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Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

December 21, 2022 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

Evergreen branch with snowy rain drops close up.

The topic of five winter themed drama lessons you should try sounded like something I should blog about today. By the next time I blog, it will be 2024!  Wow, time has really flown this year. If you want something with a Christmas theme, check out: Drama Units Christmas Theme Bundle

I’m not a big fan of the whole new year’s celebration thing.  In my family, all we did was change the calendar to the next month. Exciting, huh?

However, I know teachers are always looking for thematic units to brighten up the winter months.  This post concerns new years and winter units using drama as the tool for discovery.

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

A Story of Generosity

This is one of the only folk tales I’ve found to celebrate the new year. I like the story so much that I’ve created two short class plays of it!

This charming play, based on a Japanese folk tale Oji San and the Grateful Statues share the themes of New Year, multiculturalism, winter, kindness and forgiveness. Students strengthen their study of another culture, reading (fluency), speaking (diction) and listening skills (restating) while learning to work cooperatively. This is excellent and very suitable piece for a vocal music, social studies, reading, language arts or drama class.

Once upon a time, there was an older Japanese couple who make straw hats which they sell at the market every day.  It is a struggle for them to make ends meet, but they greet each day with gratitude and kindness to everyone.  On New Year’s eve the man goes to market and no one buys a hat. As he walks home, dejected and worried, beautiful snow begins to fall.  When he passes the stone statues which sit on the wall near his house, he notices that the snow is falling on their heads and decides to give the statues the unsold hats to protect them from winter’s harshness.

Ojisan and the Grateful Statues

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

His wife doesn’t understand her husband’s actions, but forgives him.  In the night a knock at the door awakens the couple.  To their amazement, a large rice cake is sitting there, though they don’t know who left it.  Off in the distance, they see the statues slowly walking back to their place on the wall.  It’s such a sweet story.

Students will have an opportunity to dramatize a folk tale using many of the elements of drama, create straw hats, design snowflakes, sing an original song written in a pentatonic scale and use their imaginations to express emotion through movement.

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

In all honesty, I’m all about arts integration–it’s my goal for every classroom to integrate drama into their learning to some degree.  Ojisan and the Grateful Statues is a perfect choice to use as an integration. Contact  your vocal music teacher and present the play together! Your students can sing and accompany the song with metallophones, xyllophones and percussion.

You can find Ojisan and the Grateful Statues here.

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

Chinese New Year Celebration

Maybe you want something to celebrate the Chinese new year.  Although this story is not directly related, it is a super story to dramatize.  I have three lessons about–one is a readers theater, one is a play and one is an entire unit.

Li Chi The Serpent Slayer is based on an old Chinese folk tale about a young girl who lives with her family in a small village.  Every few years, a serpent terrorizes her village and drags off one of the young women for his dinner. Everyone is fearful. No one wants to fight the serpent, but Li Chi asks her parents if she can fight the serpent. Want to learn about some other multicultural plays? Check out: The Reasons Teaching Multiculturalism in the Classroom is Vitally Important

Li Chi the Serpent Slayer

Li Chi is a fierce young woman with a quick wit who is cunning and brave.  Her parents deny her this chance and forbid her to go. Even so, Li Chi slips out at night with her dog and climbs the mountain to the serpent’s cave.   This time instead of a girl dying at the feet of the serpent, Li Chi outsmarts it. Li Chi the Serpent Slayer is full of plot twists.   And it’s even more special because the main character is a female! With themes of bravery, love of family, love of community and several others The Little Girl and the Winter whirlwinds is one to beat!

You can find Li Chi the Serpent Slayer here:

 

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

A Story of Courage

Here is another story, this time a Bulgarian folk tale which shares a delightfully, sweet story about a little girl who saves her village during the late months of winter. As with Ojisan, there are other version of this story as well. With roles for 25+ The Little Girl and the Winter Whirlwinds shares themes of winter, generosity and courage. Perfect choice for students studying the culture of Slavic countries and/or Europe in a social studies or a drama class. you can find it here:

The Little Girl and the Winter Whirlwinds

The story, a Bulgarian folk tale, of The Little Girl and the Winter Whirlwinds goes like this–A wicked Winter Witch decides to stop Spring from arriving on time and makes Winter the only season on Earth. She hides the Sun behind dark clouds and covers the Earth with heavy snow. One morning the people from a small mountain village awake and fing their houses buried under the snow up to the roofs.

