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creative movement

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

January 21, 2026 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

a group of drama students sitting around working on their drama researc projecgt.

I’ve taught drama long enough to see the pattern—students come alive during movement, voice, and collaboration, but hesitate when it’s time to open a book or dig into background research. How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way  grew out of that exact challenge, offering ways to turn research into a creative tool rather than a roadblock.  The most meaningful research your students will ever do can happen while they are designing a set, building a character’s backstory, or discovering why a playwright made a certain artistic choice.

This post is for drama teachers who want their students to think like theater artists, not worksheet completers.

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

What “Arts Research” Really Means in Drama

When we talk about research in a drama class, we’re not talking about term papers. (Aren’t we all relieved?) We’re talking about students learning to:

  • Investigate who created a piece and why
  • Explore historical, artistic, and production context
  • Analyze design and performance choices
  • Make creative decisions based on evidence

In professional theater, every actor, designer, and director researches before they ever step into rehearsal. Onr of my favorite videos is one about the choreography in The Outsiders musical.

The Broadway musical’s choreography (by Rick Kuperman and Jeff Kuperman) leans heavily into physical storytelling. Instead of flashy, traditional musical theater dance, the movement feels grounded, gritty, and character-driven — much like the novel itself. The ensemble often moves as a collective body, showing the tension between the Greasers and the Socs through posture, spacing, and physical levels rather than words alone.

One of the most talked-about elements is how the choreography blends stage combat, gesture, and balletic movement, especially in moments like the rumble. The fight sequences aren’t just about action — they’re carefully shaped to reveal power, fear, loyalty, and class division. Even stillness is used as choreography, with characters freezing  (tableau)  or isolating themselves in space to highlight emotional shifts.

High school students are often drawn to The Outsiders because its bold movement and confrontational moments invite discussion about how violence, loyalty, and social class are represented through performance rather than just dialogue.

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

1. Research Through Character, Not a Report

Instead of assigning “Write a paragraph about this character,” try reframing research as discovery work.

Classroom Strategy

Have students create a one-page “Character Research File” that includes:

  • Time period and social setting
  • Personal history (What happened before the story begins?)
  • Relationships and power dynamics
  • One real-world comparison or historical connection

Then, ask them to perform one choice that came from their research. For example, if they choose time period ( such as the 1920s) and social setting, they could demonstrate the time period through dance, pantomime and movement.

Now the research has a purpose. I think everyone thrives and is inspired when there is a purpose in a learning objective.

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way
BrandonDavis.com

2. Design-Based Research (Set, Costume and Sound)

Design is one of the easiest ways to sneak research into drama class—because students already love it. Check out this blog post: The Five Reasons Your Students Will Love Set Design

Set Design

  • Research real locations, architecture styles, or historical spaces
  • Justify design choices with evidence

For example, in a 2000s New York City setting, the color palette often leans toward cool, industrial, and artificial tones—grays from concrete and steel, black asphalt, bright neon signage, LED blues, and the sharp whites of storefront lighting. These colors reflect a fast-paced, urban environment shaped by technology, advertising, and modern architecture.

By contrast, a Native American community in the 1800s would be represented through earth-based, natural colors—warm browns, clay reds, soft tans, sage greens, sky blues, and muted yellows drawn from the landscape, natural dyes, and materials like hide, wood, and woven fibers. These tones connect visually to the land, seasons, and cultural traditions rather than manufactured light and modern industry.

Students could create design boards displaying both and share their opinions with the class in a formal assessment.

Costume Design

  • Explore clothing styles by era or culture
  • Explain how color, fabric, and shape communicate character

Color, fabric, and shape act as visual storytelling tools.
Color can signal emotion or status—dark tones often suggest power or conflict, while lighter colors can suggest innocence or calm. Fabric reflects lifestyle—heavy materials like denim or wool hint at physical work or toughness, while light, flowing fabrics suggest comfort or wealth. Shape reveals personality—sharp, structured silhouettes can feel rigid or authoritative, while soft, rounded shapes feel open or vulnerable.

Together, these choices help students explain not just what a character wears, but what it tells the audience about who they are. 

Sound & Foley

  • Research how sound effects were created in classic radio theater
  • Test and compare materials for realism

You’ll hear students say things like:

“I chose this because I found out that…”

That’s research happening naturally. Plus, it’s less stressful.  We want every students to feel comfortable in our classroom.

Photo 2

3. Musical Theater as an Arts Research Goldmine

Musicals are packed with built-in research opportunities.

Students can explore:

  • The composer and lyricist’s background
  • The source material (novel, play, memoir, or folklore)
  • The time and culture in which the show was created
  • Why certain themes still resonate today

One reason certain themes remain powerful in musical theater is that they mirror challenges students still face today. Take the theme of belonging—from West Side Story to The Outsiders to Dear Evan Hansen, characters struggle to find their place in a group, a family, or a community.

Even as settings and music styles change, the core question stays the same: Where do I fit? That emotional throughline keeps these stories relevant, allowing each new generation of students to see their own experiences reflected on stage. If you’d like pick up study guides of these musicals through my store: Dramamommaspeaks

Try This

Have students answer one guiding question before performing or reading:

“What did the creators want the audience to feel, and how did their artistic choices help make that happen?”

Suddenly, students are researching like directors, not students.

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

4. Research Through Voice: Radio Theater & Tableaux

Some students freeze when they’re asked to “act.” We’d all agree we don’t want that for them. However, research gives them a different entry point.

