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drama lesson plans

Free Teaching Resources Blog Hop

February 17, 2020 By dhcbaldwin 17 Comments

 

Free Teaching Resources Blog Hop

This is a Blog Hop! – I’ve collaborated with several of my teacher colleagues to bring you a series of super blog posts that include a Free Resource just for you! Click on the grade level that interests you and hop on over to the next blog. In a hurry, grab the freebie by clicking “Jump to Freebie.” Not in a hurry, read to find out more about the freebie. Have fun hopping through the blogging world. Thank you for visiting!

 

                                                                 

 

JIGSAW PUZZLE COVER SQUARE

Storytelling Using Jigsaw Puzzle Stories

Drama Lesson Freebie

Do you ever think, “How can I mix up my students, in a non-threatening manner, to have the potential for making new connections with other classmates?”

I got you covered!

Here is a freebie, I would like to introduce to you.  This exercise can be used with many grade levels, even into high school.

Storytelling Using Jigsaw Puzzle Stories lesson is a great way to begin a new class or use as a warm up.

How do I use this?

In a nutshell, the teacher collects and cuts postcards or pictures (laminated would be best) into two pieces, like jigsaw pieces.  Then the teacher shuffles them.  She passes out at random one puzzle piece to each student.  Students are instructed to find the person with the puzzle piece which fits theirs and sit down with the person.  From there, the teacher can assign the students to write a short story using the postcards as the writing prompt.

Usually, I require the students to find at least three things on the postcard which they include in their story.  For instance, if the picture is of a group of people rafting in white water rapids, they could include the raft, the white water and/or the people.  Or they could just use the people, the raft and the jagged cliffs above them.  You get the idea. 🙂

Jigsaw Puzzle Freebie Product

(Just a few pages from the product to give you an example of what it contains.)

What Else Can I do With The Jigsaw Postcards Pieces?

  • Storytelling–Individual and Tandem
  • Create Improvisations
  • Create Movement Pieces
  • Write a Monologue
  • Write a Scene
  • Write a Story

Drama Lesson Freebie

How about doing something with them for the entire class?

Oh yes!  That’s a great idea.  Find a photo and make enough pieces for the number of students in your class.  First, they’d need to put the puzzle together (you could break it into sections and keep those pieces all together?)  Then as a group the students could brainstorm with you what the photo means to them.  Then re-create it with the students as the objects and things!  AWESOME SAUCE.

The Jigsaw Puzzle Postcard Pieces are an excellent warm up to use with this Bundle on Super Heroes:

Super Heroes Tableau and Movement

Tableau and Movement with Super Heroes

You can find it here:  Tableau and Movement Super Heroes Bundle

Here is a really cool storytelling unit, Kamishibai Storytelling, a Japanese form of storytelling.  

Storytelling with Student Created Pictures

Tips and Tricks of a Drama Teacher-- Drama Tools, That Is

This Jigsaw Puzzle Pieces would be a very effective introduction to Kamishibai!

So as you can see, there are many ways to use this freebie.  I hope you’ll check it out and download soon.

What do you use for a warm up which places your students in random groups?  I’d love to hear about them.

If you’d like a free guide And lesson plan from me, click here LESSON PLAN

Contact me at dhcbaldwin@gmail.com or DeborahBaldwin.net

Check out this bundle for more great lessons.

Bundle:  Funny Reader’s Theater Scripts

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Filed Under: drama education, Free Products, Teacherspayteachers, teaching strategies, youth theatre Tagged With: drama lesson, drama lesson plans, free giveaway, free teaching lessons, freebies, ice breakers, warm up

The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching are Successful

October 9, 2019 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

A teacher's desk with an apple, textbooks and pencils.

The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching Are Successful 

I love this time of year.  Once we reach October, it is such fun for several months. Let’s talk about the reasons thematic units in teaching are successful, shall we? 

You know, I’m such a kid at heart. I still get all excited about the season! It’s fun, fun, fun! 

