Alumnae Honored at 1st Annual Civic Engagement Banquet

Department of Dance Alumnae Tyisha Nedd (BFA ’14) and Theresa Niermeyer (BFA ’14) will be honored at The Ohio State University’s First Annual Civic Engagement Banquet on Tuesday, September 16 for their commitment to OSU’s mission “Education for Citizenship.” Michael Kelly Bruce, Department of Dance Undergraduate Studies Chairperson nominated both awardees in tandem with Dori Jenks, External Relations Coordinator.

Niermeyer will receive the Marian Wright Edelman Award for her work at Fort Hayes Metropolitan Education Center where she used a range of culturally diverse dance forms to teach high school students about global citizenship, truly an embodiment of the values of the Marian Wright Edelman Award regarding the promotion, advancement and equitable access to education. Jenks states, “Theresa’s senior project is a stellar example of the significant impact the study of dance has in public education settings, and the vital force dance plays in educational reform.” Niermeyer’s project, “Dance in Global Contexts: Integrating Ethnographic Dance Research in Public Education,” used music and dance as the vehicle to teach students about diverse forms of human expression, beliefs and values among the world. Her students’ feedback on their experience was reaffirming. They wrote that dance offered a new way to understand themselves and their own habits. They expressed appreciation for learning about places they might never have known about on their own. They enjoyed learning about different cultural values and social cues. Most importantly, they felt more open-minded and able to adapt to change.
Of the awards they have received, these women are humble and honored to be recognized for what is their natural calling. Both Nedd and Niermeyer continue to expand upon their missions to bring people together and generate new understandings of themselves and others through the medium of dance. They spent their summer after graduation in Cape Town, South Africa volunteering their time to the community-based non-profit called Happy Feet Youth Project. The program, located in the Langa Township just outside the city, provides a safe space for neighborhood kids to come together and practice South African music and dance. Niermeyer states "Dance can be an educational tool used to enlighten students, teachers, or anyone with a body, about the diverse forms of expression, beliefs and values among the world’s nations."