Radio Theater

  • Research how early radio performers used voice and sound
  • Compare modern audio storytelling to classic broadcasts

Modern audio storytelling—like podcasts and streamed audio dramas—uses layered sound design, digital effects, and intimate microphone work to create a cinematic feel. While classic radio broadcasts relied on live Foley effects, simple music cues, and strong vocal performance to spark the listener’s imagination. Both approaches tell stories through sound, but the tools and technology shape how the audience experiences the world being created.

By the way, I’d advise you to add radio theater to your lesson plans.  You simply can’t go wrong with it.  Check out this post: Top Reasons Teachers Succeed With Teaching Radio Theater

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

Tableaux

Let’s say you have a group of students with diverse learning needs.  Remember, everyone can find a home for themselves in theater.  We just have to help them find their happy place. Students who need differentiation always shine in demonstrating tableaux.

  • Research historical photos or artwork
  • Recreate the moment using frozen images

These approaches let students show what they learned instead of writing it. 

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

5. Turning Research in Drama Class Into Reflection, Not Recitation

Instead of multiple-choice questions, try reflection prompts like:

  • What surprised you during your research?
  • What choice would you change if you were directing this piece?
  • What does this story say about the time it was created?

Reflection turns information into understanding. Additionally, reflection is non-threatening and something most students can learn to use in everything they do.  If nothing else, teaching them to reflect after attending a play or musical encourages them to think long after the curtain has gone down. 

How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

A Simple Structure You Can Reuse All Year

I do my best to keep my lessons simple in nature for a teacher to teach. Here’s a “research in drama class” teacher-tested flow you can use with research in drama class with almost any drama lesson:

  1. Explore – Introduce the play, musical, or concept
  2. Investigate – Students research one focused question
  3. Create – Students apply what they learned
  4. Share – Perform, present, or display
  5. Reflect – Discuss what the research changed

This keeps research active, not passive.


How to Teach Research in Drama Class the Easy Way

Why This Matters for Reluctant Learners

You know you are reaching your objectives when students research for a creative purpose, they stop asking:

“How long does this have to be?”

And start asking:

“Can I change this idea?”

It often begins with a simple shift in thinking. When a student starts asking, “Can I change this idea?” that question alone signals that research is doing its job. It has sparked curiosity, reflection, and ownership of the work. Rather than looking for a single “right answer,” the student is weighing possibilities and making informed choices. You will find that your gifted/talented students will groove on coming up with a unique idea. It always occurs.

This is where differentiation becomes essential. Some students may explore through reading and note-taking, others through images, movement, or discussion. By offering multiple pathways into the same concept, you allow every learner—regardless of ability or confidence level—to engage meaningfully and move the idea forward in their own way.

That’s when learning sticks and it’s exciting!


Research in Drama Classroom Takeaway

Remember, research in drama doesn’t belong in a packet.

It belongs in:

  • Design boards
  • Actor notebooks
  • Sound tables
  • Director’s notes
  • And student performances

When students see themselves as artists-in-training, research becomes part of the process—not a chore.

If you’re looking for ready-made lessons that combine arts research, close reading, and creative application, many of my Dramamommaspeaks musical study guides and radio theater units are designed with this exact approach in mind.

Have you assigned research type projects to your students? What did they select? How did it go for them? I’d love to hear your thoughts.  Contact me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com

Deb

Working with students at Presser Performing Arts Center

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Filed Under: acting, arts education, creative dramatics, creative movement, drama education, drama integration, Education, excellence in teaching, gifted and talented, High School, middle grades, Radio Theatre, youth theatre Tagged With: choreography, costume design, lighting design, set design, sound design, The Outsiders Musical, West Side Story

Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students

January 6, 2026 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

A group of Cirque De Soleil contortionists forming a human zebra

Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students

When teachers think about theater education, scripts and stage lights often come to mind first. I do, too!  But Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students is about something broader—projects that invite movement, rhythm, silence, collaboration, and risk-taking. These experiences often engage students who may not see themselves as performers, yet thrive when theater is approached through sound, physical storytelling, and visual expression rather than memorization and lines.

You know I’ m a big advocate for theater and how it engages reluctant students. I’ve seen it connect students to their learning, some for the first time.   Theater arts projects like these expand how students define performance. Additionally, it helps them discover that theater isn’t just something they watch—it’s something they experience.


Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students and Breaking Bach

Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students

Recently, I saw a Reel on Instagram detailing this project and I was hooked right from the beginning.  Breaking Bach blends classical music with hip-hop movement, spoken word, and contemporary rhythm. While it may not look like “traditional theater,” it is rich with theatrical storytelling, character, and emotional expression. I knew from the minute I watched the Reel that once students saw it, they would love it immediately. Check it out here: Breaking Bach

For students, Breaking Bach becomes an invitation to respond creatively rather than perform perfectly.

Classroom connections for students:

  • Discuss how movement communicates emotion without dialogue

  • Create short movement pieces inspired by classical music in the style of Breaking Bach

  • Write a reflective monologue or poem responding to a musical selection

This type of project works especially well for students who feel intimidated by memorization or scripted performance.

If you’d like to teach Breaking Bach, check it out here:  Breaking Bach:  Hip Hop  and Classical Music Project


Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students and Mummenschanz

Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students

The Swiss theater company Mummenschanz uses masks, abstract shapes, and physical movement to tell stories—without speaking a single word. For students, this is a revelation: theater can exist entirely through body language and imagination. Check out Mummenschanz here.

