Q3 PE HEALTH Notes
Q3 PE HEALTH Notes
Q3 PE HEALTH Notes
STREET DANCE
A street dance is a dance style (regardless of country of origin) that evolved outside dance studios in
any available open space such as streets dance parties, block parties, parks, school yards, and
nightclubs.
2). Locking- it is a type of street dance that involves acrobatic moves and could be seen as comical. It
requires fast and exaggerated hand and arm movements, but the hips and legs are more relaxed.
3). Krumping- This style of dance requires a lot of energy and is entirely freestyle. This became a major
part of the hip-hop in the 1990s. It involves four primary moves-wobbles, stomps, arm swings, chest pops.
4). Popping- This technique is usually done standing up and quickly contracting and relaxing your muscles,
causing your body to do a jerk called a hit or a pop. If you perform this type of dance, you are known as a
"popper." The moves are performed continuously with the music and are concentrated on specific parts of
the body-chest, leg, or arm.
5). Waving- it is a dance style that is basically a combined set of moves that makes it look as though a
wave is traveling through the body of the performer.
6). Robotics dance style- it indicates dancing like a robot. The moves themselves are called dime stops,
which mean moving a part of your body and bringing it to an abrupt stop like that of a robot. If this style is
danced or performed without music, it is known as mime.
HIP-HOP DANCES:
Hip-hop dances are street dance styles performed with hip-hop music that evolved from the hip-hop
culture.
These were created in the 1970s and made popular by dance crews in the United States. These
dances are practiced in dance studios and outdoor spaces often in freestyle or improvisational.
3. Popping
- This style was created in Fresno, California in the 1970s. One of its significant techniques is quickly
contracting and relaxing muscles, causing a jerk in a dancer's body.
- This is referred to as a pop or a hit, with each hit synchronized to the rhythm and beat of the music.
- It is also used as an umbrella term to refer to a wide range of closely related illusionary dance styles such
as "strobin" or "ticking."
2). Turfing
Turfing, the acronym for "Taking Up Room on the Floor," was created by Jeriel Bey in 2002 in
Oakland, California. This is a fusion of miming and gliding that places heavy emphasis on
storytelling and illusion.
3). Jerkin
The jerkin' dance style was created in Los Angeles, popularized in 2009 by the New Boyz rap song
"You're a Jerk." Dancers typically style their hair in mohawk and often wear bright-colored clothing,
skinny jeans, and Vans sneakers.
4). Krumping
This style was created by Cesare Willis and Jo Artis Ratti in the early 2000s in South Central, Los
Angeles.
This style focuses on highly energetic battles and movements that are described as intense, fast-paced,
and sharp. Journalist Taisha Paggett from Dance Magazine stated that, "If movement were words,
[krumping] would be a poetry slam."
HEALTH
GLOBAL HEALTH INITIATIVES
A. Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
In 2000, the UN General Assembly adopted the Millennium Declaration, establishing a global partnership of
countries and development partners committed to achieve the eight (8) Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs).
The MDGs have 21 targets and a series of measurable health indicators and economic indicators.
It is a global initiative that has post-2015 goals that focused on eliminating multiple dimensions of extreme
property and emerging global realities.
The Global Fund is a twenty-first century partnership organization designed to accelerate the end of
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria as epidemic. Over 20 million lives have already been saved by Global
Fund-supported programs.
How do global health initiatives contribute to disease prevention and control on a global scale?
Global health initiatives help stop diseases from spreading all over the world. They do this by doing a few
important things. They make sure lots of people get vaccines to prevent diseases like measles and polio.
They also teach people through health seminars about how to stay healthy, like washing hands and eating
good food. They support scientists who are looking for new ways to treat and prevent diseases. And they
also talk to governments and other groups to make sure everyone works together to keep people healthy.
So, global health initiatives are like big teams that work hard to keep everyone safe and healthy all around
the world.