Drama Curriculum
Drama Curriculum
Drama Curriculum
Curaclam na Bunscoile
Drama
Arts Education
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Drama
Arts Education
Curriculum
Contents
Introduction
Arts education The arts education curriculum Aims 2 2 4 Drama Aims Broad objectives 5 8 9
Infant classes
Overview Content 13 14
Assessment
Assessment 42
Appendix
Glossary Membership of the Curriculum Committee for Arts Education Membership of the Primary Co-ordinating Committee 50 52 53
Drama Curriculum
Introduction
Arts education
The arts are organised expressions of ideas, feelings and experiences in images, in music, in language, in gesture and in movement. They provide for sensory, emotional, intellectual and creative enrichment and contribute to the childs holistic development. Much of what is finest in society is developed through a variety of art forms which contribute to cultural ethos and to a sense of well-being. Arts education enables the child to explore alternative ways of communicating with others. It encourages ideas that are personal and inventive and makes a vital contribution to the development of a range of intelligences. A purposeful arts education at primary level is lifeenhancing and is invaluable in stimulating creative thinking and in promoting capability and adaptability. It emphasises the creative process and so ensures that the childs work is personal and has quality. Attempts at artistic expression are valued, self-esteem is enhanced, spontaneity and risk-taking are encouraged, and difference is celebrated. It is this affirming aspect of the creative arts that makes participation such a positive experience. Arts education is integral to primary education in helping to promote thinking, imagination and sensitivity, and arts activities may be a focus for social and cultural development and enjoyment in school. Arts education encompasses a range of activities in the visual arts, in music, in drama, in dance and in literature. These activities and experiences help the child to make sense of the world; to question, to speculate and to find solutions; to deal with feelings and to respond to creative experience.
This awareness is fundamental to the development of visual expression and to the childs personal response to creative experience. Making art involves two and three-dimensional work in a range of media. Appreciating promotes understanding of the qualities inherent in art works and aesthetic enjoyment. In developing the programme, the expressive or making activities are balanced with opportunities to see and to make a personal response to visual art forms of different styles, periods and cultures. Regional craft traditions and their modern developments, as part of the national heritage, are among those art forms. The music curriculum comprises listening and responding, performing and composing activities. Focused listening is emphasised, both for its sheer enjoyment potential and for its essential role in composing and performing. The child is encouraged to listen with attention to sounds in the environment and to become gradually aware of how sound is organised in music. Performance incorporates a balance of singing and instrumental playing of his/her own work and the work of others. Ways of using sound are explored in composing, both with the voice and with a widening range of musical instruments. In the development of the programme, performance is balanced with opportunities to hear and to make a personal response to music of different styles, periods and cultures, including the national repertoire in its varied national and regional forms. Interrelated activities for listening, performing and composing are suggested in the curriculum content. The drama curriculum comprises interrelated activities which explore feelings, knowledge and ideas, leading to understanding. It explores themes and issues, creates a safe context in which to do so, and provides for opportunities to reflect on the insights gained in the process. It draws on the knowledge, interests and enthusiasm of the child. In drama, the child explores the motivations and the relationships between people that exist in a real, imagined or historical context, to help him/her understand the world. The child is encouraged to make decisions and to take responsibility for those decisions within the safe context of the drama. Dance provides the child with opportunities to organise and develop his/her natural enjoyment of expressive movement in dance form. Through dance, the child is encouraged to explore and experiment with a variety of body movements and to communicate a range of moods and feelings. The dance programme comprises activities in the exploration,
Drama Curriculum
creation and performance of dance and in developing understanding of dance forms. Through literature, the child is guided to explore the world of the imagination and to discover how language brings it to life. Expressive language, both oral and written, is fostered for its enjoyment value and to help develop aesthetic awareness.
Aims
The aims of arts education are to enable the child to explore, clarify and express ideas, feelings and experiences through a range of arts activities to provide for aesthetic experiences and to develop aesthetic awareness in the visual arts, in music, in drama, in dance and in literature to develop the childs awareness of, sensitivity to and enjoyment of visual, aural, tactile and spatial environments to enable the child to develop natural abilities and potential to acquire techniques, and to practise the skills necessary for creative expression and for joyful participation in different art forms to enable the child to see and to solve problems creatively through imaginative thinking and so encourage individuality and enterprise to value the childs confidence and self-esteem through valuing selfexpression to foster a sense of excellence in and appreciation of the arts in local, regional, national and global contexts, both past and present to foster a critical appreciation of the arts for personal fulfilment and enjoyment.
