By Madeleine Scott, Registered Movement Pattern Analyst
I utilized the Movement Pattern Analysis decision-making framework to support an undergraduate seminar for dance majors that focused on career planning and resume/portfolio development. In preparation for the course, I had interviewed and constructed basic profiles of all thirteen students. This revealed specific learning needs of the group and suggested strategies to meet these needs.
For example, students with strong Attending motivation need to be interested in the subject as such. They need to go into the subject in depth and also see it from a number of different angles. Attention-oriented students like an open-ended approach where he/she can make discoveries.
Students with a strong Intending motivation need to have a definite purpose and want to establish the value of a subject and its worthwhile-ness. They respond well to challenges and want to know how well they are performing in relation to others. Intention-oriented students like a clear approach with tasks he/she can come to grips with.
Students with a strong Committing motivation need to see a prospect for getting results out of their studies. They need to see that tangible progress is being made at a good pace and want immediate feedback on performance. Commitment-oriented students like a well-organized approach, systematized wherever possible.
I found that the MPA profiles helped students to understand their own decision-making processes. This can facilitate better management not only of individual studies but also of collaborative projects that must be carried out with peers.
In the following blog, I discuss how the MPA Interaction Motivations and team building, though not the primary focus of this course, also became relevant as a teaching tool.


In the 1940s, Rudolf Laban took his dance theories into the world of work, addressing issues of efficiency, job satisfaction, and reduction of fatigue on the factory floor.
As the benefits of physical motion are gaining recognition and undergoing further scrutiny, it is interesting to see how Laban characterized movement health. He wrote, “A healthy human being can have complete control of his kinesphere and dynamosphere…. The essential thing is that we should neither have preference for nor avoid certain movements because of physical or psychical restrictions.”
The Wall Street Journal has also been covering the health benefits of walking, notably the walk-and-talk business meeting. According to their September 13th article, “the health benefits are real for people who take walking meetings; their work gets more creative, too.”
Good news has been scarce in this election year. But don’t despair, movement analysts, for the benefit of movement is gaining traction in the national press!
The very first time we encounter a stranger, we derive an impression based on the person’s physical attributes and body language. Then rapidly and without conscious or logical control, we form a judgment – is the person positive, negative, or neutral?
Movement occurs in patterns, and these patterns are both expressive and meaningful. In 2017, MoveScape Center’s Red Thread offerings focus on the patterned aspects of movement behavior – in everyday activity, in effort, and in space.
Laban’s Choreutic forms both mirror and challenge the natural range of motion of the human body. As Laban was designing these movement sequences, he drew upon his first career as a visual artist. It’s clear from his figure drawings that he had studied anatomy. And he applied this knowledge in theorizing the shapes the moving limbs can trace in space.