Why students respond to this work:

  • Removes pressure to “say the right thing”

  • Builds awareness of physical storytelling

  • Encourages ensemble collaboration

Student project ideas:

  • In two person scenes, create characters using recycled materials

  • Perform short silent scenes focused on emotion or conflict

  • Explore how posture, tempo, and gesture change meaning

Mummenschanz-style projects are particularly effective for middle school students and reluctant speakers. Heard of Box Sox? Check out a 5 lesson resource including Mummenschanz here: Emergency Sub Plan Theater Around the World 

Check out this blog post about them: Creative Movement: Elementary and Middle School Teachers – Ready to Move?


Blue Man Group: Rhythm, Visuals, and Ensemble Performance

Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students

Several years ago, my husband and I used to sponsor school trips to New York City.  One of the students most favorite performances was of the Blue Man Group.  Blue Man Group blends percussion, comedy, audience interaction, and striking visuals into a theatrical experience unlike any other. Blue Man Group is  surprising and certainly unique!  Students immediately recognize that this kind of performance relies on timing, collaboration, and bold physical choices. Check out Blue Man Group here.

Classroom opportunities for students:

  • Create rhythm-based performances using found objects

  • Develop characters through costume, makeup, and movement

  • Explore safe, structured audience interaction

These projects help students understand that sound design, physicality, and visual storytelling are just as important as spoken lines.


Cirque du Soleil: Visual Storytelling Through Movement and Design

Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students

Cirque du Soleil blends acrobatics, music, movement, costume, and design into a highly theatrical experience. While Cirque performers are elite professionals, the true classroom value lies in how the company tells stories visually—often with minimal dialogue. Check out Cirque De Soleil here.

For students, Cirque du Soleil becomes a gateway into understanding how theater elements work together to create meaning.

Classroom connections for students:

  • Analyze how costume, makeup, and movement define character

  • Design a Cirque-inspired character using color, texture, and shape

  • Create short movement sequences that tell a story without words

  • Explore how lighting and music influence mood and emotion

Cirque du Soleil is especially useful when teaching technical theater concepts, visual storytelling, or ensemble movement, even when students never attempt acrobatics themselves.


Why Cirque Works So Well in the Classroom

It reinforces the idea that:

  • Theater is more than dialogue

  • Design choices are storytelling tools

  • Movement can communicate theme and emotion

Check out this unit if you are ready to teach about this incredible company: Cirque De Soleil Costume Design


Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students

Why Nontraditional Theater Projects Matter for Students

Projects like Breaking Bach, Mummenschanz, Blue Man Group and Cirque De Soleil expand how students define theater. They easily see that theater is more than just a play or musical.   These other companies allow students to:

  • Participate without memorization–probably a student’s number one worry is memorizing

  • Build confidence through movement and sound–students enjoy using movement, dance and sound–they are relatable

  • Collaborate in low-pressure, creative ways–working in small groups, students gain confidence and skills from others

  • Discover personal strengths they didn’t know they had–using movement, sound, and collaboration reveals students’ abilities that traditional performance sometimes hides.

For teachers, these projects are flexible, adaptable, and ideal for short units, interdisciplinary lessons, or days when a full script simply isn’t the best fit.


Final Thoughts

I’m always looking for ways to help teachers and reach students. I think you’ll find that when students experience theater beyond the stage, they begin to see performance as a form of communication rather than a test of talent. Nontraditional theater arts projects remind students that creativity has many entry points—and that every student belongs in the theater classroom. Read about how Theater Saved My Life.

Sometimes, the most meaningful performances happen when we step away from the script. We let students explore what theater can be. That’s when exciting things can happen for them that they do not expect. I hope this blog post, Beyond the Stage: Theater Arts Projects for Students gives you some ideas to use in your classroom.  That’s always my goal.  

Have you taught any of these forms of theater to your students?  I’d love to hear from you about them.  Contact me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com  Or check out my book, We’re Live! Radio Theater #101

Photo Gallery of DramaMommaSpeaks
The Giver which I directed.

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Filed Under: acting, arts education, arts integration, creative movement, Creativity, drama education, drama integration, Education, gifted and talented, High School, middle grades, Teacherspayteachers, Teaching, teaching strategies Tagged With: Blue Man Group, breaking bach, circus skills, cirque de soleil, clowning, dance, drama, Middle school, movement, Mummenschanz, music, pantomime, percussion, reluctant students, teaching tips to engage students

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

December 4, 2025 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

If the words “Let’s devise a scene!” make your students stare back at you like deer in headlights—you’re not alone.  Many teachers are afraid to teach devising theater in the classroom.  I, for one, understand! It can feel abstract or a little chaotic at first. To be honest, I felt that way, too. But once you learn how to guide it, devising becomes one of the most rewarding tools in your drama classroom.

In my forty years of directing and teaching, I’ve found that devising builds confidence, collaboration, empathy, and creativity faster than almost anything else we do. Students suddenly realize that they are the playwright, the designer, and the performer. They have ownership—and that’s where the magic happens. Until you try devising theater with your students, you won’t believe how much engagement is derived from it.

Let’s break down a clear, classroom-ready way to use devising theater with your students.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

When I was in college, this might have be called a structured improv., although this is more comprehensive. Devising theater is the process of creating an original performance as an ensemble. Instead of beginning with a script, students generate material through improvisation, movement, images, personal stories, character exploration, or thematic prompts.

The script—and sometimes even the structure—emerges from the group’s discoveries. It’s part improv, part writing workshop, part ensemble building, and completely student-driven. That last part is a double edged sword.  Giving the students ownership of their theater piece is exciting.  However, on the other hand, it can be nerve wracking.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Why Should Drama Teachers Teach Devising Theater?