When the Halloween season was upon us when I was a child, I could hardly contain myself.  It was really tough to concentrate in class.  We didn’t do a lot of learning using themes, but I wish we had.

Let me tell you,  our teachers have it figured out–thematic units work.  

As a child, I don’t remember learning through a theme.  Of course, that was back when we had desks with a top which raised and used a pencil sharpener which was screwed to the blackboard at the front of the classroom.

The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching are Successful

Yup, it was pretty much like this.

What is a thematic unit in teaching?

“Thematic unit is the organization of a curriculum around a central theme. In other words, it’s a series of lessons that integrate subjects across the curriculum, such as math, reading, social studies, science, language arts, etc. that all tie into the main theme of the unit. Each activity should have a main focus toward the thematic idea.”

As most people know, a teacher needs various teaching methods to reach the students.  Thematic teaching is sly.  It encourages learning using a back door approach.

Sort of like saying, “Oh, neat!  Let’s celebrate Halloween through costume design today.” Here is a lesson to use.

Generally, students are very intrigued.

The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching are Successful

The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching Are Successful

When I was looking for some information which support this approach, I found a lengthy blog post about the subject.  Here are some highlights from it at Forensicoutreach.com:

Thinking outside the box: encouraging understanding beyond the syllabus

Consider this: was there ever a time an issue (perhaps in the arena of current affairs) was raised by a friend or a colleague, to which you hadn’t very much to contribute due to insufficient interest, and therefore knowledge, in that particular area? Once you’d done your homework, so to speak, it probably provoked several questions in your mind that weren’t previously there — simply because you hadn’t had enough material to really examine it.

The involvement of a relevant subject (or theme for our purposes) — drawn into the classroom to help drive a particular unit objective home — has been shown to consistently elicit intriguing questions from enquiring young minds for very much the same reasons. Simply put, entrenching the curriculum firmly within a wider, topical context allows students to look at the same matter in a radically new and different light.

It’s this new lens that allows students to probe the subject with relative ease, and makes thematic teaching (in some cases) more effective than a simple reading assignment.

Making it work: including resources not commonly utilized

We’ve found that classrooms have (perhaps in days of yore) invested in several teaching aids that are seldom used. It’s a frequent finding as we step into the shoes of a teacher for a day at the over one-hundred different institutions we’ve visited: a skeleton in the corner; and unused chemistry slime set; or even crime scene tape, found underneath the cupboard in the room’s front standing area. Thematic teaching allows you to make use of these valuable resources in ways that aren’t limiting or formulaic. Build your unit theme with what is already available to you.

Thematic Units are Wonderful

The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching are Successful

In another blog post from edtechlens.com, more points are made:

1. It’s more fun to teach and learn using a theme. (Boy, that’s the truth!)

Chris believes fun is a key ingredient in learning. “If children are happy, they are confident, and so are teachers. This magic combination makes teaching and learning so much more effective. Children become inspired and wider-thinking. Teachers may still be exhausted, but now it’s an exhaustion that makes them feel fulfilled and valued,” she says.

2. It harnesses curiosity to motivate learning.  (Probably the most important asset!)

“To me it’s the most natural way to learn,” says Chris. “A child or adult finds something that intrigues them, maybe a foreign stamp or a stone. They want to know more and so they start on a journey of collecting ideas and information. With the stamp, the child finds out about its source, the geography of its people, the music of their homeland, the art work within it. They investigate its richness, draw its setting, sing its songs, write letters to find out more, investigate in books and on the internet. The learning is never sluggish, but is vibrant and exciting.”

3. Educators transition to being facilitators of learning. (Yes, they do.)

“The teacher is no longer a provider of facts copied from the board and learned for homework,” Chris says. “Instead, because the boundaries of exploration are far wider than the teacher can predict, he or she becomes a learning manager.” A learning manager guides children while keeping open the opportunity for self-guided discovery.

4. It teaches children how to learn.  (Such a necessary part of learning–becoming an independent learner.)

With theme-based learning, children are thinking for themselves, following the thread of a topic to explore and discover more. Chris says, “It gives them a taste of moving from one related area to another related area and one builds on another. It’s a way of learning throughout life.”