The people decide that the best thing to do is to send someone to the highest mountain peak, where the good wizard Father Frost lived in his palace of ice and ask him for help. Surprisingly, the Little Girl volunteers to go because she has very little to hold her back.  She believes her warm heart and love for everyone will melt the snow and bring spring. She never considered all the obstacles that would she would meet along her way. Full of varied characters of sizes The Little Girl and the Winter Whirlwind is a lovely story.

Again, we’ve added music to this play and teachers seems to like this aspect.  Since this story ends as Spring arrives, it would be perfect for February or even March.

Since first blogging about this subject, I’ve created additional resources to celebrate winter in the classroom. 

The Great Santa Suit Snafu — A Winter Readers Theater Your Students Will Love

Looking for a lively winter activity that builds reading fluency and keeps your students engaged during the busiest time of year? The Great Santa Suit Snafu is a classroom-friendly Readers Theater script that brings humor, mystery, and teamwork together in one festive package. It includes twelve speaking roles with room for extras and sound effects crew.

The Story:  Only one day before Christmas Eve, the elves discover that Santa’s magical suit has shrunk! A frantic team of reindeer, elves, and Mrs. Claus tries everything—from sewing disasters to “unjingling” Jingle Bells—in an attempt to save Christmas. With witty characters, playful dialogue, and an upbeat ending, students will love performing this holiday comedy. (Even includes musical score to help you learn it!) I’ve even included the lyrics to Unjingling the Bells so you won’t have to work too hard to teach it!

Because Readers Theater requires no memorization, costumes, or special materials, it’s ideal for December lessons, substitute plans, or that energetic week before winter break. The script is written especially for upper elementary and middle school students, with clear character cues, accessible vocabulary, and plenty of comedic moments that make even hesitant readers want to participate.

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

Sometimes, my husband and I get crazy ideas.  Rudolph the Rapping Reindeer is one of them.

The story:  Rudolph discovers a unique talent for rapping, bringing a fresh beat to the North Pole just before Christmas Eve. While Santa and the other reindeer are skeptical at first, Rudolph, with the help of the beatboxing elves Twinkle and Jingle, teaches the team to groove and find their rhythm.

Even Blitzen, who struggles to rap, taps out a steady beat with his hooves to keep everyone on track. The fun reaches its peak when Mrs. Claus surprises everyone by unleashing her own wild freestyle rap.

With teamwork and holiday cheer, Rudolph and the crew take flight, spreading joy and beats across the world in the most unforgettable sleigh ride yet.

This 10–12 minute holiday play is perfect for grades 4-6, with 12 speaking roles and room for a chorus.  It  combines humor, teamwork, and joyous fun with a unique musical twist!

Need a good laugh? 

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

The February Doldrums

Want something fun for early February?  Get everyone out of the winter blahs with this fun musical. Best for high school students, Ground Hog Day is based on the film of the same name.  Laugh your way through the learning! You can find it here.

Ground Hog Day the musical is about Phil Connors, a cynical Pittsburgh TV weatherman, who is sent to cover the annual Groundhog Day event in the isolated small town of Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, when he finds himself caught in a time loop, forced to repeat the same day again and again…and again. Note:  This musical because of language is more suitable for high school students. 

The music is great and the story line is funny. We’ve all thought about what it would be like to go back and do something differently, haven’t we? I know I have.

The unit includes everything a busy teacher would need in order to be successful:  themes of the musical, plot, synopsis, creative staff biographies, Broadway and musical trivia, student questions (with a teacher’s key) and several enrichment activities to secure the learning.

Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try

Hello Spring!

One more unit that I think your students will find fun is Buddy and the Evergreen Trees.

Buddy is a little blue bird with a hurt wing. When winter comes, his selfish and thoughtless bird friends leave him behind. Consequently, Buddy is sad, very worried and hurt by their leaving. A group of evergreen trees hear him saying good bye to his supposed friends and decide they want to help him. They befriend Buddy and invite him to live in their tree limbs until winter passes. Buddy heals over the winter delighting in living in the snowy evergreen trees, his new friends. This story teaches the themes of winter, friendship, compassion and generosity. You can find it here. 
File:In the winter forest (5431146866).jpg

Hello Every Month!