Devising naturally supports:

  • Student ownership of ideas
  • Ensemble building and trust
  • Creative risk-taking
  • Collaboration and communication skills
  • Social–emotional learning
  • Cross–curricular connections (social studies, ELA, history, even science)

And best of all—students who don’t see themselves as “actors” often thrive here. In many ways, it is non-threatening and that’s a big plus for reluctant students.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Step 1: Start with a Strong Stimulus

This is the most important phase, in my opinion.  A stimulus gives students something to respond to. This is the single best way to avoid chaos. Without it, the students have a tendency to float around from idea to idea never coming to a conclusion until it is usually too late. For example, one time I observed two boys play around with some fur pieces I’d put in a box.  Ever so often I’d remind them to focus on their scene. Their scene, they decided, was cavemen living in a cave. That’s as far as they progressed.  They were so distracted by the furs they never got it together.

You can use:

  • A piece of music--You might want to give them boundaries such as only using classical or film music. Lyrics can impede the creative process.
  • A short poem or quote–Suggest to them of ways they could work the poem into their piece.  Take it apart?  Chanting particular sentences?
  • A photo of a place, person, or moment in history–Prior to the project as a warm-up I’ve shown students a photo of an old woman and asked them to tell me who she was, where did she live, etc.  Teaching them to use their imagination and that nothing is wrong so long as we focus together, we will have success.
  • An object (keys, scarf, shoes, old letter)–Stress to them that an object can become something else in their piece.  Maybe it begins as a scarf and over time it becomes a slithering snake?
  • A theme (identity, fear, courage, community)–You may need to give them examples, discussing themes of movies or plays of which they are familiar.

Ask students:
What does this make you think, feel, or imagine?  They could jot down notes in a journal they created for this experience.

Let their responses guide the first round of improvisation. This shows them that all ideas are good ones, some more than others.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Step 2: Use Simple Improvisation Structures

First, you need to keep improvisations short—under 60 seconds at first. Why?  Because it forces the mind to abbreviate one’s ideas and to focus on selecting the best parts of one’s ideas.

Try:

  • Tableaux sequences–You know I love a good tableaux!
  • Gesture chains-– Much like the game “When I go to California” without speaking
  • “Pass the Action” improv.–This is a little like the improv. exercise, “Yes, and..”
  • Character walks with internal monologue–So clever, the actor demonstrates what they are thinking through their walk
  • Short improv scenes with a single rule (only questions, only movement, no words, etc.)

Read more about my thoughts on improvisation here:  Improvisation in Theater:  Myth Versus Reality

These tiny explorations give you loads of raw material.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Step 3: Collect the Best Ideas

This step is crucial. Have students pause, reflect, and gather:

  • Interesting images they created–either digitally or three dimensional
  • Lines of dialogue that emerged--jotting down the best ones
  • Characters or relationships that appeared–are they useful to our improv.?
  • Movements that felt meaningful–which ones and how so?
  • Themes that keep repeating--what do these themes mean in your piece?

I usually assign a student as the “scribe” or I jot everything on the board.

Patterns always emerge. Usually, someone in each group notices them. Encourage the group when you see them light on an idea. It may be outlandish and farcical at first, but give them time to percolate.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Step 4: Shape the Material into a Structure

When I was in college, this might have been called a structured improv.  However, this is more comprehensive. Frankly, I like it much better!

Once you have enough ideas, help the ensemble choose a simple structure.

A word of advice here. It does not need to be complicated! I’d remind the students that they are just learning how to do this.  Perhaps awarding participation points instead of a grade might help to make this less stressful?

Examples:

  • A series of vignettes
  • A journey (physical or emotional)
  • A day-in-the-life
  • Flashbacks
  • Nonlinear moments around a central theme

Most importantly, students decide the order. Encourage them to look objectively at their work and not be afraid to move their ideas around within the piece.  This is when ownership soars.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Step 5: Rehearse, Refine, and Repeat

This is where it becomes “real theater.”

Guide students to:

  • Sharpen their movement and vocal choices
  • Clarify transitions–these can be challenging for students
  • Add sound, simple props, or rhythm
  • Edit anything unclear or unfocused

Devising is drafting. Revisions are part of the process—and students learn resilience by improving their own material. I wouldn’t be opposed to seeing each group’s piece prior to showing the rest of the class.  Give them notes and see what they do with them.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Step 6: Share the Work

A novice teacher might make this more than it is designed to be.  A performance doesn’t have to be big. It can be:

  • A showing for another class
  • A share-out circle
  • A taped performance
  • A small showcase for families

The goal isn’t perfection—it’s expression.

Students often surprise themselves with what they can create together.

Afraid to Teach Devising Theater in Your Classroom?

Tips for Successful Devising

As the teacher, your job is to say “yes, and” early and often.

  • Keep group sizes small (4–6 students). That way, everyone has some say in the project.
  • Celebrate the process, not the product.  It’s all about the process, NOT the product!
  • Model risk-taking yourself. This is tantamount to success with this unit.  In fact, I think we teachers should always model everything for our students.
  • Provide enough structure to feel safe but enough freedom to feel creative. Put up the day’s objective and discuss it before they begin each day.

Final Thoughts

To think that I was not familiar with devising theater when it was introduced to me.  Now it seems like it’s second nature.  Devising theater is one of the most powerful ways to help students develop artistic confidence, empathy, and collaboration.

At its heart, devising says: Your voice matters. Your ideas matter. The ensemble needs you.

And when students believe that, they grow—not just as performers, but as people.

