Monthly Archives: February 2017

Drama Lessons – TDT

A subject that I always seemed to enjoy throughout my primary and secondary school days was drama. I find it a particularly interesting and useful subject as it can offer young children many opportunities especially performing in front of an audience. To some children, the thought of performing in front of anyone can be terrifying for them but drama can actually help boost their confidence and this can impact them outside the drama classroom too along with many other skills drama can offer.

For the TDT, we were asked to watch a short video of how to structure a drama lesson. For me, I have plenty of experience working within the drama classroom but never teaching it so this video was especially useful for me. The video was of a one day drama workshop for teachers who needed inspiration or guidance on how to start preparing for a drama lesson and these are the steps they were to follow:

  1. Agreement – Before even beginning the lesson, the teacher must create an agreement with the students. This can be a set of rules during their time spent in drama. I thought this was an excellent idea as it emphasises the expectations during the lesson such as the 3 C’s which were highlighted in this video and they are concentration, communication and co-operation. The children can always look back at the agreement to refer to it.
  2. Warm – Up – This is a very important stage, particularly if the children have ben sitting down in a classroom all day, as it gets the children up and ready for practical work. Warm ups can get the mind and body ready.
  3. FocusĀ – What is the main focus of your drama lesson? The focus provides the main purpose of the lesson, it can link to other curricular areas such as what are the children learning in history and they can create a performance related to their subject.
  4. Development – After the focus is established, the children can then build on this and work towards the finished product which can be a performance in front of an audience.
  5. VisualisationĀ – This part gets the children to create a visual picture in their minds and start to think creatively. In the video, scenarios were created and everyone had to close their eyes and think about what they could see, hear, smell etc.
  6. Bodyscape – Now they have visualised the picture, children can now use their bodies to create the scene. This can be done with no props, only their bodies and again can be related to their subject.
  7. Performance – The final product, the performance. Thought tracking can be used during the performance and this involves the teacher moving around a still image the children have created and tapping on each persons shoulder. At this point the child shares what the character is feeling or wanting to say.
  8. Evaluation – In this video, they made it clear teachers need to leave time at the end of the lesson for evaluation. This allows the children to share what they have learnt, talking to each other about what they enjoyed and maybe things they found difficult. The teacher can take the evaluation from the children into account when preparing the next drama lesson.

Experiences & Outcomes

The E&O’s i think have been addressed in this video are the following

I can create, adapt and sustain different roles, experimenting with movement, expression and voice and using theatre arts technology. (EXA 2-12a)

Inspired by a range of stimuli, I can express and communicate my ideas, thoughts andĀ feelings through drama. (EXA 0-13a / EXA 1-13a / EXA 2-13a)

Overall, I feel the first drama input was very interesting and has definitely provided stepping stones for when it comes to planning my own drama lessons.

http://archive.teachfind.com/ttv/www.teachers.tv/videos/ks1-ks2-drama-teaching-drama-a-structured-approach.html