Overview of Cheerdance
Overview of Cheerdance
Cheerdance
PREPARED BY:
MS. MARIEL V. MINGLANILLA, LPT
Cheerdance
❑ Is coined from the words CHEER and DANCE
❑ To cheer is to shout out words or phrases that may help motivate
and boost the morale of a playing team and perform better during a
game
❑ Dance, on the other hand, is a physical activity where one
expresses emotions or gestures while performing bodily movements
usually in time with rhythm.
Cheerdance
❑ Cheerdancing rooted from the word cheerleading – performance of
a routine, usually dominated by skills such as jumps, tumbling skills, lifts
and tosses combined with shouting of cheers and yells to lead the crowd
to cheer for a certain team during a game or sport.
❑ Today, cheerdancing is identified as one of the most spectacular
events in one of the biggest collegiate sports events in the country, the
UAAP (University Athletic Association of the Philippines).
THE HISTORY
The original cheerleaders were men.
Cheerleading was connected to the emergence
of gridiron football at Ivy League colleges and
universities in the United States in the mid- By the 1920s cheerleading had become a formal
1800s, and the growth and formalization of extracurricular activity for boys in high schools,
cheerleading paralleled that of football. colleges, and communities across the country.
Over the latter half of the 19th century, as Women began joining cheer squads during the 1920s and
attendance at college games grew, large ’30s as collegiate sports proliferated and men and women
stadiums were constructed, and spectators were began socializing more in public.
distanced from the playing field. Cheerleaders— A separate cheerleading tradition also evolved within black
or “yell leaders,” as they were then called—led educational institutions during the same period, with a
cheers from the sidelines both to encourage the similar emphasis on character building and leadership.
spectators and to serve as a form of crowd Cheerleading remained an overwhelmingly white enterprise,
control. and evidence suggests that it became even “whiter” after
desegregation, because the total number of black schools
diminished and black students were rarely elected as
cheerleaders.
THE HISTORY
After scholastic athletic programs had diversified, that cheer squads began to
reflect the ethnic and racial composition of schools. That shift was in part the
result of protest activity on the part of black and Latino students. Since the 1990’s, “alternative” forms
- The mobilization of college-age men during World War II opened new of cheerleading have emerged
opportunities for women in cheerleading and ultimately led to the “feminization” alongside the mainstream variants
of cheerleading, when the proportion of female cheerleaders rose to roughly 95 discussed above.
percent. This led to the trivialization and devaluation of cheerleading.
❑ Formation: The arrangement of athletes on a surface during the course of a stunt or routine
❑ Pyramid: The grouping of connected stunts, including persons standing at ground level
❑ Spotter: A person responsible for protecting the safety of the person during a stunt