levels of interaction between participants. 
  • 60% of clients who were initially resistant to joining groups eventually became engaged and participated willingly.

Clients Reported…

  • Several higher-functioning clients reported looking forward to dance therapy group every week.
  • Many clients reported that dancing and moving “felt good” and that it was something that they needed in their daily routine.

Anecdotes of Note

  • During one group, a participant who uses a wheelchair, and has low cognitive functioning as evidenced by lack of short-term memory recall (did not know the therapist’s name or any details pertaining to date, time, place, etc) and frequent “word salad” (inability to form coherent sentences) started to describe something we had done in a past group. Her words were jumbled, but she described something that sounded similar to a prop that the therapist had used in a previous group. The therapist introduced the prop once again and the individual instantly said “Yes! That’s it!” Throughout the 7 weeks, this was her only instance of demonstrating memory recall.
  • After the program had ended, the therapist was talking to participants in the common area. She talked to one participant who is very low-functioning to the point of not remembering her own name. In a seemingly lucid moment, she looked at the therapist in the eye and said “it’s been a good 2 months.” 
  • When talking to one of the spouses of a participant, the therapist was asked if the participant engaged in group. This particular individual was always very engaged in group, and would sing and dance every session. The spouse was surprised and happy, because at home, she said it was very hard to encourage this participant to get out of his chair where he usually watches TV all day.


ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY 

ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY- Fall 2018

Participants Enrolled in the Program: 45 

Volunteers Assisted withe the Program: 47 

KDA and the League of Dreams offered the 2nd annual ADAPTidance program, an adaptive dance experience for people with physical and developmental disabilities, on Saturdays- October 6-November 10, 2018. ADAPTIdance participants learned inclusive, creative dance that is accessible and adaptable for movers with and without physical and developmental disabilities. The program culminated with a performance at the historic Bakersfield Fox Theater. 

ADAPTIdance was taught by dance educator, Sakina Hansford, who was trained by the world’s leading dance + disability dance company, AXIS Dance Company. 11 dance Interns from dance studios across Kern County assisted in also teaching the classes. ADAPTIdance served 45 dancers with cognitive and developmental disables. 

The goals that were obtained during ADAPTIdance were 1.) To provide access to creative movement and dance training for all students regardless of disability, income level, or prior dance experience 2). To provide a forum for physical activity that is a model for kids of all abilities to collaborate as equals while developing skills in cooperation and a respect for self and others; 3.) To educate about disability, collaboration, and inclusion through the medium of dance and the presentation of positive role models and images of people with disabilities. 

ADAPTIdance is the only dance and disability program available for people with disabilities in Kern County and was made possible through generous support from Chevron, Chain Cohen and Stiles, Virginia and Alfred Harrell Foundation, Robert Grimm Family Foundation, Cynthia Lake Charitable Trust, CARE, and Garces Memorial High School. 


Master Class Series: ARTS + MENTORING

Master Class Series: ARTS + MENTORING – Spring 2018

Kern Dance Alliance (KDA), in partnership with Garden Pathways, continued arts mentoring services for at-risk youth through the Master Class Series: ARTS + MENTORING. The classes provided opportunities for artistic, educational, and personal development as young artists were mentored by arts industry professionals.

The classes focused on professional dance artists and the trends they are setting in the international field of dance.   Guest artists represented different dance disciplines: Contemporary Modern and Jazz. Three elements were featured: master classes, mentor session, and a Q&A/discussion with dancer’s families and an invited audience. 

The Master Class Series was generously supported by Chevron, Stria, Arts Council of Kern, Padre Hotel, and Garces Memorial High School.  

February 4 

CONTEMPORARY MODERN 

Emily Schoen – Director/ Choreographer of Schoen Movement Company, Dancer for Keigwin + Company

Emily Schoen has received the Gibney Dance boo-koo grant for emerging artist in NYC, a Princess Grace Choreography Fellowship nomination by METdance in Houston, and was called “Top 25 to Watch” by Dance Magazine. She has danced for Kyle Abraham/Abraham.In.Motion, Nejla Yatkin, the Metropolitan Opera in works by Doug Varone and Mark Morris, the 50th Anniversary Rolling Stones Reunion Tour, and has been with Keigwin + Company since 2011. Her own group, Schoen Movement Company, has been presented at Jacob’s Pillow Inside/Out, Joe’s Pub, and recently at the Tunisian National Theater in Tunis, Tunisia with the support of DanceMotion/USA, the US Embassy in Tunis, and American Dance Abroad. SMC has also produced Happy Hour dance shows in breweries, and the mini dance film series “Ten Tiny Dances” which is viewable online. She sets work on companies and universities throughout the United States. She graduated from the University of Arizona with her BFA in Dance and BS in Nutritional Sciences and is a proud Wisconsinite!