Recently, I found this folk tale and thought it was would be a perfect readers theater unit.  Why? First, there are many speaking roles!  The story will remind you of Cinderella to some degree.  It has a parable that could lead to a class discussion topic.
The Twelve Months reader theater unit and  story concerns a young and beautiful girl (called Marushka in some variations) who is sent into the cold forest in the winter to perform impossible tasks by her evil stepmother. She must get spring violets, summer strawberries and fall apples in midwinter as presents to give her stepsister for her birthday. On her journey, she meets a group of magical people who are the personification of the twelve months of the year.
When she returns home with the strawberries, her step mother and sister don’t believe her.  Finally, the step sister becomes so engaged with anger, she decides that she will go up into the snowy mountains by herself.  Little did she know, her rudeness would come back to ruin her.
Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try
As always, I hope your 2023 year begins with much promise, joy and lots of fun teaching moments.  Teaching and learning should be fun, I believe.  It’s my hope that if you pick up these units, I’ve helped you to do so.
Drama Readers Theater Scripts Folk Fantasy Fairy Tales Literature Toolkit
Save money!  Pick up this bundle here:  Drama Readers Theater Scripts
What units do you teach during the winter season?  Anything thematic?  I’d love to hear about it.  Contact me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com with your ideas.
Click here:  We’re Live! Radio Theater #101
Happy New Year!
Five Winter Themed Drama Lessons You Should Try
 

 

 

 

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Filed Under: arts education, arts integration, community theater, drama education, drama integration, Education, Education, elementary, excellence in teaching, middle grades, New Teacher, plays, Teacherspayteachers, Teaching, theater, youth theatre Tagged With: Bulgarian folk tale, gifted and talented, ground hog day, language arts, reading, social studies, the months of the year, upper elementary, winter

How Do I Use Arts Integration in the Classroom?

September 23, 2020 By dhcbaldwin 3 Comments

How Do I Use Arts Integration in the Classroom?

When I was a little girl, I spent a lot of time playing out on the east porch of our huge old house. Usually, I pretended I was a princess.  I’d drape a towel over my head and promenade around the porch and make my castle under the ping pong table.

As you can tell, I am a naturally creative person.  Are you?  I bet so.  In fact, all of us are to some extent.  Although I have one friend who says she doesn’t have a creative bone in her body.  She thinks if you are creative it means you easily draw a life-like picture, can sing an aria, tap dance or sculpt with clay.

I feel badly for her when she says this, because she is very creative!  She is an excellent cook and has a beautiful decorated home.  However even with those talents, she doesn’t think she’s creative.

That’s a real pity in my book. Had she learned through arts integration when she was a student, I think she would see how creative she really is.

What is Arts Integration?

What is arts integration? Simply put according to Scholastic.com it is, “Arts integration is the use of the arts in core curriculum classrooms. When used well, arts integration is seamless — the interplay between the art and subject is fluid as one flows into the other.”

When I was a youngster, my favorite part of reading class was the projects we would do after reading the book.  I loved drawing a picture about the book.  Sometimes I didn’t even finish the book, I wanted to draw so badly.  Ha!

As I began researching the arts integration subject, one that is very dear to me, I wanted some research to back my thesis. My Masters in Education is in arts integration.  Integrating the arts in to a lesson comes naturally for me.

How Integrating Arts Into Other Subjects Makes Learning Come Alive | KQED

What skills does arts integration learning nurture in your class?

  • Test scores increase
  • Classroom engagement intensifies
  • Teacher effectiveness increase
  • 21st century life skills are developed
  • Students’ innate abilities are unleashed
  • Creativity permeates each subject

What else can arts integration do?

Engagement: Arts integration facilitates personal motivation to learn through problem
solving, and strengthens best practices in teaching as a result of increased student
investment.

Collaboration: Participation in arts integration practice promotes learning partnerships
that evolve through respectful relationships that value the strengths of each individual.

Pick up my FREE guide and ten page drama integration lesson here: FREE Drama Integration Guide

Agility: Learners are engaged in rigorous arts integration practice that teaches flexibility,
embraces change, and invites multiple perspectives.

Knowledge Construction: Arts integration is relevant to the learner as it promotes and
supports the use of critical thinking skills and inquiry.

Congruence: Effective arts integration practice upholds deliberate alignment between
academic content and the arts.

Check out Little Girl and the Winter Whirlwinds Readers Theater

Integrity: Mindful synthesis of arts and content learning promotes best practices in arts
integration, which hold true to the art form(s).

Insight: Best practices in arts integration embrace the symbiotic relationships between
ideas, content and the arts.

