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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year theatre shifts from playing pretend to building scenes on purpose. Students invent characters, plan what happens next, and rehearse with a clear idea in mind. They also watch each other's work and explain what worked and why. By spring, students can perform a short scene they helped shape and talk about the story behind it.

  • Acting basics
  • Character building
  • Scene work
  • Rehearsal
  • Audience feedback
Source: Maine Maine Learning Results
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Building stories and characters

    Students start the year imagining stories and inventing characters. They draw on their own lives to come up with ideas for short scenes and skits.

  2. 2

    Shaping scenes together

    Students work in small groups to organize their ideas into scenes with a beginning, middle, and end. They try out different choices and revise based on what works.

  3. 3

    Acting and stagecraft

    Students practice the craft of performing. They work on voice, movement, and expression to bring a character to life for an audience.

  4. 4

    Performing and responding

    Students share their work and watch others perform. They talk about what a play meant, what choices the actors made, and how stories connect to their own lives and communities.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 3.
Connecting
  • Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art

    Students connect something from their own life to a scene or character they create, using real feelings or memories to make the work feel true.

  • 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 them understand why the story was told and what it meant to the people who first told it.

Creating
  • Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work

    Students come up with story ideas for short plays, then plan out characters, settings, and what happens in each scene.

  • Organize and develop artistic ideas and work

    Students take a theater idea, like a character or a short scene, and shape it into something ready to perform. They make choices about what happens, who speaks, and how the story moves.

  • Refine and complete artistic work

    Students revisit a scene or character they created and make changes to strengthen it. They practice until the work feels finished and ready to share.

Performing/Presenting/Producing
  • Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation

    Students choose which scenes or characters to perform and explain why those choices fit the story. They practice making decisions about what to show an audience, not just how to act.

  • Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation

    Students practice their lines, movement, and timing until the performance feels ready to share. Rehearsal is how they turn early ideas into a polished scene.

  • Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work

    Students perform a scene or story in front of an audience and make deliberate choices, such as voice, movement, and facial expression, so the people watching understand what the character feels or wants.

Responding
  • Perceive and analyze artistic work

    Students look at a scene or performance and describe what they notice, explaining why specific choices (a costume, a sound, a movement) create a particular feeling or mood.

  • Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work

    Students look at a scene or character and explain what the performer was trying to show. They put the feeling or message into their own words.

  • Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work

    Students pick a scene or performance to judge and explain what made it work or fall short, using a simple set of agreed-on rules as their guide.

Common Questions
  • What does theatre look like for this grade?

    Students make up short scenes, play characters, and act out stories from books, family life, or their own ideas. They also watch others perform and talk about what worked and what they felt. Most of the year is hands-on play with purpose, not memorizing big scripts.

  • How can I help my child practice acting at home?

    Pick a short story at bedtime and act out one scene together. Try different voices for each character, or freeze and ask what the character is feeling. Five minutes of pretend play counts as real practice at this age.

  • Does my child need to memorize lines?

    Not really. Most work at this grade is improvised or read from a short script. If a class play comes up, lines will be short and practiced together in class.

  • What if my child is shy about performing?

    Start small at home. Have students act out a scene for one stuffed animal, then for one family member. Confidence grows from low-pressure repetition, not from being pushed onto a stage.

  • How should I sequence theatre across the year?

    Start with imagination and movement games, then move into character work and short improvised scenes. Bring in script reading and basic staging by midyear. Save a small shared performance for the spring so students have months of skill-building first.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Staying in character when classmates laugh, and giving feedback that is kind and specific. Both take steady modeling. Sentence stems like "I noticed" and "I wondered" help students respond to a scene without slipping into "that was good" or "that was bad."

  • How do I connect theatre to what students are reading?

    Pick a scene from a class read-aloud and have small groups act it out two ways. Then ask why one version felt different. This pulls reading comprehension and theatre work into the same conversation without adding a new text.

  • How do I know students are ready for the next grade?

    By spring, students should be able to invent a short scene with a partner, stay in a character for a minute or two, and say one specific thing they liked about a classmate's performance. They should also connect a scene to something from their own life or a story they know.