Building characters and ideas
Students start the year by inventing characters and story ideas from their own lives and imagination. They try out voices, movements, and quick scenes to see what feels real on stage.
This is the year theatre moves from playing pretend to making deliberate choices on stage. Students build characters by pulling from their own lives and from the time period a play comes from. They rehearse scenes, take notes from classmates, and revise their work before performing. By spring, students can perform a short scene, explain why they made the choices they did, and give clear feedback on what a classmate's performance is trying to say.
Students start the year by inventing characters and story ideas from their own lives and imagination. They try out voices, movements, and quick scenes to see what feels real on stage.
Students organize their ideas into scenes with a beginning, middle, and end. They write dialogue, plan staging, and rework drafts based on feedback from classmates.
Students practice acting skills like voice, gesture, and timing. They pick scripts to perform, rehearse with intention, and make choices that help an audience follow the story.
Students look at plays and performances from different cultures and time periods. They notice how a play reflects the world it came from and what it might say to an audience today.
Students put their work in front of an audience and watch the work of others. They give and receive thoughtful feedback using clear criteria, and reflect on what worked and what to try next.
Students connect what they know from life outside school to the scenes and characters they create in theatre class. Personal experiences shape the choices they make onstage and in writing.
Students look at a play or performance and connect it to the time, place, or culture it came from. That context helps explain why the story was told and what it meant to the people who first saw it.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect what they know from life outside school to the scenes and characters they create in theatre class. Personal experiences shape the choices they make onstage and in writing. | TH:Cn10.7 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students look at a play or performance and connect it to the time, place, or culture it came from. That context helps explain why the story was told and what it meant to the people who first saw it. | TH:Cn11.7 |
Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a scene or performance, experimenting with character, story, and setting before committing to a direction.
Students take a theatre idea and shape it into something stageable, making choices about character, dialogue, and staging until the scene holds together.
Students revise a scene or script based on feedback, making specific changes until the work is ready to perform or present.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a scene or performance, experimenting with character, story, and setting before committing to a direction. | TH:Cr1.7 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take a theatre idea and shape it into something stageable, making choices about character, dialogue, and staging until the scene holds together. | TH:Cr2.7 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students revise a scene or script based on feedback, making specific changes until the work is ready to perform or present. | TH:Cr3.7 |
Students choose a scene or monologue, then explain why it suits the performance and what choices they made to prepare it for an audience.
Students rehearse a scene repeatedly, adjusting voice, movement, and timing until the performance is ready to share with an audience.
Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear intent, making deliberate choices about voice, movement, and character so the audience understands what the piece is about.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose a scene or monologue, then explain why it suits the performance and what choices they made to prepare it for an audience. | TH:Pr4.7 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students rehearse a scene repeatedly, adjusting voice, movement, and timing until the performance is ready to share with an audience. | TH:Pr5.7 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear intent, making deliberate choices about voice, movement, and character so the audience understands what the piece is about. | TH:Pr6.7 |
Students watch or read a scene and break down how the acting choices, staging, and story work together to create meaning.
Students explain what a scene, character, or design choice means and what the creator was trying to say. They support their reading of the work with specific details from the performance or script.
Students judge a scene or performance using specific criteria, explaining what worked, what didn't, and why. The focus is on reasoning, not just personal taste.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch or read a scene and break down how the acting choices, staging, and story work together to create meaning. | TH:Re7.7 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what a scene, character, or design choice means and what the creator was trying to say. They support their reading of the work with specific details from the performance or script. | TH:Re8.7 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students judge a scene or performance using specific criteria, explaining what worked, what didn't, and why. The focus is on reasoning, not just personal taste. | TH:Re9.7 |
Students build short scenes from their own ideas, rehearse and refine them, then perform for an audience. They also watch plays and other performances and talk about what worked and why. The year balances making theatre and responding to it.
Start small. Read a short scene out loud together and try the same line three different ways: angry, scared, joking. Five minutes of playful read-alouds builds confidence without putting anyone on a stage.
Some assignments will ask for memorized lines, others will not. When memorization is required, short nightly practice helps more than one long session. Run the lines at dinner or in the car for a few minutes a day.
Most teachers braid all three rather than teach them in blocks. A short creating task leads into a rehearsal, then a performance, then a structured response from peers. Repeating that cycle with rising stakes works better than saving performances for the end.
Giving useful feedback is the hardest skill. Students will say a scene was good or bad without pointing to what they saw. Practicing one feedback frame, like naming a choice and its effect, pays off across every unit.
Students look at how a play reflects the time and place it came from, and how their own backgrounds shape the choices they make on stage. A scene set in another era is a chance to ask what people believed then and how that shows up in the dialogue.
By spring, students should be able to pitch an idea for a scene, rehearse it with a partner, take a note and try it again, and explain a choice they made as an actor. Comfort with revision matters more than a polished final performance.
Be the audience. Watch a one-minute rehearsal, then ask what choice was made and what was tried before. That kind of question pushes thinking further than saying it was great.