Theatre Counts! From the Arts Education Council: "On stage, the audience sees a young person bow at the end of a theatre production. What the audience may not see: the hours of rehearsal spent preparing for this moment; their classmates poised on the catwalk shining the stage light to capture the performer’s joy; the costumers’ research, drawings, and design; the audio technician’s artful and precise balance of sound; and the stage manager creating harmony among the performers and the crew. The audience may not recognize that they are seeing the result of years of training and commitment on the part of educators to support students. Theatre education benefits are numerous and powerful and exist across student populations, age levels and learning environments." For more, click here!
From the CRPC:
"Theatre is an integral part of English language arts as well as the performing arts, so the foundation for theatre begins at birth as children develop personal communication skills. Parents and preschool and elementary teachers should encourage imaginative play and role-playing, both for their own sake and as important components of the learning process across the curriculum. All students should study creative writing, improvising and writing scripts; expressive public speaking, media literacy, theatrical production and interpretation; and other key communication skills as part of their basic K-12 language arts curriculum, and should deepen and apply these skills in formal theatre experiences under the guidance of expert theatre teachers."
3rd Grade Theatre, as a whole, becomes a mix between experimental play, while also taking a look at a more structured program involving music, dance, and other performance based mediums. Specific activities/lessons are found below!
Total Hours Per Quarter: 9
We have been getting to know each other the past few weeks! One of the fun activities that has helped us get to express ourselves and practice expressing different emotions is "Bluey" our class puppet! Sometimes we guess what Bluey is feeling or mirror his expressions!
Working on team work...cause it is the dreamwork and part of the theater experience. Energy ball encourages students to use their imagination, focus, and work as a team all while having fun! We have been playing many theater games such as energy ball, weather freeze and go, and more to work on team building skills and basic acting skills.
We are learning about the structure and importance of content in a story. What makes it interesting? What is important to the building of story? How do we turn that into a script? In small groups and individually we are exploring story writing to showcase our best story writing!