11 dancers participated in the master class taught by Emily Schoen. 

April 22

CONTEMPORARY JAZZ 

Saleemah E. Knight- Professor or Dance, USC Glorya Kaufman School of Dance

Saleemah E. Knight is an internationally recognized interdisciplinary artist in the concert and commercial dance realms, a Professor of Jazz Dance and lecturer at the highly acclaimed USC Glorya Kaufman School of Dance. Saleemah holds a Master of Fine Arts in dance from the University of California, Irvine and a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Arizona School of Dance. Her training in dance technique stems from reputable concert dance companies such as: Gus Giordano Chicago, Dayton Contemporary Dance Company and River North Chicago. As a performer Saleemah has been a featured dancer in Disney’s world renowned production, The Lion King Broadway Musical and has also danced alongside prominent icons such as Beyoncé, Chris Brown, Jillian Michaels, Jamie Foxx, Ludacris, Tyrese and many more! At the university level, Saleemah specializes in the areas of Jazz and Modern dance technique, as well as theory courses on “World Perspectives on Dance”, “Choreography for the Camera” and “Dance in Popular Culture”. Learn more about Saleemah by visiting saleemaheknight.com.

19 dancers participated in the master class taught by Saleemah E. Knight. 

Evaluation:

Master Class evaluation took place through a variety of methodologies: student journals, discussion/Q&A, and a video assessment. 

  1. Journals provided a assessment of the students’ journey.  Students were directed to write about their kinetic response to learning differing dance pedagogical theories and how this process will aid them in their future dance career.  Students were also directed to write about their physical and emotional response to the class. 
  2. Discussion and Q&A created a “round-table” that allowed students to address questions and concerns regarding learning a new movement vocabulary in a group setting.  This provided the guest artist and KDA with an insight into the adaptation of material.  
  3. Video assessment is key to any dance assessment.  Students were filmed performing new skills.  Students were able to physically see the journey they were been on by watching the film and comparing the beginning of the class to the end.  Skills that were learnt in the beginning of the class appeared rough and difficult, however; the same skill performed on at the end of the class showed ease and understanding of fundamental movement concepts.   


NATIONAL HONORS SOCIETY for DANCE ARTS

National Honors Society for Dance Arts Induction Ceremony- April 15, 2018

KDA celebrated our first class and first inductees into the National Honor Society for Dance Arts – NHSDA / Kern Dance Alliance Secondary Chapter. Congratulations to Bakersfield High School Senior, Natalie Lovan, and Liberty High School Senior, Paityn Boyt, on their acceptance into the USA’s most prestigious honors society for dancers who excel in artistry, leadership, and academic achievements.  NHSDA inductees received their honors cords and pins, as well as a NHSDA plaque during the luncheon at Stockdale Country Club on April 15, 2018. 

To date, KDA has received over a dozen applications from Kern County dancers seeking induction into the National Honors Society for Dance Arts.  As the only NHSDA Chapter in Central California, KDA looks forward to inducting more high school students in the future.


SEASON PREVIEW PARTY – January 28, 2018

KDA announced our 2018 season on January 28, 2018 at 12:30 PM at the Bakersfield Country Club. The afternoon featured guest speaker, Mayor Karen Goh, talking about “The Arts in Kern County”, as well as live music, appetizers, and drinks. The event was open and free to the public. 150 attended the event. 


Ford Dimension Dream Builders Program- S.T.E.P. – Senior Targeted Exercise Program – February 8, 2018

KDA was proud to partner with Team Bank of the Sierra of the Ford Dimension Dream Builders Program on their project, S.T.E.P., a Senior Targeted Exercise Program focused on reducing muscle degenerative diseases. The workshop was presented by specialists who demonstrated and spoke on physical therapy exercises, Dance/Movement Therapy, nutritional and mental health aspects to promote healthy and active lifestyles. The event was free and open to the public. https://jimburkeeducationfoundation.org/newsletters/2018-UpDate-Newsletter/#page=2 

KDA was honored to receive a $250 donation from the Ford Dimension Dream Builders Program for our assistance to the S.T.E.P. program. 


BEHIND THE SCENES: The Joffrey Ballet Romeo and Juliet- March 9, 2018

KDA sent two KDA Members + guests to go behind the scenes of the Joffrey Ballet’s “Romeo and Juliet” by attending the technical/dress rehearsal at the Music Center on March 8, 2018.  Two weeks prior to the event, KDA hosted an online “Romeo and Juliet” trivia contest via our social media platforms.  Several KDA members participated; however; KDA Members Jennifer Cox and Vanessa Rodriguez, won the competition!  Those not selected as winners received a consolation prize.


SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN – PRE SHOW TALK w/ KDA PRESIDENT, ANDREA HANSEN – April 23, 2018

The Fox Theater Bakersfield featured “Singin’ in the Rain” on April 23 and invited KDA President, Andrea Hansen, to provide a pre-show talk about American dance icon, Gene Kelly.  Andrea provided information about Kelly and his life as a dancer to over 250 attendees.  KDA members were invited to attend the show for free.


GIVE BIG KERN- May 1, 2018

KDA raised $1650 during GIVE BIG KERN on May 2, 2018!! KDA hosted a 24 hour social media campaign highlighting the 12 reasons donors should give to KDA. BRAVO to all that donated, liked, clicked, and shared – we are humbled by your bighearted ways!!


DANCING UNDER THE STARS- May 26, 2018

KDA invited guests to EAT, DRINK, and DANCE under the stars at one of Kern County’s most treasured historic hotels, The Padre Hotel.  The event featured celebrity dancer, actress, and singer, Heather Morris, best known for her role as Brittney S. Pierce on the Fox musical-comedy series GLEE and Dancing With The Stars (DWTS) Season 24. Guests took a dance class with Heather Morris and her partner from Dancing with the Stars, KC Monnie, ate delicious appetizers, drank fine crafted cocktails, and enjoyed a mini performance and Q&A with Heather and KC on the Padre Hotel’s 2nd floor patio, Prairie Fire. Over 65 guests attended and were delighted to buy the ChaCha Shake for a $25 donation to KDA.  Guests continued to dance the night away until 10:00 with a live DJ and bar service. 


Art After Dark: MUSEUM DANCES- May 31, 2018

Art After Dark: MUSUEM DANCES was presented by Bakersfield Museum of Art and Kern Dance Alliance on Thursday, May 31, 2018 from 7-9 pm at the Bakersfield Museum of Art- $5 General Admission/FREE Members/FREE Students with valid ID. Guests were invited to grab a drink and enjoy BMoA’s newly installed Summer Exhibitions and experience a series of dance performances by local and regional dancers inspired by artist Charles Arnoldi’s exhibition. 11 performances ranging from hip hop to contemporary made up the evening, including a performance by KDA President, Andrea Hansen, and KDA Past Board Member, Andrea Chesley. 120 total guests attended and indicated the event felt like “something out of Los Angeles”! 


Beautiful Bakersfield Awards- June 2, 2018

KDA was nominated for a second “Arts and Culture” Award at the Beautiful Bakersfield Awards on June 2, 2018.  The nomination was on behalf of ADAPTIdance: DANCE + DISABILITY.  While KDA did not receive the award, the recognition as a contender in the category was truly an honor!


NATIONAL DANCE DAY- July 28, 2018

KDA hosted Kern County’s first official National Dance Day celebration on July 28 at Garces Memorial High School. 10 hours. 10 dance classes. $2 a class.  Classes were taught by Kern County dance educators and the classes ranged from Zumba, Contemporary, Pole Dance, Country Line Dance, and Dance for Disabilities.  All classes were very full, with several of the classes selling out prior to the event.  KDA received excellent coverage from the press and were very happy with the turnout from the day’s activities.  All online registrations received free KDA swag, doughnuts and popsicles were provided throughout the day, as well as raffle prizes and a grand raffle! Nearly 260 dancers participated in NDD 2018. It was a terrific celebration of dance and we look forward to 2019.


Boys and Girls Clubs of Kern County- Farm to Table(aux)- October 5, 2018

KDA provided the on stage “Shadow Dance” entertainment for the 3rd Annual “Farm to Table(aux)” fundraiser benefiting the Boys and Girls Clubs of Kern County on October 5th 2018. With support from Dignity Health, KDA was thrilled to add to the event’s exuberant theme of “Andy Warhol.” Over 530 guests enjoyed a tableaux performance by Bakersfield City Ballet. The Boys and Girls Clubs of Kern County serve 7,500 daily.  KDA was honored to assist in their fundraising efforts and applauds the Boys and Girls Clubs of Kern County.


Bakersfield Young Professionals- Downtown Street Party- October 12, 2018

The fourth annual Downtown Street Party benefiting the Bakersfield Young Professionals (BYP) Program was an absolute blast! The event on Oct. 12 drew a crowd of about 250 attendees, who played games, admired paintings from local artists through Kern Creatives, ate, drank and danced the night away in the Wall Street Alley with performers from Kern Dance Alliance (KDA). This year’s event was a huge success, especially with the KDA partnership that brought such a fun and exciting new energy to the party. To see all the fun, check out this video from Lights Camera Action Cinema: https://vimeo.com/297840709.


BAKERSFIELD CITY BALLET OPEN CLASS w/ KDA- November 10, 2018

KDA President, Andrea Hansen, taught a ballet open class to dancers at Bakersfield City Ballet on November 10.  Additionally, Andrea took the opportunity to talk and inform the dancers about KDA.


BALLET NOW w/ TILER PECK – December 24, 2018

KDA hosted ballet super star, international celebrity, and Bakersfield native, Tiler Peck, at the The Fox Theater Bakersfield on December 24 at 12:30 for a viewing of Ballet Now.  Mayor Karen Goh and Assemblyman Vince Fong joined the event by participating in a Q&A session while Kern County dancers were encouraged to bring their dance shoes to the autograph signing and come prepared for questions to ask Ms. Peck. Over 200 audience members participated in the event. KDA members were invited to attend the show for free.
Ballet Now provides a rarely seen, unfiltered glimpse into the world of ballet and what it takes to create a one-of-kind dance extravaganza. Featuring New York City Ballet’s Prima Ballerina Tiler Peck – the first ever woman to be asked to curate The Music Center’s famed Ballet NOW program – and a diverse cast of world-class dancers from around the globe, the film follows Tiler as she tries to execute her groundbreaking vision of mashing together the worlds of tap, hip-hop, ballet and even clown artistry. With less than a week to pull it all off, Tiler faces the mounting pressures of not only dancing in multiple pieces, but also producing and directing this high profile event.Following the viewing, Ms. Peck will participate in a Q&A session and an autograph signing. 
 
“It was a tremendous honor and challenge to be the first woman ever asked to curate the prestigious BalletNow™event at the legendary Los Angeles Music Center for the Glorya Kaufman Dance at The Music Center Program. As curator, I was forced to step outside my normal comfort zone as a ballerina and wear many hats, including that of director.” Tiler Peck
 
Ballet NOW is directed by Oscar nominated and Emmy award winner, Steve Cantor, and produced by Emmy and Golden Globe winner, Elisabeth Moss. Ballet NOW has been screened at the Nantucket Film Festival, Seattle International Film Festival and launched on Hulu in July 2018. Ballet NOW is made possible by Vulcan Productions and Stick Figure Studios.


Erica Lynn

I am incredibly thankful to the Kern Dance Alliance board members for allowing me to be their 2018 Student Intern. This internship has been an incredible opportunity for me to experience the thrill of giving back to a community that I love so dearly, through an art that has played such a significant role in my own life. I am so proud to have been a part of an organization that provides so many moving programs. Being a part of this board provided a space for me to vocalize my passion for dance and the positive impact it can have. I truly thank the KDA team for making a continuous effort to ensure that my voice was heard. They taught me that you truly can make a difference if you are passionate about your cause. I learned something special from each and every member of the board. Moving forward, I can only hope that I make a difference in this world the way that these 9 amazing individuals are, here in Bakersfield. Thank you KDA for a wonderful year to remember. -Erica Lynn, 2018 KDA Student Intern


HOW TO MAKE KDA WORK FOR YOU

Whether you are a dancer, studio owner or arts connoisseur, KDA is here for you.

  • HOW TO GET A SCHOLARSHIP:  If you’re interested in receiving a scholarship for your school, a workshop or even a summer intensive programs, KDA can help.  We offer scholarships up to $500 – apply directly on our website – click here!
  • HOW TO GET EVENTS POSTED: Studios, organizations and students are all able to have any and all events added to the KDA calendar!  All you need to do is email info@kerndance.org about your event, include all details and any image you’d prefer and it will be posted on the KDA calendarFYI: in the near future, you will be able to post events yourself directly to KDA’s event page 
  • HOW TO FIND OR POST A JOB:  TheKDA Job Board lists casting, employment and internship opportunities!  To have something added to the job board, please email info@kerndance.org.
  • HOW TO BECOME A MEMBER: Want to receive membership perks like tickets to great events? Want to be able to receive a scholarship?  Want to collaborate and be involved with events that help arts and dance in our community?  Want to be able to access all Kern County dance events in one place?  It’s just $25/yr for individuals, $50/yr for organizations and $100/yr for venues.  Become a member!
  • HOW TO DONATE:  Want to help KDA programming like the dance education and outreach program at The Fox Theater this fall?  In November, KDA will host performance and dance classes  for underprivileged children in partnership with Garden Pathways, The Boys and Girls Club and Bakersfield Homeless Center.  Donate here or email us if you’d like to personally get involved!
  • HOW TO VOLUNTEER: KDA offers several levels of volunteer involvement! Visit www.kerndance.org/GETINVOLVED to learn more.
  • HOW TO SHARE WHAT KDA IS DOING:  KDA would love you to share what we are doing!  Follow us and share what’s going on – Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and of course email links to our website or newsletter.
  • HOW CAN KDA HELP YOU?  If you want to collaborate, we have community connections and would be happy to help.  Just shoot us a note and let us know what you as an individual or your organization needs help with, we will see what we can do!