Thematic Learning in Drama Class.

We use thematic learning in a drama class, too.  In fact, I would imagine every drama teacher uses a theme without even thinking about it.

Here is one for tableau using a holiday theme:

A snowman with a green scarf celebrating the winter season

Tableau Exercises Holiday Themed

Here is another on the Broadway musical, A Christmas Story

A Christmas Story, the Musical

Because I know they work, I created several thematic units which are available through my store, Dramamommaspeaks at Teacherpayteachers.com.

Here is one for Halloween:

Drama Units Halloween Theme  

or a smaller one--Bundle: Halloween Drama Lessons, Designing and Fun

or my newest: Set Design Halloween Themed

or design and make a Halloween costume using only garbags and masking tape!

If you’d like a free guide and lesson plan from me, click here LESSON PLAN

Winter Thematic Units at the Ready

Maybe you are skipping the fall season opportunities for thematic learning and winter is more your style.

Check out: Bundle: Drama Lessons and Plays Winter Theme

 

 

If you ask me, bundles are the way to go.  You always get a discount of some kind and many times I give another free lesson as a thank you for purchasing from me.

I have many more, so do check them out at Dramamommaspeaks

Each lesson includes will save you heaps of time, low prep, step by step instructions and extras.

  • a letter to teacher
  • procedure
  • warm up
  • teacher’s script
  • materials list
  •  lesson
  • exercises
  • extensions
  • source list
  • video clip list, hot linked for you

So, if you are thinking about using drama in your classroom check me out.

Here are two new ones:  The Cask of Amontillado and The Monkey’s Paw

The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching are Successful The Reasons Thematic Units in Teaching are Successful

What thematic units are you using at present?  How are they working for you?

I’m always interested in hearing what a teacher is doing or needs created for their classes. These thirty-eight years of teaching should benefit someone other than myself, you know?  Ask away.

Contact me at dhcbaldwin@gmail.com

Deborah Baldwin, Dramamommaspeaks

 

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Filed Under: acting, arts education, creative dramatics, creative movement, drama education, excellence in teaching, performing arts, Radio Theatre, reading skills, teaching strategies, theater, youth theatre Tagged With: bundles, drama lesson plans, Halloween theme, theater class, thematic units, winter theme

Teachers: How to Jump Start Your School Year

August 10, 2017 By dhcbaldwin 1 Comment

Do you know how to jump start your school year?  With radio theatre!

The school year is about to begin. Yikes!

I remember that feeling.

Nerves, anxiety, excitement, worry, hope.

As a drama teacher, it was not unusual for me to spice up the beginning of the year to assure my classes got off to a good start. One of the greatest assets of teaching drama, is it allows for constant creativity.

Radio Theatre in the Classroom was one of my favorite units to teach.

When I began using radio theatre in the classroom, I  perused the internet for scripts and found many, however most of them were too difficult or long for classroom use.  It’s just like everything I do.  Generally, I have to customized them for my needs.

So, I began adapting scripts for my needs and the kids have LOVED them! I have several:  Superman, The Shadow, The Invisible Man, several soap operas and one of my own, Bow Wow Blues.

Utilizing radio theatre scripts with your students, gives them an opportunity to work on fluency, vocal expression, vocabulary and everyday diction.

There’s a place for students with special needs, too.  Many a kid have enjoyed being part of the Foley crew and performing without reading, but using sound effects instead.

After thirty-eight years, I have it perfected and available to you to purchase. It is suitable for grades six through ninth. 

Over thirty pages of lessons, exercises, projects, warm ups, history and a FREE full length radio play suitable for your classroom or group. Check it out at Teacherspayteachers.com

$8.00

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Radio-Theatre-in-the-Classroom-Tune-In-and-Turn-On-3319922

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Filed Under: Education Tagged With: drama lesson plans, Garrison Keillor, radio plays, radio show, radio theatre, War of the Worlds

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