Building the ensemble
Students start the year by trying out theatre games and short scenes together. They learn to listen, take turns onstage, and build characters from their own life experiences.
This is the year theatre shifts from playing pretend to making deliberate choices about character and story. Students build scenes from their own ideas, then rework them after feedback instead of stopping at the first try. They also start asking why a play was written and what it meant to the people who first saw it. By spring, students can rehearse a short scene, perform it for classmates, and explain the choices behind it.
Students start the year by trying out theatre games and short scenes together. They learn to listen, take turns onstage, and build characters from their own life experiences.
Students move from quick exercises to writing and shaping their own short scenes. They draft ideas, try them on their feet, and revise based on what works in front of classmates.
Students read and watch scenes from different time periods and cultures. They look at why a play was written and how its setting shapes the story a parent would see onstage.
Students pick scenes to perform and rehearse them with attention to voice, movement, and choices that carry meaning. Costumes, props, and staging come together for a final showing.
Students respond to performances by their classmates and to plays they have seen. They give feedback using clear reasons, not just personal taste, and apply the same criteria to their own work.
Students connect their own memories and life experiences to the choices they make in a scene or performance. Personal history shapes character decisions, emotional tone, and storytelling.
Theatre works don't exist in a vacuum. Students connect plays and performances to the time period, culture, or events that shaped them, explaining what the work reveals about the world it came from.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect their own memories and life experiences to the choices they make in a scene or performance. Personal history shapes character decisions, emotional tone, and storytelling. | TH:Cn10.6 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Theatre works don't exist in a vacuum. Students connect plays and performances to the time period, culture, or events that shaped them, explaining what the work reveals about the world it came from. | TH:Cn11.6 |
Students brainstorm characters, settings, and story situations to develop original ideas for a scene or performance. This is the spark stage, where ideas get explored before any script or blocking begins.
Students take a rough idea for a scene or character and shape it into something stageable, making choices about dialogue, movement, and setting until the work is ready to rehearse.
Students review and revise a scene or script they created, making choices about what to keep, cut, or change until the work feels finished and ready to share.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm characters, settings, and story situations to develop original ideas for a scene or performance. This is the spark stage, where ideas get explored before any script or blocking begins. | TH:Cr1.6 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take a rough idea for a scene or character and shape it into something stageable, making choices about dialogue, movement, and setting until the work is ready to rehearse. | TH:Cr2.6 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students review and revise a scene or script they created, making choices about what to keep, cut, or change until the work feels finished and ready to share. | TH:Cr3.6 |
Students choose a scene or monologue to perform and explain why it fits their skills and the story they want to tell.
Students practice and improve their performance before presenting it to an audience. That means rehearsing lines, blocking, and delivery until the work is ready to show.
Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear purpose in mind, making choices about voice, movement, and character so the audience understands what the moment means.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose a scene or monologue to perform and explain why it fits their skills and the story they want to tell. | TH:Pr4.6 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice and improve their performance before presenting it to an audience. That means rehearsing lines, blocking, and delivery until the work is ready to show. | TH:Pr5.6 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear purpose in mind, making choices about voice, movement, and character so the audience understands what the moment means. | TH:Pr6.6 |
Students watch a scene or performance and break down what they notice: how the actors move, speak, and use the stage to tell the story.
Students explain what a scene or performance is trying to say, looking at the choices the playwright and performers made to find the meaning behind the work.
Students look at a scene or performance and judge it using specific criteria, like whether the acting felt believable or the story came through clearly.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch a scene or performance and break down what they notice: how the actors move, speak, and use the stage to tell the story. | TH:Re7.6 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what a scene or performance is trying to say, looking at the choices the playwright and performers made to find the meaning behind the work. | TH:Re8.6 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students look at a scene or performance and judge it using specific criteria, like whether the acting felt believable or the story came through clearly. | TH:Re9.6 |
Students build short scenes from their own ideas, then rehearse and perform them. They also watch plays and talk about what the story meant and how the actors made choices. By spring, most students can take a scene from a rough idea to a polished performance.
Start small. Read a picture book out loud together and try different voices for each character, or act out a short scene from a movie you both like. Five minutes of silly practice in the living room builds more confidence than a pep talk.
Ask about a real moment from their week, like a funny argument with a sibling or a weird thing that happened at lunch. Real life is where scene ideas come from. Help them pick one moment and figure out who wants what.
Sometimes. Short scenes and monologues usually get memorised so students can focus on acting instead of reading. Running lines in the car or at dinner for a few minutes a day is the easiest way to help at home.
Spend the first months on short improv and devising work so students get used to generating ideas without pressure. Move into scripted scenes mid-year, then end with a polished performance that uses the rehearsal habits built earlier. Responding to plays can run alongside all of it.
Giving and taking feedback without getting defensive is the big one. Students also struggle to revise a scene once they have performed it; they want to be done. Build short revision cycles into early projects so editing feels normal.
Pick scenes or plays tied to a time period or culture students are studying elsewhere, then ask what the play shows about how people lived or what they argued about. A short scene set during a historical moment works well. The link does not have to be heavy to be real.
Students can build a short scene from an idea, rehearse it with a partner, take notes from feedback, and perform it for an audience. They can also watch a play and explain what the playwright or actors were trying to say, using specific moments as evidence.
They can stay in character through a short scene, take direction without shutting down, and talk about a play they watched in more than one or two sentences. If they can do those three things, they are ready.