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Teachers
> Lesson Plans
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/ Theater > Creating Plays from Children's Stories |
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Standard: Students will make and write plays Indicators of Achievement: Students will:
Standard: Students will act in formal or informal presentations Indicators of Achievement: Students will:
Standard: Students will manage and produce informal or formal presentations. (Managing and producing informal and formal presentations includes maximizing creative use of space, personnel, time, budget, and materials; and planning, organizing, and marketing.) Indicators of Achievement: Students will:
Standard: Students will assess the characteristics of theater, evaluating productions and audience response Indicators of Achievement: Students will:
Preparation: Students need to have had experience with improvisation and script analysis and performance. Solicit stories from elementary school students in the district. Activity: Discuss children's literary and dramatic interests. Have the high school students choose the children's stories with the most dramatic possibilities, e.g. interesting characters, the possibility of tension/conflict, etc. After discussing the process of adapting a piece of literature for the stage and reinforcing the essentials of collaboration/ensemble, divide the class into workable groups. Have them improvise a scene(s) from the story they've chosen. Share the scenes discussing plot (beginning, tension/conflict, ending), character (finding the "voice"/language to make the character unique), and setting. Have the groups write their scene(s). A process to keep them ontask might be to require a teacher signature at the end of each of the following steps: plot outline, setting, character descriptions, rough draft, revision. Have the students read their rough drafts to the class, followed by a critique focused on the playwriting choices. Rewrites follow. A day is spent in developing a marketing plan for the grade schools (perhaps the high school students travel to the elementary school for the performance or the children travel to the high school). An evening performance for student's families might also be effective. After the rewriting is completed, the students gather the necessary props and perhaps costume pieces to suggest character. They rehearse, memorize and perform their scenes for the class a second time. The order for the presentation of the scenes is developed and the whole production is rehearsed. Logistics for the performances are planned. After the performance a critique is held focusing on the playwriting choices, actor/character choices, the ensemble collaborative process, audience response. Assessment: Student journals, inclusion of the draft and final version of the scene and a final written critique in the student's portfolio. Forced answer test on play structure. Adapted from a lesson written by the National Theater Standards Writing Committee |
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