Skillful assessment: Mindfully designed authentic evaluation of content, process and
product in arts integration ensures that all levels of learning are synthesized, transferred
and applied through art to relevant and related academic concepts.

Resiliency: Arts integration learning experiences foster healthy risk-taking through personal growth, transformation, and empowerment.

Visionary Leadership: Confident leadership, demonstrated through collaboration, communication, and consistency, facilitates arts integration practice that is transformational to a learning community. It teaches growth mindset, too.  Check out this blog post about my thoughts on growth mindset: Growth Mindset in the Study of Famous Theater Artists

Arts Integration Ideas in the Core Subjects

“Okay” you say, “but how do I use it in my social studies classroom?”

If it’s drama you want to incorporate, a really easy way is to read a readers theater script of the subject you are teaching.  For instance, if you are teaching about Nigeria, you could incorporate a Nigerian folk tale.  Or if it’s the Civil War, create a radio play of a particular moment in the Civil War.  Talk about immersion!

Maybe it’s a math class and you want to integrate art into the lesson.   Maybe the students are challenged to create a multiplication problem in a design which also shows the answer, but unobtrusively.

Not many people think about this–when you approach the learning through the arts, students are relaxed and don’t feel the pressure of “I have to learn this right now and it has to be perfect.”  By applying arts into the learning, it gives students an opportunity to sort of live with the learning concept.  I promise, they will remember the concept much better if you apply the arts. Even the most challenged student will have success because the arts allow for differentiation so easily.

Arts Ingration Lesson

In my DramamommaSpeaks store, I many lessons and units which a teacher could incorporate into their arts integration collection.  Recently, I created a unit on the Zuni legend, The Maidens of the Corn. It was a fascinating experience.

This 47 page product includes:

  • Two warm ups–one physical and one imaginative, both boost energy
  • Original version of the Legend of Corn Maidens–great for comparison and contrast
  • Teacher’s script–what I say and how I say it!
  • Advice in directing reader’s theater
  • Blocking plot for performance
  • Kachina Dolls Information
  • Vocabulary
  • Who are the Zuni people?
  • Eleven page script with roles for 20+
  • Original song reminiscent of the Zuni music
  • Sheet music (optional for performance)
  • Sound bytes of music
  • Enrichment activities–designing a costume, designing a set, study of other Native American creation myths or a drama exercise using tableaux

This is a good example of arts integration in the social studies classroom.  In time, I plan to create more arts integration lessons for teachers, so do look for those.

Teaching humor?  This radio play will do the trick for you. It’s best with secondary level students.   Mark Twain’s The Invalid’s Story Radio Play

Do you have a suggestion of a lesson you’d like created?  I create lessons for teachers if they request them.  I really enjoy this, because I see immediate results as the teacher uses the lesson and I take any suggestions they may have or we work it together.  It’s awesome.

What arts integration have used in your classroom?  I’d love to hear.  Contact me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com or DeborahBaldwin.net

Dramamommaspeaks Blog Author Deborah Baldwin

 

 

 

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Filed Under: arts education, arts integration, creative dramatics, drama education, Education, Education, elementary, excellence in teaching, middle grades, Teacherspayteachers, theater, youth theatre Tagged With: language arts, math, reading, social studies

Sedna, an Inuit Folk Tale

May 30, 2018 By dhcbaldwin 1 Comment

Sedna, An Inuit Tale

Who lurks in the ocean deep?

Sedna is the Inuit goddess of the sea. According to most versions of the legend Sedna was once a beautiful mortal woman who became the ruler of Adlivun (the Inuit underworld at the bottom of the sea) after her father threw her out of his kayak into the ocean. Sedna’s fingers, which her father had to cut off to keep her from clinging to the side of the boat, are often said to have turned into the first sea mammals.

The other details of Sedna’s story are told differently in different Inuit/Eskimo communities– sometimes she provoked her father’s rage by attacking him or violating cultural taboos, while other times her father was selfishly trying to save his own life by sacrificing Sedna.

Sedna, an Inuit Folk Tale

Fascinating story, huh?  I liked it so much I adapted it into a class play with several changes (minus the cutting off part, thank goodness…) for upper elementary and middle grade students.

You can also use it as a reader’s theater piece.

Sedna Reader’s Theater 

I am now selling my lesson plans and units on Teacherspayteachers.com.  You can thank my dear husband for continuing to encourage me to put together all of the lessons and units I have created over thirty-eight years.

