• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Join Me in my new Facebook Group! https://www.facebook.com/groups/417126059784261

Menu
  • Meet Deb – The Heart Behind DramaMommaSpeaks
    • Work with Me! 
    • Photo Gallery of DramaMommaSpeaks
    • Directorial Credits
  • I Give Book Talks! 
    • Book Talk Through Skype
    • Books
  • Freebies!
  • Bumbling Bea
  • Teaching Resume
  • Acting Resume
  • Contact Me
  • Blog
    • Drama Education
    • Arts Education
    • Youth Theatre
    • Middle Grades
    • Musical Theatre
    • Teaching
  • Meet Deb – The Heart Behind DramaMommaSpeaks
    • Work with Me! 
    • Photo Gallery of DramaMommaSpeaks
    • Directorial Credits
  • I Give Book Talks! 
    • Book Talk Through Skype
    • Books
  • Freebies!
  • Bumbling Bea
  • Teaching Resume
  • Acting Resume
  • Contact Me
  • Blog
    • Drama Education
    • Arts Education
    • Youth Theatre
    • Middle Grades
    • Musical Theatre
    • Teaching

sound design

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

Share this:

  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Like this:

Like Loading...

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

How Sound Design Brings Characters to Life

October 17, 2025 By dhcbaldwin Leave a Comment

How Sound Design Brings Characters to Life

How Sound Design Brings Characters to Life

Have you ever stopped to think about how much a single sound—or even the tone of a voice—shapes how we feel about a character? I always notice the sounds of the film–the soft purr of a Disney heroine and the Lion in the film of Wizard of Oz. The booming laugh of a villain, or the rustle of footsteps echoing down a hallway, help me to become more engaged in the story. Sound gives life and depth to a story long before we see the full picture. That’s the essence of how sound design brings characters to life—it transforms simple motion and dialogue into emotion, personality, and atmosphere.

Recently, I came across a short reel from SoundWorks Collection, a platform that profiles the incredible artists who create the sound worlds we all love. This reel features Disney’s sound team, showing just how much care goes into every whisper, creak, and splash. You can view it here.

The Power of the Voice

When I was a child, I discovered I had a talent for creating character voices.  I could imitate voices I heard in movies and television.  I remember when I saw the movie, The Music Man, I walked around for days afterward quoting the mayor’s daughter, “E Gods!” Needless to say, my mother wasn’t always fond of the characters I quoted.  From watching the television show, Hogan’s Heroes for years, I couldn’t resist mimicking the German guard’s line, “I see nothing!”—always said with an over-the-top German accent that made everyone laugh.

Usually, when I create a character for a play or musical, I include developing a voice for the character. When I stepped into the role of Mother Goose in Babes in Toyland, I imagined her as a quirky, chatty old bird. Consequently, I gave her a lisp and a nasally twang—and it brought down the house! (There again, I’m obviously wanting the audience’s reaction.)

 When teaching acting, I remind my students that their voice is their most flexible instrument. Through tone, rhythm, and volume, they can communicate emotion, personality, and intent. The biggest challenge is getting students to try using a voice.  Particular vocal exercises will help them bridge that gap and become more confident.

How Sound Design Brings Characters to Life

A Drama Exercise in Vocal and Physical Expression

One of my favorite exercises to use for this particular focus is  Close the door.

Directions:
Have the class stand in a circle facing inward.

Say to the students:
“Today we’re going to explore using our voices and bodies to express meaning. You’ll say the line ‘Close the door.’ in any way you wish — but you cannot change the words. You may add a gesture, whisper, laugh, use an accent, change your tempo or pitch — anything you like — as long as you keep the same words.”

Each student will demonstrate their version of the line to the person on their right. That partner will then imitate the delivery as closely as possible, matching the voice, tone, and movement.

After imitating, the partner will perform the line in their own unique way, showing how they want to express it.

After each pair performs, we’ll give them a round of applause. The applause isn’t for judging the performance — it’s to celebrate their creativity and willingness to try something new.

Why is this exercise always successful?  Because it levels the playing field.  Everyone creates a character, everyone imitates and everyone says this one non-threatening line.

When the Voice Is the Character

How Sound Design Brings Characters to Life

Animated films and radio theater do this beautifully—without facial expressions or physical movement, the performer must convey everything through voice alone. An excellent example of a character voice is Julie Kavner’s Mage Simpson. Check her out here:  Voice Evolution of Mage Simson. Characters such as Genie in Aladdin or Olaf in Frozen or Miss Trunchbull in Matilda demonstrate using  their vocal energy as part of their personality.

How Sound Design Brings Characters to Life

Sound Design Completes the Picture

But there’s another star we don’t always notice: the sound designer. If you’d like to learn more about Addison Teague,  an Oscar winning designer my husband and I know personally, check out: There’s a Place for Everyone in Theater   Hear his most recent designs, check out  Tron:  Ares.

Sound designers are the invisible magicians who build the world around the actors’ voices. Every drip of water, swish of fabric, and gust of wind is chosen and layered with purpose. It’s not just background—it’s storytelling.

That’s why I love sharing short behind-the-scenes features like this SoundWorks Collection reel. When students hear the isolated sounds of footsteps, wind, or waves, they begin to understand how sound supports emotion.

How Sound Design Brings Characters to Life

Classroom Idea: Sound Design Reflection Worksheet

To help your students think like sound designers, I’ve created a Sound Design Reflection Worksheet you can download and use for free. It’s perfect for middle or high school drama or film units. You can pick it up here: Sound_Design_Reflection_Sheet_Dramamommaspeaks You can use it with this clip I’ve provided above or any that you choose.

Voice acting and sound design are two sides of the same creative coin. Both shape how we experience stories, and both remind us that performance isn’t just about what we see—it’s about what we hear.

Whether your students are voicing characters, creating foley effects, or reflecting on how sound shapes emotion, they’re learning to listen deeply—and that’s one of the most powerful skills an artist can have. If you are ready to teach about sound effects check out: Sound Effects 

How do you teach character voices?  I’d love to learn how you do it.  Feel free to email me at DhcBaldwin@gmail.com

Woman behind DramaMommaSpeaks

Check out my new book:  We’re Live! Radio Theater #101

Share this:

  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • More
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp

Like this:

Like Loading...

Filed Under: acting, arts education, arts integration, drama education, drama integration, excellence in teaching, performing arts, sound design, Sound Design, theater, theatre Tagged With: acting, Bert Lahr, characterization, Julie Kavner, Lion King, Matilda, sound design, Soundworks, The Simpsons

Footer

Follow Us

logo3.png

FOLLOW US

Facebook X-twitter Pinterest Instagram Envelope Rss

Goodreads: read

Malibu Rising
Malibu Rising
by Taylor Jenkins Reid
People We Meet on Vacation
People We Meet on Vacation
by Emily Henry
The Last Thing He Told Me
The Last Thing He Told Me
by Laura Dave
Faking It
Faking It
by Cora Carmack
Losing It
Losing It
by Cora Carmack

goodreads.com
Copyright © 2024 · Wellness Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress.com.Log in
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d