How have you used devising theater in your classroom?  I’d love to hear about it.  Just comment here or email me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com

Click here: We’re Live! Radio Theater #101

 

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Filed Under: arts education, arts integration, creative movement, Creativity, DeborahBaldwin.net, directing experiences, Distance Learning, drama education, drama integration, Education, excellence in teaching, High School, middle grades, Teacherspayteachers, Teaching, teaching strategies, youth theatre

Why Drama Circles Work in the Elementary Classroom

November 21, 2025 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

Why Drama Circles Work So Well for Elementary Students

Why Drama Circles Work in the Elementary Classroom

Why Drama Circles Work in the Elementary Classroom

“How Drama Circles work in the Elementary Classroom” is a topic that’s close to my heart—mostly because you are far “more fortunate than I ever was. When I began teaching, I had absolutely no resources for the theater classes I taught. I was constantly tweaking college-level acting lessons for my very young students. Not the best idea…

But lucky you! After thirty-eight years (and then some), I’ve perfected my lessons to help you. Drama teachers have known for decades that movement, imagination, and storytelling help students learn. But what if you could combine all of those elements into a simple, low-prep activity that works in any classroom?  Plus, you were relegated to using a stage? There’s the secret sauce!

Enter: Drama Circles.

Drama Circles are quick, engaging activities which invite students to take turns acting out prompts, exploring characters, and stretching their creativity in a structured, supportive way. Best of all, drama circles require no costumes, no rehearsals, and no performance pressure. All you need is a printed set of cards (or a list of prompts) and a group of students ready to have fun.

Why Drama Circles Work in the Elementary Classroom

What Is a Drama Circle?

To begin, a drama circle is a simple activity where students stand or sit in a circle, draw a prompt, and act it out for the group.

The prompts can focus on:

  • Movement–“You are a squirrel trying to teach a walnut too far out of your reach.”

  • Vocal expression–“You are a gruff, old bear looking for berries to eat before you hibernate.”

  • Characters–“You are a grandmother who has proudly made the Thanksgiving turkey for the family only to find its burned.”

  • Emotions--“You are a clown who doesn’t know how to juggle.”

  • Seasonal themes–” You are one of the elves and you accidentally wrapped yourself up in the package you were wrapping.”

  • “Curriculum concepts–“You and your friend show us a tableau of  scene from Red Riding Hood.”

It’s worth noting, that the beauty of drama circles is that they allow every child to participate at their comfort level. In addition, they encourage bold choices and imagination.

 


Why Drama Circles Work in the Elementary Classroom

Why Drama Circles Work So Well for Elementary Students

Drama circles align beautifully with what elementary learners need:

1. They support whole-body learning.

Young children make meaning through movement. To that end, drama circles channel wiggles productively while strengthening coordination, spatial awareness, and expressive movement. Check out this blog post for more information about movement: Creative Movement: Elementary and Middle School Teachers – Ready to Move?

2. They build confidence.

Drama circles even nurture shy children to take risks.  Because students “perform” only for their classmates in a casual, low-stakes manner. One prompt at a time is far less intimidating than performing a whole scene.

3. They promote speaking and listening skills.

Every prompt becomes an opportunity for students to practice pacing, volume, and clarity.  These are all important communication skills that support reading fluency. Check out this post for more information about reader theater:  Unveiling Reader’s Theater: What You Never Knew

4. They encourage creative thinking.

A simple prompt like “Walk as if you’re on the moon” sparks imagination, problem-solving, and character interpretation. Pick up this drama circle is you really want to stretch your students’ imagination! Drama Circle Lost in Space:  The Star Voyager Chronicle

5. They strengthen classroom community.

Laughter, shared creativity, and positive peer feedback help build trust among students. Drama circles make classrooms feel safe and joyful. Check out this article on how laughter leads students to learn.


Why Drama Circles Work in the Elementary Classroom

How to Use Drama Circles in Your Elementary Classroom

Drama circles are incredibly versatile. Here are several ways teachers can integrate them seamlessly into the school day.

1. Use them as a warm-up activity.

Start your morning meeting or ELA block with a few prompts to energize your students. It sets a positive tone for the day.

2. Add them to transitions.

A two-minute elementary drama circle between subjects helps refocus brains after worksheets or independent work. This is such a great idea!  Check out this FREE drama circle: Drama Circle Winter Holidays

3. Use them as brain breaks.

Instead of turning to YouTube videos, let your students act out “Ride a roller coaster!” or “Be a sleepy dragon waking up.”

4. Tie them into seasonal celebrations.

Holiday-themed drama circles (like Thanksgiving, Winter Holidays, or Valentine’s Day) make festive weeks more manageable while keeping students on-task. Here is one for Thanksgiving: Drama Circle Thanksgiving Theme

5. Use them in literacy instruction.

Warm ups for kids through drama circles help students explore:

  • Character traits–“Show us you are proud of yourself having run the race.”

  • Emotion vocabulary–“Show us you are laughing hysterically at your friend.”

  • Setting–“Show us you are sitting near a mountain creek with your feet dangling in the freezing cold water.”

  • Action verbs–“Show us you are carrying heavy groceries into your house.”

  • Dialogue delivery–“Show us by saying this sentence in an unusual manner–Close the door.” (I’ve used this one for years.)

They’re also a great way to introduce reader’s theater or creative writing.

6. Substitute Plans Made Easy

Left with a day’s notice? Drama circles in the elementary classroom require almost no explanation. Plus, they  work perfectly as a structured, engaging sub activity. Because you can do so many activities with them, a substitute will feel at ease using them, especially if they are not a drama teacher. 


Why Drama Circles Work in the Elementary Classroom

Tips for Successful Drama Circles

Here are a few tricks I used for 38 years in the drama classroom—and they work beautifully in elementary settings:

✔ Keep prompts short and clear.