Drama
There are strong elements of make-believe in all childrens play. This make-believe helps the child to test out his/her hypotheses about what the world is like and how it might feel to have certain experiences. It is fuelled by inquisitiveness and a desire to think about possibilities and concepts through the medium of action. The process by which this is done is the same process as that by which drama is made for all levels and ages. The primary task of the teacher of drama, therefore, is to preserve and encourage this desire to make-believe while at the same time extending it to other areas of life and knowledge. In this way drama can assist in the fulfilment of the childs current cognitive and affective needs and in providing for his/her future personal, social, emotional and intellectual development. We meet drama most frequently in the theatre, on television or in the cinema, and we associate it with performance, costumes, setting and stages. Similarly, in school we often associate drama with script, rehearsal, voice production and the display of acting talent. This type of drama has certain benefits in that it increases childrens self-confidence, gives them the opportunity to express themselves in public and allows them the opportunity of appearing on stage. However, it represents only a part of the rich learning and developmental experience that drama has to offer. This curriculum will not dwell on the display element of drama but will, rather, emphasise the benefits to be gained from the process of exploring life through the creation of plot, theme, fiction and make-believe. Drama used in this way is called classroom drama or process drama. The field that drama can explore is as wide as life itself, and the areas of the exploration can be derived from the content of other curricula or from any other aspect of life that interests and concerns the children or the teacher. Examining these topics through drama will involve children in such activities as the spontaneous making of drama scenes (sometimes called improvisation) entering into other lives and situations engaging with life issues, knowledge and themes through drama honing and shaping drama scenes for the purpose of communicating them to others
Drama Curriculum
living through a story, making it up as they go along, solving problems in the real and fictional worlds, co-operating with others, and pooling ideas thinking about and discussing the patterns in life so that the outcome of encounters and plots will reflect their perception of how life is or might be. All of this can take place at a level suitable to the age of the child. However complex the material may seem, the child, at any level, will find his/her own understanding and ways of dealing with it. Because drama is a holistic activity it is difficult to separate the form from the content, the affective from the cognitive, the social development from the personal. Nevertheless, it can be said that its educational outcomes derive from two sources: the knowledge and insights gained from bringing the childs experience to bear on the examination of a particular aspect of life through drama the personal skills, social skills and drama skills that must be encouraged if the class is to enter effectively into and create the world of the drama. These skills are as natural to the younger child as playing and need only careful support and nurturing to extend them into continuing to serve the childs education. It requires primarily that the teacher adopts the role of facilitator and acts like a good guide in the forest, pointing out the possibilities of certain directions and delights but leaving much of the responsibility for the exploration, and its enjoyment, to the child.
Drama Curriculum
Aims
The aims of the drama curriculum are to enable the child to become drama literate to enable the child to create a permanent bridge between make-believe play and the art form of theatre to develop the childs ability to enter physically, emotionally and intellectually into the drama world in order to promote questing, empowering and empathetic skills to enable the child to develop the social skills necessary to engage openly, honestly and playfully with others to enable the child to co-operate and communicate with others in solving problems in the drama and through the drama to enable the child to understand the structures and modes of drama and how they create links between play, thought and life to enable the child to acquire this knowledge of drama through the active exploration of themes drawn from life (past and present), whether they have their source in other curriculum areas or in general areas relevant to the childs life to enable the child to begin the process of translating a knowledge of drama into the active exploration of life themes from drama literature, leading to the appreciation of world drama culture to form the criteria with which to evaluate the drama texts, written or performed, to which he/she is continually exposed.
Broad objectives
When due account is taken of intrinsic abilities and varying circumstances, the drama curriculum should enable the child to develop the ability to enter physically, mentally and emotionally into the fictional drama context and discover its possibilities through cooperation with others develop empathy with and understanding of others and the confidence needed to assume a role or character experience and create an atmosphere where ideas, feelings and experiences can be expressed, where conflict can be handled positively, and life situations explored openly and honestly develop personal adaptability, spontaneity, the ability to co-operate, verbal and non-verbal skills, and imagination and creativity, in order to ensure that the drama text reflects real life in a fresh and valid way develop the ability to decide what course is likely to lead to significant drama action develop the ability to steer the drama towards areas that are likely to lead, through whatever genre, to insights into the subject matter to be explored develop the ability to co-operate with others in solving, out of role, the problems that are presented in making the drama develop the ability to co-operate with others, in role, in keeping the drama alive, in creating context, and in exploring the problems that are presented in making the drama develop the ability to use drama to promote or express a view on a subject on which he/she may have strong views or feelings develop the ability to use drama to examine and explore unfamiliar material so as to reach an understanding of the patterns, meanings and concepts contained in it develop concern, curiosity and understanding of the increasingly sophisticated patterns that comprise drama content and of the increasingly refined insights that can flow from it use drama to explore actively the human aspect of all learning as a means of curricular integration
Drama Curriculum
become aware of subtexts, which manifest themselves involuntarily, in drama and in life begin to develop, through active story-making in drama, an appreciation of plot and theme so that these can form the basis of an understanding of drama literature and how it relates to text-making in a specific time and place begin to be able to discern the covert or overt messages in drama texts, ranging from advertising to Shakespeare, through becoming aware of how values and attitudes are woven into drama begin to develop the ability to assess critically the validity of the meanings hidden in drama texts and what can be learned from them.
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Explanatory notes
The exemplars given in the curriculum are merely suggestions that may help to clarify the content objectives. These have a number of contexts. Some have already been used in actual drama activities and the teacher may have to infer a context for them. In others the context is obvious. Some others are illustrated more extensively in the descriptions of successful drama activities in the teacher guidelines. The exemplars are chosen to demonstrate that drama draws its content from the full range of human experience. Many of them are in fact drawn from lessons already taught which had been so framed that issues of morality, violence, life and death were being explored in an active and reflective way. The inclusion of exemplars such as these reminds us that drama often enters the realm of the mythic and the archetypal in order to achieve distance from social or personal issues and to provide a lively focus for pupils exploration. Furthermore, it affords children a valuable perspective that will be a counterbalance to the trivialisation of such content in so many films and television programmes to which they are exposed. The word drama is used in three contexts in the drama curriculum and teacher guidelines, as follows: drama refers to the widest generally accepted meaning of the word a drama refers to a specific drama activity in any form or genre the drama refers to a drama activity on the classroom floor. A number of terms are used and a number of concepts are referred to in both the curriculum and the guidelines that may be unfamiliar to teachers. These are explained in the glossaries in the documents.
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Infant classes
Overview
Strand Strand units
infant classes
Exploring and making drama Reflecting on drama Co-operating and communicating in making drama
Prerequisites for making drama Content The fictional lens Creating a safe environment
Elements of drama Belief Role and character Action Place Time Tension Significance Genre
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develop awareness of how he/she, as part of a group, helps to maintain focus in the dramatic action concentrate, with the group, on convincing the cowardly wizard that the frog will not harm him/her in a drama about a mountain rescue, concentrate on helping the whole group to follow the leader over the stepping-stones without anyone falling in together with the other children decide, by concentrating on listening to the sounds of animals in the woods, whether it is safe to leave the tent while making get-well cards for an bhbg bhreoite the teacher keeps the focus on bbg by telling the children about his/her own visit to the hospital develop awareness of tension in the drama if the bear cannot go up the slippery slope, he/she will not be able to rescue the stranded penguin if one person (represented by a coat) falls into the stream, he/she, together with the group, will have to abandon the journey a friendly stranger offers sweets to him/her and to other members of the group, who decide whether or not to take them.
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Strand unit
Reflecting on drama
The child should be enabled to
develop the ability to reflect on the action as it progresses speculate whether he/she and the other children could have persuaded the old woman to give them bread if they had been nicer to her in a drama about bears going to school, consider what bears should put in their schoolbags in the morning reflect on appropriate behaviour when visiting people in hospital, discussing and demonstrating how we show that we care about the person who is sick experience the relationship between story, theme and life experience in the drama about the tiger village, become one of the children who has to defend his/her plan when the chief tiger (the teacher in role) says that it will not serve the tigers purpose show the lion who cant make friends some of the strategies that the child uses in making friends share insights gained while experiencing the drama tell how he/she felt when the fairy had to walk in the snow without shoes tell if mother or father would do things differently from one of the characters in the drama.
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Strand unit
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Overview
Strand Strand units
Exploring and making drama Reflecting on drama Co-operating and communicating in making drama
Prerequisites for making drama Content The fictional lens Creating a safe environment
Elements of drama Belief Role and character Action Place Time Tension Significance Genre
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experience how the fictional past and the desired fictional future influence the present dramatic action the knowledge that the princess has been imprisoned in the castle and the childrens desire to get her out make them negotiate with the gatekeeper because the shepherds and their wives have been warned that innkeepers are likely to exploit them, they treat this innkeeper warily the animals, knowing that some of the wilder animals have eaten smaller animals, go to Noah to ask him to devise the Rules of the Ark develop the ability to help maintain the focus in the dramatic action focus on helping to solve the mathematical problems the gatekeeper sets how can we help the peacock who has lost the ability to spread his tail? the capital letters and small letters are arguing with each other but have to bury their differences when they hear there is a computer coming who wants to make them his/her slaves mar bhall den ghrpa at ag iarraidh an mhuc dhraochta a fhil n bhfeirm, ceistigh an bhean a bhfuil mioneolas aici ar obair na feirme begin to see how tension adds to drama the suspense that ensures the interest of the participants decide with the group whether to give a man directions to the church and what he wants to do there in the same drama, decide whether to tell the garda that we gave him directions to the church in a drama about friendship and exclusion, see how the group behaves when somebody new joins them card a tharlaonn nuair a chasann an garda a labhraonn Gaeilge ar na pist agus iad tar is an chathaoir a thgil amach as an teach.
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Strand unit
Reflecting on drama
The child should be enabled to
use reflection on a particular dramatic action to create possible alternative courses for the action out of role, speculate whether the drama might be more exciting if the ball goes into the river and is taken away by it in role, decide how to teach the frustrated frog to calm down write a short account of what he/she thinks the animals should do if they want to avoid being caught by the hunter the teacher in role (as Noah) and the animals draw up a list of suggestions on how to calm the giraffe and save the Ark, after the giraffe has put his foot through the hull experience, through drama, the relationship between story, theme and life experience examine the question of bullying through a reworking of Jack and the Beanstalk or Jenny and the Giants Wife use reflections on stories gathered from his/her grandparents to lead to a drama about buying a house without knowing sign language, think about how to communicate with a person who cannot hear or speak share insights while experiencing the drama or insights that arise out of the drama reveal whether he/she suspected that it was the man posing as the lollipop person who had robbed the church in the context of a drama that uses a reworked Little Red Riding-Hood story, speculate whether there is any time when it is right to talk to strangers make a picture-sequence, frieze or model to record or interpret what happened in the drama.
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Strand unit
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Overview
Strand Strand units
Exploring and making drama Reflecting on drama Co-operating and communicating in making drama
Prerequisites for making drama Content The fictional lens Creating a safe environment
Elements of drama Belief Role and character Action Place Time Tension Significance Genre
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explore how the fictional past and the desired fictional future influence the present dramatic action the members of the tribe, having had the experience of trying to move the stone and desiring to go home to help their starving kinsmen, decide whether to bring the stone home or let it sink into the bog knowing that the tide is coming in fast and that some of the children cant swim, decide whether to try and wade to safety or spend the night on the island the parents, knowing that a child has fallen into the lake, decide to find out how it happened Aengus knows that Patrick is holy and doesnt want to disturb his prayers, but when Patrick stakes Aengus foot by mistake enact what happens next become aware of the rules that help maintain focus in the dramatic action learn and apply simple rules that give focus and meaning to dramatic activity, for example do your bit, believe it is happening to you, listen to and accept the contributions of others work out from the map the meaning of the riddle that will lead him/her to where the UFO has landed follow the leader in hauling weapons along a narrow mountain pass help the other children to teach the spacewoman how to treat the flowers begin, as a member of a group, to include in drama activity the elements of tension and suspense brief a third character, who is joining the drama, with an agenda that is not known to the two who are already involved a greedy worker at the tomb of Tutankhamun tempts others who are busy making copies of hieroglyphics to steal what they can in a drama about differences between two groups of children, increase the tension by implanting the knowledge that any person in a particular group could be a spy for the other group enact the scene when, in the market-place where Miolchu is buying Patrick, one of the hostages tries to escape
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begin the process of using script as a pre-text learn to look on a piece of script as an invitation to create dramatic action, discovering that interpreting six lines of script, for example, can lead into many different situations learn to transform script into ones own thought processes b in ann script ghearr Ghaeilge a limhseil agus drma a dhanamh di it is the turn of the hieroglyphics expert to entertain campsite colleagues by enacting the story of hieroglyphics he/she has copied.
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Strand unit
Reflecting on drama
The child should be enabled to
use reflection on and evaluation of a particular dramatic action to create possible alternative courses for the action he/she wonders if a parent would treat his/her child in this way and what direction the drama could take if he/she were kinder in a drama about friendship, the cowboy wonders if he should have told the sheriff what he had seen his friend do decide whether the drama is exciting enough and what could be done to make it more exciting learn, through drama, the relationship between story, theme and life experience through a drama about a child whose parents never let him/her do what he/she wants to do, explore and ask questions about freedom and responsibility if one were to make a soap-opera about the school, enact with others a small group scene that would best encapsulate the school small groups depict peoples reactions at moments of great change in history use the sharing of insights arising out of dramatic action to develop the ability to draw conclusions and to hypothesise about life and people discuss one childs opinion that the drama is silly, because if the gang had behaved like that they would have been arrested long ago reflect on whether parents generally behave as the parents in the drama did reflect, as a result of doing a drama on a dolmen, on the number of problems people in the past had to solve to get us to the world we have today the archaeologists from Tutankhamuns tomb are compiling a history of the dig, and each expert must profile himself/herself and explain his/her work.
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Strand unit
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enact spontaneously for others in the group a scene from the drama, or share with the rest of the class a scene that has already been made in simultaneous small-group work as part of a drama on the making of a dolmen, show half a minute of action in which the members of the tribe endure great hardship show the scene at home when the teachers letter arrives to say that Jenny has been misbehaving in a drama about a crime, show, as groups of detectives, an enactment of how each group thinks it happened in a drama about life on a tropical island, show how the relationship between the girls develops when they go swimming in the sea.
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Overview
Strand Strand units
Exploring and making drama Reflecting on drama Co-operating and communicating in making drama
Prerequisites for making drama Content The fictional lens Creating a safe environment
Elements of drama Belief Role and character Action Place Time Tension Significance Genre
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explore how the fictional past and the desired fictional future influence the present dramatic action the children of the Rhne valley, reading the signs of the wind that sweeps down the valley and knowing the danger of the wind, want to tell their parents to take precautions against it the people of the island, knowing how the smugglers exploit them, have to decide whether their future is best assured by telling the police or by taking the law into their own hands a group of scientists, deciding that the spacewoman should be allowed to stay, do an experiment on the composition of air to find out if she can live in this atmosphere become adept at implementing the playing rules that maintain focus in dramatic action agree methods by which a drama in the dual setting of the sitting-room and the kitchen does not split into two separate dramas help to create and maintain the atmosphere in the cold damp room in which they wait for the ghost to come mar dhuine de na cailn at ag lorg a mithreacha, ceistigh inir na feirme faoin mid a chonaic s/s help to plan dramatic activity to include the particular tension and suspense appropriate to the theme being explored in a drama about honesty, explore how contrary physical and verbal signals can indicate deception as the fishermen depart for three months, leaving their families on the quays, help create and be aware of the tension that comes from everyone trying to be cheerful as members of a dance troupe in a drama about betrayal, make a dance that lets the queen know her secret is out become comfortable with script and understand the basic processes by which script becomes action ask the who, what, where, when and why questions in creating the action that a piece of script suggests be aware of the basic conventions of play-writing through occasionally writing sections of script for other groups to make into drama texts perform simultaneously a few lines of script to lead to a drama about the issue of family break-up during the Famine Drama Curriculum
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distinguish between various genres, such as comedy, tragedy, fantasy begin to appreciate that, just like different games, different drama worlds (other than naturalistic drama) can have their own rules to lift a drama out of the naturalistic mode, do a silent scene depicting action in a labour camp while the remainder of the class juxtaposes the sounds of children playing by the seaside do a drama in which the adults act like children and the children act like adults invent an extra group of characters that Alice (in Wonderland) might meet, and do a scene she might have with them dan drma greannmhar faoi nathair san ilar.
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Strand unit
Reflecting on drama
The child should be enabled to
reflect on a particular dramatic action in order to create possible alternative courses for the action that will reflect more closely the life patterns and issues being examined participate in hot-seating write the poem the character might write at this time (it is sometimes useful to distance true emotion from the child) and then decide what course of action he/she is likely to take decide as a member of a group whether the woman with the fur coat should be helped to meet the fur dealer who will repair it decide, as a member of the group, whether to allow a soldier to pass on and possibly get killed or to risk ones own life to save him/her. learn, through drama, the relationship between story, theme and life experience beginning with the finding by the police of an abandoned wallet, see where the investigation leads and how it must be shaped by the rules by which the police abide explore bullying through a drama about a boy or girl, his/her mother and father, a dog and a gang who attack him/her going to school explore a mathematical problem through a mantle of the expert drama about a builder who wants to renovate a church use the sharing of insights arising out of dramatic action to develop the ability to draw conclusions and to hypothesise about life and people in a drama on board a sailing ship explore why the tired sailors might disagree with the captain and decide to take over the ship as part of a group, make a wall chart about the insights gained during a drama about a pop group and the conclusions for life that could be drawn from it as part of a group of Irish-speaking children, decide how best to teach the English girl to answer in Irish the questions the gardener will put to her.
