30 Ways to Use Radio Theater in Any Subject
When people hear the term radio theater, they often assume it belongs exclusively in a drama classroom. After all, theater and acting seem like natural partners. This post expands on ideas I recently shared in my Edutopia article about radio theater and student engagement. While that piece focused on why radio theater works, this post explores 30 ways to use radio theater in any subject. But after nearly four decades of teaching, I’ve discovered something surprising. if you’re looking for ways to increase student engagement, radio theater may be one of the most flexible teaching tools available—whether you teach English language arts, social studies, science, math, or even life skills.
At its core, radio theater is simply storytelling through voice, sound, and imagination. Students do not need costumes, sets, memorization, or a stage. They need a script, a purpose, and a willingness to bring ideas to life through sound.
That simplicity makes radio theater an ideal strategy for increasing engagement across the curriculum.
Why Students Respond to Radio Theater
Today’s students are surrounded by audio content. They listen to podcasts, YouTube videos, audiobooks, and streaming media every day. Radio theater taps into those familiar formats while requiring students to actively participate rather than passively consume information. As one teacher shared, “All I had to say was ‘podcasts’ and they were instantly engaged!”
Instead of simply reading a chapter, students become reporters, historians, scientists, advertisers, storytellers, and investigators. Here’s a secret—most teachers haven’t thought of using it as a way to teach their lessons. That makes it unique in your school!
Even reluctant learners often become more willing to participate because the focus shifts away from appearance and performance anxiety. Their voices become the star.
English Language Arts: Bring Literature to Life
Radio theater naturally supports reading fluency, comprehension, vocabulary development, and writing skills.
Students can:
- Adapt short stories into radio scripts–The Monkey’s Paw is one of my most popular resources, The Cask of Amontillado or The Invisible Man
- Perform scenes from novels—Hatchet when Brian survives the plane crash and realizes he is alone in the wilderness. The Giver when Jonas receives his first memory from the Giver, Wonder when Auggie attend his first day at school
- Create alternate endings–Cinderella decides not to marry the Prince, Snow White doesn’t wake up, Beast isn’t transform in the prince.
- Produce interviews with fictional characters–Interview with Charlotte of Charlotte’s Web, Percy of The Lightning Thief discussing his biggest challenge, interview Athena a Greek Mythology Character
- Record literary podcasts discussing themes and conflicts–what is metaphor, simile or foreshadowing?
When students transform text into audio performance, they must think deeply about character motivation, tone, pacing, and meaning. Pick up a copy of my radio play adaptation of The Monkey’s Paw and you will be ready to go!
Social Studies: Make History Sound Real
History comes alive when students hear it.
Instead of writing another report, students can create:
- Historical news broadcasts–report on the Civil War, the Boston Tea Party, or
- Interviews with famous figures–George Washington, Martin Luther King or Susan B. Anthony
- Live reports from important events–the Iran crisis, recent nomination for attorney general, floods in Africa
- Presidential debates–Thomas Jefferson debating Barak Obama, Hilary Clinton debating Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
- First-person accounts from different perspectives--Ellis Island immigrant, child during the Depression, witness of the January 6 insurrection
Imagine students reporting live from the Boston Tea Party, interviewing pioneers on the Oregon Trail, or creating a radio special about the Civil Rights Movement. Suddenly, history feels less like memorization and more like lived experience.
Science: Turn Learning Into Discovery
Science and radio theater are a surprisingly effective combination.
Students can create:
- Weather reports that explain weather patterns and current technology
- Science podcasts discussing new inventions
- Interviews with scientists making the biggest waves in the science world
- “Live from the laboratory” broadcasts--describe a recent lab assignment and student’s results
- Public service announcements about environmental issues –taking a position on global warming from fossil fuels, politicization of the climate crisis, plastic pollution, water scarcity, etc.
To explain concepts clearly for listeners, students must fully understand the content themselves. And isn’t that what you are ultimately seeking? The process transforms scientific knowledge into communication.
Mathematics: Give Numbers a Voice
Since I’m not a very good math student, I would have loved learning through radio theater! Math teachers may not immediately think of radio theater, but it can be a powerful engagement tool.
Students can create:
- Commercials– demonstrating percentages and discounts
- Financial planning scenarios–saving for a goal, planning for the school dance, etc.
- Math mystery stories–The Four Color Theorem, The Riemann Hypothesis or maybe Whodunnit Mysteries
- Problem-solving game shows–a creative approach to problem solving that students instantly enjoy
- Real-world budgeting broadcasts–first apartment report, Teen Entrepreneur Update, family vacation special
By placing mathematics inside authentic situations, students begin to see why numbers matter.
Foreign Language Classrooms: Encourage Communication
Radio theater removes some of the pressure students feel when speaking another language.
Students can:
- Perform simple dialogues–conversation between two friends discussing the upcoming football game
- Create travel programs--pitches to travel to various countries or parts of the U.S.
- Record interviews–famous popular singers, artists, actors or dancersfrom other countries
- Produce cultural broadcasts–festival spotlight, around the world news, voices of famous people from the past
- Present short radio commercials–choose a product from another country and pitch it!
Because the emphasis is on communication rather than perfection, students often become more willing to take risks with language.
Special Education and Life Skills Programs
One of the reasons I love radio theater is its flexibility. Students who may struggle with traditional performance often thrive in audio storytelling.
Radio theater can support:
- Reading fluency–rehearsing the script many times helps a student’s fluency, because words and phrases become familiar
- Communication skills–present a short PSA on the proper way to talk with someone, ask them to go to a movie with you, etc.
- Social interaction–solving a friendship conflict, advice show, interview a community member
- Listening skills–mystery broadcast, follow-the-directions challenge, sound detective
- Confidence building–expert for a day, character voice challenge
Many students discover strengths they did not realize they possessed.
Start Small
Teachers sometimes assume radio theater requires complicated technology. I promise you, it doesn’t. The easiest way is to begin with a short script. Add a few simple sound effects. Invite students to read aloud and experiment with vocal expression. That’s enough. It’s best to leave your students wanting more in this case.
A classroom can become a recording studio to present your radio theater with little more than imagination and a willingness to try something different. Got a CD player or MP player? Pick up a few inexpensive materials that make sounds such as a toy trumpet, drum, baby rattle and heavy plastic cups.
Final Thoughts
Student engagement is not about entertaining students every minute of the day. It is about creating meaningful opportunities for participation. Radio theater offers exactly that.
Sometimes all it takes is a microphone—or even the illusion of one—to help students discover their voice. For many years, I just used broom handles propped with chairs and put a tennis ball on the end for the mic.
Whether you teach English, history, science, math, world languages, or life skills, radio theater provides students with a creative way to process information, communicate ideas, and connect with learning. All you have to do is try it and you’ll see! Need more help or ideas? Check out my book, We’re Live! Radio Theater #101
Need more information about radio theater? Check out: Top Reasons Teachers Succeed With Teaching Radio Theater,
Top Reasons Teachers Succeed With Teaching Radio Theater
Lastly, I want you to know I’m just an email message away. I’m here to help you. I know radio theater like the back of my hand and I can help you do so, too!
Email me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com
P.S. I’ve directed radio plays with community theaters, too.