Elementary students respond best to simple phrases they can interpret creatively.

✔ Model the first prompt.

A quick demonstration helps them understand there are no “right answers.” This is essential in any situation!

✔ Encourage big choices.

Tell students, “Make it bigger than you think!” They’ll surprise you.

✔ Celebrate every attempt.

Applause, snaps, and positive comments build a feeling of success for all students. Here’s the importance of applause. Why Do We  Clap at the Theater? 

✔ Offer adaptation options.

Let anxious students perform with a partner, freeze-pose their prompt, or describe what they would do.


Drama Circle Activity Growing Bundle Improvisation Acting Holidays

Drama Circles Fit Everywhere

Whether you teach in a traditional classroom, a drama room, or a homeschool environment, drama circles are a joyful way to build creativity, communication, and confidence. They’re easy to implement. Drama Circles require virtually no prep, and ignite the kind of imaginative play that elementary students love. Who doesn’t love that?

If you’re looking for ready-to-print drama circles—seasonal themes, holidays, character challenges, and more—I have a growing collection created specifically for the elementary classroom. First and foremost, they’re classroom-tested and developmentally appropriate.  Plus, they are designed by a veteran drama teacher who believes learning should be joyful.

Why is a growing bundle a good deal?  Because if you get in now, you will receive every new drama circle I add to it for FREE!  (And as this bundle grows, the price will go up for new buyers.) You can check them out here:  Drama Circle Growing Bundle

I hope you will take me up on using drama circles in the elementary classroom. Honestly, they will not disappoint you.  You will be astounded at how quickly your students pick up the directions and engage!

Have you used drama circles in your elementary classroom?  I’d love to hear how they have worked for you.  Feel free to email me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com

Deb

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Filed Under: arts education, arts integration, creative dramatics, creative movement, Creativity, drama education, drama integration, Education, elementary, English Language Learners, excellence in teaching, gifted and talented, middle grades, readers theater, storytelling, Teaching, youth theatre Tagged With: build confidence, characters, collaboration, creative dramatics, creativity, elementary, emotions, Imagination, movement, seasonal themes, self esteem, vocal expression

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

July 25, 2025 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

Comedy and tragedy drama masks representing theater education, drama class, and support for theater teachers through Amazon Wishlists

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

Every year, dedicated theater teachers pour their own time and energy into their classrooms and production. The truth is, many of these teachers use their own money to build creative, engaging programs for their students. From props and costumes to lighting gels and scripts, the needs of a drama classroom can quickly add up. That’s why this year,  I am encouraging everyone to Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists—a simple yet impactful way to give back to educators who bring the magic of the stage to life.

If you’ve ever clapped for a school play or watched a student light up on stage, you already know how powerful theater can be. But here’s what most people don’t see—teachers digging into their own wallets to buy costumes, props, scripts, makeup, and even batteries for mics. Yes, I have too! 

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists: A Little Help Goes a Long Way

When I put out a call to theater teachers with wishlists (wanting about twelve) I could include in this post, I was inundated with them!  That sent a signal to me right there.  Without a doubt, there are so many moving parts in a production and in a theater class, we have many needs. If that’s not enough–most of the time these teachers are the only theater teacher in their schools.  It’s lonely, believe me. In fact, most theater teachers make all their production decisions by themselves from selecting the year’s season to traveling to a state theater contest.

In one public school in which I taught, we were in desperate need of microphones and stage lights.  Without them, the students couldn’t be heard past the first row of seats.  Furthermore, you can forget creating mood when all your school cafetorium has are dimmer switches–ugh.  Luckily, several parents stepped up to fund these needs.

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

The Hidden Struggles Behind the Curtain

Once we had the technical equipment  which we needed, the quality of our productions grew.  More students became involved in productions.  Our audiences grew as well.  Can I credit all of this growth to the donations?  Nope, but I do know the growth and success made us feel like we counted and were seen.

Most theater programs are underfunded. Check out: Critical Steps in Producing a Play or Musical: Set Design just to see the needs of one production.  Or, read: Critical Steps in Selecting a Play or Musical: Budget & Royalties But you can change that—today—with just a few clicks to Amazon wish lists.

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

The Underfunding of Arts in Public Schools

In 2018, the American Academy of Arts & Sciences convened a Commission on the Arts to examine the state of arts education in the United States, and to assess the need for greater support. The Commission ultimately focused on the challenges of access to arts education in public schools.

Their report,   Art for Life’s Sake states, “Arts education is seeing a persistent decline in access. While 88% of Americans agree that arts education is an essential component of a well-rounded education, there has been a persistent decline in support for arts education, particularly in communities that cannot finance it on their own.”

It continues, “Americans understand the value of an education that includes the arts,” says Rutter, “but we as a nation have not established sustainable educational policies that make it possible for all students to receive the education they need.

John Lithgow, a past board member of the Kennedy Center for the Arts said,” We want every child to have access to music, paintings, writing, theater—all the arts—regardless of their socio-economic circumstances,” says Lithgow. All  American children should learn how to express themselves and to understand the ways in which others express themselves.”

In my opinion, I think the public doesn’t fully realize how arts education nurtures at-risk youth.  A study was conducted several years ago focusing on the impact of arts education in our schools. This NEA report, The Arts and Achievement in At-Risk Youth: Findings from Four Longitudinal Studies.

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

Empowering At-Risk Youth Through Arts Education

Their key finding? “Better academic outcomes — Teenagers and young adults of low socioeconomic (SES) status who have a history of in-depth arts involvement (‘high arts’) show better academic outcomes than low-SES youth with less arts involvement (‘low arts’). Students earn better grades and have higher rates of college enrollment and attainment.

  • Low-SES students who had arts-rich experiences in high school were ten percent more likely to complete a high school calculus course than low-SES students with low arts exposure (33 percent versus 23 percent).
  •  High-arts, low-SES students in the eighth grade were more likely to have planned to earn a bachelor’s degree (74 percent) than were all students (71 percent) or low-arts, low-SES students (43 percent).
  • In contrast, high-arts, low-SES students were 15 percent more likely to enroll in a highly or moderately selective four-year college than low-arts, low-SES students (41 percent versus 26 percent).
  • Lastly, students with access to the arts in high school were three times more likely than students who lacked those experiences to earn a bachelor’s degree (17 percent versus five percent).”

If that isn’t enough reason to support our arts teachers’ programs, I don’t know what is. For more details from this report, go to: NEA Research Report Shows Potential Benefits of Arts Education for At-Risk Youth

How to Help

I’ve gathered a list of Amazon wishlists created by hardworking, creative, often under-resourced middle school theater teachers. Plus, each one is filled with items they need right now—things that help students rehearse, perform, and grow through the arts.

You don’t have to fund a whole stage. Just pick something—anything—from their list. Whether it’s \$5 or \$50, your gift makes a real difference.

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

Middle School Teacher Amazon Wishlists

Here are theater teachers who could use your support this year.  I’ve listed them by state:

(Texas)– Shanon Grecco   View His Amazon Wishlist

(Texas)– Brandy Chapman  View Her Amazon Wishlist

(Texas) Heather Roberts  View Her Amazon Wishlist

(California) Katie McLaughlin Newbanks  View Her Amazon Wishlist

(Kansas)–Allison Pieschl-Wegerle  View Her Amazon Wishlist

(Texas) Britney Ring Meyers  View Her Amazon Wishlist

(Ohio)–Shayla Holloway  View Her Amazon Wishlist

(Iowa)–Curtis Cormell  View His Amazon Wishlist

(Iowa)–Alex McCarthy  View His Amazon Wishlist

(Washington D.C.)Briana Reynolds  View Her Amazon Wishlist

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

Six Reasons Why Your Donation Will Matter Greatly

  • They’re direct. You can see in real time just how your donation helped!
  • You know exactly where your money is going. Consequently, there is no feeling of “I wonder if my donation really helped?”
  • As I’ve pointed out, they’re needed.  Many citizens don’t realize the breadth and array of materials we need.
  • These aren’t extras—these are the tools students need to succeed.
  • Every single donation is a gift that lifts a burden and lights up a classroom or stage.
  • These donations are always appreciated.  Furthermore, teachers are thoughtful by nature and truly value the trust you place in them when you choose to help.

 

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists

Not Ready to Donate? You Can Still Help

Sharing this post helps just as much! Pass it along to anyone who loves the arts, supports education, or believes every child deserves a creative outlet.

Remember:  When you complete teachers’ Amazon wish lists, you’re not just donating supplies. You’re building confidence, community, and creativity that will last long after the curtain falls.

From all of us who believe in the power of theater—thank you.

Click here:  https://weareliveradiotheater.com/

Deb

Support Theater Teachers with Amazon Wishlists
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Filed Under: Amazon.com, arts education, arts integration, creative dramatics, creative movement, drama education, drama integration, Education, excellence in teaching, middle grades, New Teacher, performing arts, Producing plays and musicals, Teaching, teaching strategies, youth theatre Tagged With: Amazon wishlists, arts education, at-risk students, middle school drama teacher, middle school students, NEA, supporting arts educaiton

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

July 9, 2025 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

I’ve wanted to blog on this subject for a long time–Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First. It’s easy to assume that the best way to begin a drama class is with scripts in hand or with a monologue or duet scene. After all, that’s what theater is all about—character, dialogue, blocking, memorization. Right?

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First
Here I am with a former student sitting on the floor, playing the warm-up game with my class

Not quite.

When you’re working with middle school students, traditional scripted drama can be overwhelming. Many students at this age are still learning to navigate their emotions.  Additionaly, they are learning how to communicate effectively, and build trust with their peers. That’s why I believe the best way to start middle school theater is not with a script, but with creative dramatics.

What Is Creative Dramatics?

Creative dramatics is an unscripted, process-centered approach to theater. It includes improvisation, storytelling, pantomime, role play, and drama games. Unlike traditional scripted drama, it emphasizes exploration over performance. Additionally, it is less about perfect delivery and more about self-expression, teamwork, and discovery.

In short—it’s play with purpose.

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

Why Traditional Drama Doesn’t Work Right Away

Middle school students come to drama class with a wide range of abilities.  Plus, they join us with different comfort levels, and backgrounds.  Some are eager to perform; others are terrified of speaking aloud. When we hand them a script and ask them to “act,” we’re assuming they already have skills they may not have yet.

As we are aware, times have changed one generation to the next.  I was from the generation where parents said children were, “to be seen and not heard.’ My parents let my teachers deal with me at school–they did not intervene at all. My daughters weren’t raised as strictly but guardedly.  However, we did not ask them for their input in making decisions about and for them.  This latest generation is much more hands-on.

Modern parents are often more involved in their children’s lives than previous generations. They attend more events, know more about their kids’ social-emotional development, and are quicker to advocate in school or healthcare settings. This shift is partly due to greater access to parenting research, a cultural emphasis on emotional intelligence, and a desire to break cycles from their own childhoods.

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

How Developmentally Appropriate Drama Builds Success

How does that play out in the drama classroom?  In drama class we deal with our emotions right from the first day.  If a student is uncomfortable sharing emotion, they will shut down on a teacher before they have even begun.