It has been a goal of mine for several years. I kept procrastinating because I figured no one would be interested in my products in drama education. Nay nay, I say….(I heard a comic say that once and it cracked me up!)

So far, as of this writing I have available 130 products to purchase for grades second through twelfth. This one of Sedna is probably one of the most involved plays.

Sedna, an Inuit Tale

I adapted multicultural stories when I taught in a middle school for twelve years. There was simply very little material for class plays and that is what I needed. Desperation is the mother of invention, you know?

A drama class, reading group, Social Studies will find this very useful.

My husband, a retired instrumental music teacher with lots of composing experience, created a song reminiscent of the Inuit culture’s music.

This is a terrific co-teaching experience, too!  A drama teacher and vocal music teacher working in tandem on the piece is such a great opportunity for learning. You know?

Included in the product is:

  • warm up
  • procedure or rehearsal schedule
  • six page script
  • stage properties list
  • sound effects list
  • original song reminiscent of the Innuit culture
  • recording of the melody with the accompaniment
  • source list with suggestions for masks and dances
  •  properties list

Now, my version of Sedna isn’t quite so gruesome, but creation myths can be very dramatic and Sedna follows suit with other mythological fables.

If you are interested in purchasing Sedna, check her out at:  Sedna Play

If you are interested in other products of mine, click here to see a few:

 

Costume Design Lesson with Circus Performer

Here is a lovely story of kindness and generosity:

Oji San and the Grateful Statues

My radio theater unit is also popular: Radio Theater Unit and “The Invisible Man”

 

Do you need a story dramatized but don’t have the time to do it yourself?  No problem. I LOVE to adapt multicultural folk tales into plays.

Contact me at dhcbaldwin@gmail.com and we’ll talk!  I’d love to help you.

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Filed Under: acting, Arts, arts education, creative dramatics, creative movement, drama education, Education, elementary, middle grades, plays, Teacherspayteachers, theatre Tagged With: ELL, Inuit culture, reading, social studies

Revolutionary Program for Bored Kids on Airplanes

September 3, 2017 By dhcbaldwin 2 Comments

Here’s an article about a revolutionary program for bored kids on an airplane.  How cool!

Recently, my husband I flew across the ocean to England. There were several kids on board. One little girl had a terrible time on the trip because her mother didn’t bring many things for the girl to do. Then I ran onto this article about a pilot program being tried on Easyjet! .

 

 

 

 

 

 

Easy Jet Launches ‘Flybraries’ Book Club To Keep Kids Entertained On Flights And Encourage Reading
Huffington post U.K.

An airline has come up with the perfect solution to keep kids entertained on flights, while also encouraging their passion to read.

EasyJet has today  launched ‘Flybraries’ (flying libraries), which will see 7,000 books take to the skies in 147 planes.

The launch followed a survey of 2,000 parents, which found 83% think their kids read less than they did when they were children.

Children will be offered books to read on the plane from a book trolley.
They have to leave the books on the plane when they land, but they can download free samples of other classics to read afterwards from the easyJet bookclub.

The airline has teamed up with Jaqueline Wilson and Puffin Classics to compile a selection of books kids will enjoy.

Books onboard flights include ‘Peter Pan’, ‘Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland’, ‘The Wizard Of Oz’ and ‘The Railway Children’.
Dame Jacqueline Wilson, who is supporting the campaign, said: “The long summer break is the ideal opportunity for children to get stuck into a great story.
“Books stimulate a child’s imagination and development. Reading soothes, entertains, grows vocabulary and exercises the mind and a flight is the perfect place to escape into a literary adventure. That’s why I think this campaign is such a clever match.”

EasyJet CEO Carolyn McCall said: “Our in-flight lending library means young passengers can pick up a brilliant book during their flight and then return it to the seat pocket at the end of the flight for the next customer to enjoy onboard.

“We think it will be popular with parents and children alike.”
To find out more, visit easyJet’s bookclub online here. http://www.easyjet.com/en/bookclub?awc=6296_1504300509_e305347aaa9fe84b6c2185488f5c9b97&utm_medium=Afiliacion&utm_source=Awin_UK&utm_campaign=home&amc=aff.easyjet.27953.32832.19310
Contact me at Dhcbaldwin@gmail.com or DeborahBaldwin.net

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Filed Under: Bumbling Bea, Reading Literacy Tagged With: airplane programs for kids, reading, reading program for kids, the summer slump

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