in PE 9 Q3WK5 - 2022
in PE 9 Q3WK5 - 2022
in PE 9 Q3WK5 - 2022
(Q3WK5)
Objectives:
● undertakes physical activity and physical fitness
assessments,
Cardiorespiratory Power
endurance Speed
Muscular strength Agility
Muscular endurance Coordination
flexibility Balance
Body composition Reaction time
Tangub City 1st Place Street Dancing - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PRc4Qsu6Jy0
What is Festival Dances?
Festival dances are cultural dances
performed to the strong beats of percussion
instruments by a community of people
sharing the same culture usually done in
honor of Patron Saint or in thanksgiving of
a bountiful harvest.
Festival dances may be religious
or secular in nature.
● Religious - in honor of a
certain religious icons
● Secular - in thanksgiving or
celebration of peoples
industry and bountiful harvest
Purposes of
● Festivals
Entertain
● Celebrate
● To have fun
● Help people explore each
other’s culture
● Uplift economy
Whatever festival we celebrate, be it
done to honor a religious icon or
celebrate our industry.
Festival dances reflect the unity of the
Filipino community that despite the
economic, social, environmental,
cultural and political challenges we
face everyday, there can be no other
race more resilient than ours.
Religious Festival
Sinulog Festival(Cebu City)
Sinulog festival is a traditional celebration in
Cebu City held every Third sunday of
January to honor the Santo Nino(Child
Jesus). Basically festival is done by a dance
ritual in which it tells the story of the Filipino
people’s pagan past and their acceptance of
Christianity. The word “Sinulog” means
“graceful dance” wherein it all started in 1980
with a simple dance that represents the
“sulog”(or current) of a river in Cebu.
Religious Festival
Dinagyang Festival(Iloilo City)
BANGUS FESTIVAL
(Pangasinan)
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
The Dinamulag Festival also
known as the Zambales Mango
Festival is an annual festival
held in the province of
Zambales, Philippines to
celebrate or encourage
bountiful harvest of the
province’s mangoes. It is held
during the month of March and
April. DINAMULAG
FESTIVAL(MANGO)ZAMBALES
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
Mammangui Festival celebrated
amid the most recent seven day
stretch of May.; a Ybanag word
meaning “the reap of planting of
corn”. It respects the ranchers who
are genuine establishment of
Ilagan’s economy and is
commended as a thanksgiving
action for a decent gather.
MAMMANGUI
FESTIVAL(ILAGAN ISABELA)
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
It is a month-long annual flower
occasion in Baguio. The term is
of Kankanaey origin, meaning
“season of blooming”. The
festival, held in February, was
created as a tribute to the city’s
flowers and as a way to rise up
from the devastation of the 1990
Luzon earthquake.
PANAGBENGA
FESTIVAL(BAGUIO CITY)
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
Ibon-Ebon Festival, also called
“birds and Eggs Festival”, is a
celebration held during the first and
second days of February in
Candaba, Pampanga. This festival is
also a celebration for another year
of bountiful harvest. The main
features of the festival are the
migratory birds. IBON EBON
FESTIVAL(CANDABA,
PAMPANGA)
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
The Masskara Festival is an
annual festival with highlights
held every 4th Sunday of October
in Bacolod, Philippines.
Masskara Festival is more than
just the electrifying festival dance
or parties, but held as a symbol of
the Negrenses’ optimism and
resilience during trying times and
to bring smiles back.
MASSKARA
FESTIVAL( BACOLOD CITY)
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
Also known as T’nalak
Festival, is a festival held to
celebrate the anniversary of
South Cotabato, and is
observed every July. The
festival’s unique name is
attributed to a popular piece of
colorful cloth woven by the
T’NALAK FESTIVAL( KORONADAL, local T’boli woman.(T’boli is
SOUTH COTABATO) a tribe in the region)
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
The festival held from May 21 - 25,
is an annual array of weeklong
festivities in the province where
Novo Vizcayanos from all walks of
life will commemorate the
province’s founding anniversary on
May 24.
Ammungan is the Gadda word
for “gathering” while it’s Ilocano
counterpart is ummungan which
also has the same meaning and is AMMUNGAN FESTIVAL( NUEVA
widely understood among the ethno-
VIZCAYA)
linguistic groups.
Secular Festivals in the Philippines
Binatbatan festival of the Arts
celebrated from the last week of April
to the 1st week of may was originally
the Feast of the Natives that began on
May 3, 1883.
However, in 2002, Binatbatan
Festival was introduced to celebrate
one of the industries that kept
residences alive-abel Iloco hand loom
weaving. Binatbatan in the process of
beating cotton pods to remove the
BINATBATAN FESTIVAL( VIGAN seeds.
CITY)
Processing Questions: