Drama in the Classroom: The Good Kind

When thinking of drama as a subject in our curriculum, it is easy to think of it only as a skill that can be learned and mastered. There are a lot of fundamental concepts that we teach – role play, character, relationship, time and place, tension, focus and emphasis. Our students love creating scripts, making tableaus, improvising, performing and playing all of those fun drama games. Not to mention the social and personal skills that children learn when engaging in the creative process! Some students excel in dramatic arts and love to perform, but that isn’t what its all about.

Aside from being its own subject, I (mostly) see drama as a meaningful instructional technique. When we no longer think of drama as a stand-alone subject and consider it a teaching tool, we open our programs up to wonderful things. By incorporating dramatic arts into all subject areas, we are handing students a powerful processing and communication tool. We are also increasing their engagement, motivation and adding physical activity to our teaching. Dramatic role play combines so many important functions at once – physical movement, facial expression, verbal and nonverbal communication and self awareness. The best part about using drama as an instructional technique is that it is dynamic – it can be applied to nearly any concept. The most natural fit for drama tends to be in language arts, as it so closely relates to storytelling. I’ve found, though, that some of the best drama experiences come when I incorporate it into my mathematics, science or social studies instruction.

Last week, my grade twos transformed themselves into atoms and moved themselves around the classroom, filling the space as a liquid, a gas and then a solid. I could see, right in front of me, their understanding of the concept when they changed their body movements and direction of movement to reflect the different properties of the states of matter. In math, we used drama to process concepts in our money unit. My students created a store, took turns being cashiers and customers, and used money manipulatives to make transactions. The process was entirely student directed, and allowed me to both observe and engage in their role play. By role playing and taking on the characters of customers and cashiers, they were applying their math learning to simulated real world situations. The opportunities and ideas are endless.

Every child can engage in drama. Dramatic play is a natural part of childhood and there is little difference between children playing superheroes on the playground and children engaged in drama activities in the classroom. Any Kindergarten teacher or Early Childhood Educator could list dozens of skills and schemas being process by a child engaged in dramatic play. Dramatic play is how children process the world around them. It’s also easy to think that dramatic play is something only early primary students engage in – but if you listen closely on the playground, you’re likely to find that even our older students are creating and leading their own dramatic play. Last month, during some free time outside, I was delighted to observe my grade three students pretending to be Early Settlers in Upper Canada. Our play structure suddenly became a log cabin and students took different roles as blacksmiths, carpenters, fishermen, hunters, farmers and school teachers. This was their natural way of internalizing and processing the concepts they were exploring in social studies. As teachers, we need to remind ourselves that drama is not only a skill to be mastered, but a natural method of communicating, processing and relating.

Unfortunately, drama is often a rotary subject and is not taught by homeroom teachers. I challenge you not to let that stop you from using drama as an instructional tool in your teaching! You’ll be amazed at what your kids will do.

Jack of All Trades, Master of None

I am for sure aging myself here, but for those of you who may not be familiar with this figure of speech it is used to describe a person who is good at many skills but a master of none. That is the best way to describe who I am as a teacher and how I have evolved over my career of  learning to be a better teacher.

Far too often we think that in order to use a strategy or tool in our classroom we have to be an expert at it. We don’t! As a teacher I have to be familiar with the content, the methodology and/or the necessary steps but I do not have to be a master of it. I am going to talk specifically to my personal Achilles tendon of teaching, the ARTS. I am in no way a musician, yet I can share my passion for music, lyrics and the powerful messages found in music. I can learn and teach to the curriculum expectations of my grade. I can partake in professional development opportunities to expand my skill set and knowledge. Even after all that, I will still not be an expert as compared to a music specialist.

My greatest accomplishment in the arts has been my work on understanding drama as a teaching tool, learning dramatic content and implementing it into my program. I have never been on stage (other than as an elementary student at Christmas time). I have never been a part of any formal dramatic theme, other than helping clean up after a school event and yet drama is one of the most successful components of my program these days. Each year my team and I take a group of highly volatile behaviour students and put on a formal dramatic presentation that we travel with to various schools within my board to share. We are currently in mid production of this year’s play.

Like in almost anything I was not comfortable with as a teacher, the students’ skill set, passion and innate ability to learn took over and I was just left to facilitate their growth. The second message is that when you share your expertise with your colleagues (collaborative planning) the saying that no one person knows more than all of us holds true. I am writing this for all teachers to understand that is it okay to take risks, it is okay to make mistakes in your classroom and learn from those mistakes and it is certainly okay to be a jack of all trades and master of none.

