International Dance Teachers Association

Last updated
International Dance Teachers Association
AbbreviationIDTA
FormationFounded: 1903
Incorporated: 1967
Legal status Private limited company (Ltd)
PurposeDance education and examination board
HeadquartersInternational House
76 Bennett Road
Brighton
BN2 5JL
United Kingdom
Region served
UK and Worldwide
Chief Exec.
Elizabeth Murphy
Main organ
Board of Directors
Affiliations• British Dance Council
• Council for Dance Education & Training
• Central Council for Physical Recreation
• Theatre Dance Council International
Website www.idta.co.uk

The International Dance Teachers Association (IDTA) is a dance teaching and examination board based in Brighton, England. Operating internationally, the IDTA currently has over 7,000 members in 55 countries. The IDTA is recognised by the national qualifications regulators in England and Wales, Ofqual and the Council for Dance Education and Training, and is also affiliated to the British Dance Council, the Central Council of Physical Recreation and the Theatre Dance Council International. The IDTA works in partnership with the Royal Academy of Dance. The IDTA publishes a print and online magazine for members titled Dance International four times a year.

Contents

History

The International Dance Teachers Association was formed in 1967 as the result of a merger between the Dance Teachers' Association (DTA), and the International Dancing Masters Association (IDMA). Both of these organisations were formed from the merging of older dance teaching associations, with the earliest being established in 1903. The IDTA subsequently celebrated its centenary in 2003. [1]

The earliest predecessor of IDTA was the Manchester and Salford Association of Teachers of Dancing, founded in 1903. This later became known as the Empire Society, (ESTD), in 1938. In 1920, another group of teachers in Birmingham formed the Midland Association of Teachers of Dancing (MATD), which eventually merged with the Empire Society in 1961 to form the Dance Teachers' Association.

In the early post-World War I years, a number of other small dance organisations were formed: the English Dancing Masters Association (EDMA), the Premier Association of Teachers of Dancing (PATD), the Universal Association of Dane Teachers (UADT), and the Yorkshire Association of Dancing Masters (YADM). These four organisations merged in 1930 to form the International Dancing Masters' Association.

After their merger in 1967,[ who? ] the organization was renamed the International Dance Teachers' Association. [1] :32

Notable people

Ballroom branch

Theatre branch

Honorary members

See also

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References

  1. 1 2 Wainwright, Lyndon B (1997). The Story of British Popular Dance. International Dance. ISBN   978-0-900326-35-6. OCLC   60153264.