This is the primary reason for beginning the school year or even second semester with creative dramatics and not jumping into more a more traditional theater class.  Take.your.time.

Here are a few reasons traditional methods may fall short:

They’re still figuring out who they are. Think of it–they enter your classroom as basically a 5th grader and leave the school as almost a 9th grader.  That’s huge growth!  Identity is a work in progress at this age. Asking them to take on another character can feel like too much when they’re unsure of themselves to begin with.

Reading aloud is a challenge for some. Not every student is a confident reader. Struggling through a script in front of peers can be a confidence killer.

Performance anxiety is real. Scripts and staged scenes can cause fear of failure, embarrassment, or judgment.

Additionally, they haven’t built ensemble yet. Trust is a crucial part of theater—and it takes time. Without it, collaborative scene work suffers. Students must feel safe in order to take chances and make mistakes in front of their peers.

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

What Creative Dramatics Offers Instead

Simply put, creative dramatics gives students the freedom to play, explore, and make choices.

Here’s why it works so well for middle schoolers:

Confidence Grows Naturally
I found that activities like studying movement and storytelling encourage participation without the pressure of “getting it right.” Students learn that all ideas are welcome, and that builds a safer space for risk-taking.

It Emphasizes Play
Middle schoolers need movement and laughter. Games and creative exercises channel their energy in productive ways—and make class genuinely fun. Students have shared with me that the warm-up games are their favorite part of their school day!  One exercise that is always successful is The Three Headed Monster.  Want a copy?  Pick it up here: Three Headed Monster

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

Why Creative Dramatics Works for Every Student

It Builds Ensemble
Middle schools are generally as large as a small high school.  That means your students may not be familiar with each other. Several elementaries can funnel into one middle school. Therefore, group work, partner activities, and group-based improvisation help students learn to listen, collaborate, and trust one another. These are the same skills that will serve them when they do move into scripted work. Check out this bundle:  Group Based Improvisation Exercises

 Skills Are Introduced Organically
Voice, body language, emotion, conflict, character motivation—these are all explored through creative dramatics. Often students aren’t even aware that they’re developing them. Because you have focused on participation rather than performance, your timid students have an opportunity to challenge their fears without criticism.

It Welcomes All Learners
Some students didn’t choose to take drama. Others are English language learners or neurodivergent. Creative dramatics gives everyone a way in—regardless of background or ability. My favorite memories of teaching middle school have always been when a secial needs student get to participate in the performance. Or the ELL students show their classmates that they don’t need to be good English speakers to win at a game! Need something for a substitute teacher to teach?  Check out: Emergency Sub Plan Bundle 

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

What It Looks Like in Practice

So, what does creative dramatics actually look like in the classroom?  A middle school drama classroom is joyful, dynamic and always fun!

Here are a few ways to begin your middle school drama class:

  • Tableaux exercises where students freeze in poses to tell a story or capture a scene–pick up Fairy Tales with Tableau
  • Improvisation games like “Yes, And…” or “What Are You Doing?”
  • Story circle activities where students help shape a narrative such as Magic Circle
  • Movement builds expression and clarity without words such as Creative Movement
  • Character walk explorations where students invent physical traits for imaginary people. This first begins with a charater analysis such as Character Analysis

None of these require a script. All of them build foundational theater skills.

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

When to Introduce Scripts

Scripts do have a place in middle school drama. They come after the ensemble is built, the fear is reduced, and the students are comfortable in their own creative voices.

When that time comes, try:

  • Class plays where the entire class is involved, such as The Brave Little Tailor
  • Reader’s theater as a gentle transition, such as The Magic Lake
  • Radio theater is non-threatening and requires very little preparation for you or the students, try Bow Wow Blues

Once they’re ready, traditional drama becomes much more successful—and meaningful. It’s worth noting you should also not begin the year delving into theater history.  If you’d like a  free lesson for this subject, check out: The Origin of Theater

Creative Dramatics for Tweens: Build Confidence First

Final Thoughts

Here’s some advice:  don’t be like me and get all caught up in the quality of the performance. When I first started teaching middle schoolers, I was too focused on the final performance.  Some students can only equate a play performance as doing “theater”. They may not come out of their shells until they are standing in front an audience (hopefully, someone else’s class of students are serving as audience).

What is key here is that your students are LEARNING. Once you accept this, your teaching will be much more fun and fulfilling.   Middle school drama is not about putting on a perfect show. It’s about helping students discover who they are, how they express themselves, and how they connect with others. Want more advice about teaching middle schoolers? Check out: How to Make Your Drama Class More Successful –Lessons Learned from 38 Years of Teaching-Middle School

Where Confidence Begins: Creative Dramatics

If we want them to fall in love with theater—and we do—we need to meet them where they are. That starts not with scripts, but with play. With movement, with laughter and 2ith ensemble.

It starts with creative dramatics.

Have you tried creative dramatics with your students?  Drop a comment and share what’s worked for you, or explore my ready-to-use lessons that make the first weeks of drama class engaging and low-stress—for you and your students.

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Filed Under: arts education, arts integration, creative dramatics, creative movement, drama education, drama integration, Education, Education, excellence in teaching, middle grades, Teacherspayteachers, Teaching, teaching strategies, youth theatre Tagged With: 'tweens, bow wow blues, character analysis, class plays, drama education, drama lessons, drama units, growing up, Middle school, movement, radio theater, reader's theater, storytelling, tableau, The Brave Little Tailor, The Magic Lake, The Origin orf Theater

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