Hundertwasser, Spirals, and Lollipop Trees

One of my favourite artists is Friedensreich Hundertwasser (1928-2000), an Austrian artist, architect, and environmentalist whose work is colourful, playful, and unconventional – characteristics which make it perfect for any age to enjoy. Hundertwasser hated straight lines and the colour grey, but loved rain, trees, and the infinite beauty of nature.

Years ago, I happened to randomly look up “Hundertwasser Lesson Plans” on the computer and was thrilled to see that, because Hundertwasser had spent a lot of time in New Zealand, the country’s Ministry of Education had posted an art lesson plan for grade 2 students to learn about him and his whimsical style of painting. I immediately read through it and adapted it to suit my grade 6 students’ abilities as well as the limited art supplies I could find in my school’s stockroom – large cardstock paper (or bristol board), acrylic paint in primary colours, sharpies, white glue and sparkles.

Recently I adapted and introduced Hundertwasser to my kindergarten students. I started by showing them some of his work, taking particular notice of his ‘lollipop’ trees – painted with bright spirals. To encourage students to play with spiral lines, we set up a table with different colours of plasticine and a collection of white boards so that every student could roll out a plasticine ‘snake’, and then wind it up into a spiral on the whiteboard. Almost every student came to the art table that day. They seemed to be mesmerized by the action of rolling out long ropes of plasticine and then spinning them into spirals. Their creations were beautiful and all different; some were as tiny as a coin, others were large and irregularly shaped filling the whole white board, and yet others were delicately made with the finest, thinnest spirals in one continuous colour.

Our discussion about Hundertwasser spirals lead into an inquiry about where else we could find them. The students loved a book I read called, “Swirl by Swirl: Spirals in Nature” by Joyce Sidman. All through the day, they would come up to me and show me spirals they had found, drew, or created using materials in the classroom – blocks, loose parts, and toy animals, for example. Halfway through the day, we even fit in a spiral dance, holding hands as we moved around the classroom, winding up tightly and then unwinding while the music played – that way, they could actually feel the tight hug of a spiral. When it came to Writer’s Workshop at the end of the day, almost everyone wrote about spirals. As they were explaining their work, students would tell me where they found the spiral they had drawn – on a butterfly’s face or a seashell, the bodies of snakes and worms, or elephant trunks and spider’s webs. They had clearly begun to notice!

Exploring spirals is a first step into discovering more about Hundertwasser and his amazing creations. This week, my goal is to create a forest of Hundertwasser-inspired ‘Lollipop Trees” in the hallway leading up to our classroom. The students have already painted circles using cool colours (green, yellow, blue) of paint on circles of cardstock. When they are dry, they use a Sharpie and trace a spiral on top of the paint. Using warm colours (red, orange, yellow) on sheets of cardstock, the students will then cut and paste strips for the tree trunks. When I taught the grade 6s, they painted a poster where they recreated a town inspired by Hundertwasser by painting lollipop trees, onion domes, bright colours, wavy lines, and irregular windows into a rich street scene. With the kindergarten students, the grade 6 art project is a bit too ambitious and so instead, they will be isolating key elements of his work, so that they can feel as if they are IN one of Hundertwasser’s paintings with larger-than-life lollipop trees.

Next up, we will explore onion domes…

Starting The Year With Dance

Welcome to a new year! My name is Tammy Axt and I am a music/drama/dance teacher at a K-5 school in Brampton, Ontario. This is my fifth year teaching music and my first year teaching drama and dance. I am sure that with my new teaching package I will have a lot of learning to share in this blog. I love my job wholeheartedly and am proud to be part of the BEST profession in the WORLD! I should mention that I come from a maritime family where hyperbole is the norm when interacting in daily life.

In addition to teaching drama and dance for the first time, it has also been my first time teaching grade one in many years. Wow, they sure are a busy bunch. I’ve already learned a ton about having really simple, short instructions and built-in busy and quiet times. All of my grade one classes are also going to require a lot of community building and development of social skills.

This term, the grade ones will be making up a number of dances. However, this month I have noticed a few things about grade ones in my class. First, they cannot remember what dance moves they came up with three days ago. Second, they have no idea who their partner was three days ago. Third, they have difficultly putting papers on the floor in a row to make a sequence. Finally, without some structure put in place, they will have difficulty building on and revising their creations.

My colleague and I talked it through and came up with the very simple idea of housing their creations in a file folder. Each section of the folder would contain one creation that the students came up and at the end of the term the file folder with all of the dance plans will go home with the students.

Our first dance plan addresses the curriculum expectation ”students will use movements that are part of their daily experience in a variety of ways in dance phrases”. We asked the students to come up with movements that they like to do and draw a picture of the movement on two pieces of white paper. We glued the two pieces of paper into the folder and scribed the words that matched the picture.  The folders will be a valuable tool in helping the students to create their dances and assist them in remembering what they did in their previous dance period.

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