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Strand unit
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enact spontaneously for others in the group a scene from the drama, or share with the rest of the class a scene that has already been made in simultaneous small-group work enact a scene that shows the reaction of a family to the news that they have won the lotto as part of a drama on the bravery of peacemakers, enact the scene in which the hero or heroine says goodbye to his/her family before going on his/her mission as part of a comic piece about people who care about nothing, show a scene in which the hurlers or camogie players are completely uninterested in the lecture from the coach before the game.
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Assessment
Assessment
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Reflecting on drama
Reflection is an essential part of the drama process. This takes place both during the drama activity itself and through discussion and other activities after the drama activity is over. The success of the childrens reflection will be seen in the extent to which they use it to create alternative courses for the action that reflect the issues bring examined and in their ability to recognise the relationship between story, theme and life experience. The quality of the insights they gain from the drama experience, and the extent to which they can reach conclusions from it and are able to hypothesise in a more general way about people and life, will also indicate the success of their learning through drama.
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Teacher observation
This is the form of assessment most consistently used by teachers and the most effective in relation to childrens engagement with drama. It involves the informal monitoring of childrens progress as the drama process takes place. In observing the varying degrees of success with which children acquire drama skills and concepts and learn through the drama process, the teacher can adjust his/her methods and approaches and modify the drama contexts in order to maximise its learning benefits for individual children. Much of this observation is concerned with detailed and immediate drama activity and is unrecorded. However, it can be useful to make brief notes from time to time about particular learning requirements. This can be a further help to the teacher in taking account of the progress of the class, a group or an individual at any particular juncture, and can inform his/her planning of short-term and long-term drama approaches.
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Appendix
Glossary
action
the interaction between character and situation in the drama, involving the resolution or attempted resolution of conflict and tension a suggestion or instruction given to one character, of which the other characters may or may not be unaware, which has the purpose of giving a new direction to the drama the entire intellectual, emotional and physical makeup of a real or fictional person the subject matter of a drama, based on the childs general experience and needs or drawn from the content of some other curriculum area the action in which the text of the drama is created the choice of fictional characters and the situation they are placed in that creates the dramatic context for the enactment the process through which a fiction is transformed into directions and suggestions for an enactment. (It is through this process that the drama text is distanced sufficiently from the children to be safe but remains close enough to be explored effectively.) the form of dramatic expressionnaturalistic, comic, absurd, etc. the spontaneous dramatic enactment of a fiction doing or saying something from the standpoint of role or character the process by which the teacher implies that the children are experts in some particular topic so as to encourage them to research that topic within the drama talking about issues, choices and possible directions in the drama when outside the enactment the coherent series of incidents that, together with the theme, make up the drama
brief
character content
framing
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pre-text
an effective starting point that will launch the dramatic world in such a way that the participants can identify their roles and responsibilities and begin to build the dramatic world together. the process by which drama texts are made pretending to be someone or something other than oneself a short play, an improvised text or a dramatic action that which signals something important about plot, theme or life the non-verbal signals by which thoughts, feelings and attitudes are transmitted the teacher taking a role in the drama and moulding it from within the expression in drama of the conflict inherent in the needs and desires of the different characters in the drama that drives the action forward a class text is the selection, enactment and linking of scenes in the drama, and all the class activities related to this a drama text is an enacted drama fiction, watched or unwatched, whether it takes place in the class or in a theatre-like situation a written text is a script that describes a dramatic action
text
theme
the underlying patterns by which the plot of the drama is connected to life
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Tom Gilmore Sydney Blain (from 1995) Liam higearta (from 1996) Dympna Glendenning (to 1995) Fionnuala Kilfeather (from 1995) amonn MacAonghusa (to 1996) Fr Gerard McNamara (from 1995) Peter Mullan Sheila Nunan (from 1995) Eugene Wall Church of Ireland General Synod Board of Education
NCCA Chairpersons: Dr Tom Murphy (to 1996), Dr Caroline Hussey ( from 1996)
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ISBN 0-7076-6330-X
9 780707 663302