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Selection criteria - dance

This guide provides an overview of what selection criteria are and how they are employed during the assessment of your application. It will also provide you with some guidance on how the dance board currently views and interprets each criterion.

Selection criteria are what the Australia Council uses to assess applications.

Dance board members individually score applications and submit them to staff to table the scores in preparation for the assessment meeting. Advised by artform peers, the members of the board, reconsider the applications during the assessment meeting against the selection criteria. Applications are given a percentage score and are sorted by rank. Applications are then funded from the top down until the board's budget is expended.

Your aim is to prepare clear, relevant information so that your application will compete strongly against others.

Dance board criteria in 2009
The dance board is using uniform selection criteria across the  projects, fellowships and artform development categories in 2009.

Your application will be considered within the context of the purpose of the category in which you have applied. You should ensure that you understand the purpose and breadth of each category and ensure that your activity is well justified to be assessed in that category. A quick category overview is provided at the end of this document.

Applicants should always aim to respond to all selection criteria as well as possible. The ability to respond strongly to all criteria will increase your percentage score which is used to rank applications for funding.

The dance board is utilising five criteria to which everyone must respond, with an optional sixth criterion for those applicants that are eligible and wish to respond to the cultural diversity of Australian dance.
Selection criteria
The interpretation of the criteria below includes both a definition of the criterion and a series of prompt questions that applicants and board members can use to help identify to what degree an application has responded to each criteria.

1. Artistic innovation with a creative rationale
This criterion is designed to tease out the quality of the underlying creative foundation and originality of the proposed activity. It is not about the company or the artist but rather about a clear rationale for the project and its activities. Artistic innovation is linked to the way that artists develop, expand or refine their area of practice.

What are the creative aims of the project? Do the artists acknowledge the context in which they create work? Are the artistic motivations clearly articulated? Is the reason how and why this project is being done clear? If relevant, has the artist provided a robust and insightful methodology of investigation; provided details of choreographic vocabulary, a research technique, or outlined details of their collaborative process or partnership? Is the creative and artistic significance of the project for the artist and the artists’ work articulated?

2. Artistic or professional skills appropriate to the activity
This criterion assesses the creative ability of the artists in relation to the proposed activity and continuum of their artistic practice. Applications will be assessed on the skills gathered for the project rather than a judgment of the regard for particular artists. Board members use attendance at performances, company history, support material, letters of support and the biographies within the application to assess against this criterion.

Do the artists outline the skills required for this project? Are there appropriate processes for skilling-up, mentoring or training if there is an absence of these skills? Is dramaturgy, project assistance or technical support required? Are the right people doing the right jobs? Are the roles and responsibilities of the team outlined in the project? Are the skills identified relevant to this particular type of activity?

3. The benefit of the activity and audience development potential
This criterion is used to assess:

3.1 the benefit of the project on the artists, the dance sector, the community and the wider public. Applicants should clearly articulate the benefit - the significance of the activity or project at this point in time.

What kind of impact will this activity have locally, nationally or internationally? Is this activity important and beneficial at this point in time? Are the outcomes of this project clearly articulated? Does the project consider its context within the community, the public and Australian dance?

3.2 the intended audience is and what is the potential for audience development. Processes and techniques of developing new and existing audiences for dance should be outlined and considered. Projects do not need to be all encompassing and accessible to all audiences but consideration of audience engagement or participation is valued. For proposals that do not have an immediate public outcome, an outline of future developments and modes of distribution is important.

Have the artists identified their audiences? Do the artists understand and respond to their audience? What techniques are used to reach new, old or existing audiences?How will the work be promoted? Is there potential for audience development?

4. Contribution to the cultural diversity of Australian dance
The dance board is committed to supporting and promoting a diverse dance sector that reflects and celebrates Australia’s cultural diversity. How does this project promote or engage with cultural diversity? What are the cultures being represented, how are the needs of this culture met and how will this be articulated in the project? Have appropriate cultural protocols been followed? How will this project engage with the artists, activity or audiences it attracts, reflects or represents?

For further information regarding the cultural diversity criterion please refer to the Cultural Diversity Dance Policy.

5. Good planning and effective use of resources
This criterion aims to draw out the applicant’s capability to plan, resource and evaluate their activity. This criterion is mainly practical and has a focus on logistics, financial and human resources, project management, effective budgeting, appropriate partners and supporters, effective cultural protocols and community liaison. Evidence is necessary for this criterion and the budget, letters of support, venue and partnership correspondence will be carefully considered. Effective evaluation is an important part of every project and competitive proposals will articulate relevant and strategic project, financial and artistic evaluation strategies and consultation.

Does the project make sense? Is the project realistic, manageable and achievable considering the level of activity? Are the roles and responsibilities of the team clear? Have the artists sought appropriate sources of income, support or partnership? Is the project viable? Is the budget clear? Have partners confirmed their interest and communicated the value of this project? Have appropriate cultural and community protocols been observed? Is the timeline appropriate? Have all partners, artists, venues and team confirmed their participation? Have all potential resources been identified and used?