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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year students learn that pretending is a craft. Students make up characters, act out short scenes, and use their voices and bodies to show how someone feels. They also watch classmates perform and talk about what they noticed. By spring, students can step into a role, act out a simple story with a beginning and an end, and share what they liked about a friend's scene.

Illustration of what students learn in Kindergarten Arts: Theater
  • Pretend play
  • Acting out stories
  • Characters
  • Using voice and body
  • Watching performances
  • Talking about plays
Source: California Content Standards for California Public Schools
Year at a glance
How the year usually goes. Every school and district set their own curriculum, so treat this as a guide, not official pacing.
  1. 1

    Pretend play and imagination

    Students step into make-believe with simple props and costumes. They try out characters, voices, and movements based on stories they know and moments from their own lives.

  2. 2

    Building stories together

    Students start shaping short scenes with a beginning, middle, and end. They take turns adding ideas and listen to classmates to grow a story as a group.

  3. 3

    Practicing for an audience

    Students rehearse short performances and learn small tricks of the stage, like facing forward and speaking so everyone can hear. They get more comfortable showing work to classmates.

  4. 4

    Watching and talking about plays

    Students watch performances and picture books come to life, then share what they noticed. They talk about how a character felt and what made a scene funny, sad, or surprising.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Kindergarten.
Connecting
Standard Definition Code

Using personal stories in theater play

Students draw on things they know and moments they remember to make choices in a scene or story. Acting is a way to share real feelings and experiences.

CA-TH:Cn10.k.K

Stories and art from around the world

Students connect stories, characters, and performances to real life by talking about where a play comes from or what it means to different people and communities.

CA-TH:Cn11.k.K
Creating
Standard Definition Code

Coming up with ideas for a play

Students come up with ideas for pretend play and simple stories, then try them out through movement, voice, or character.

CA-TH:Cr1.k.K

Turning ideas into a short play

Students take a simple idea for a play or story and decide who the characters are and what happens. They put those pieces together so the story makes sense.

CA-TH:Cr2.k.K

Finish a piece of theater work

Students practice and adjust their drama work until it feels ready to share. They try it again, make small changes, and decide when it's done.

CA-TH:Cr3.k.K
Performing/Presenting/Producing
Standard Definition Code

Picking a performance to share

Students pick a character or short scene to act out and explain why they chose it.

CA-TH:Pr4.k.K

Practicing a skill before performing it

Students practice a song, scene, or movement until they feel ready to share it with others.

CA-TH:Pr5.k.K

Share a story through performance

Students perform a short scene or character and make choices, like how loud to speak or how to move, that help the audience understand the story.

CA-TH:Pr6.k.K
Responding
Standard Definition Code

What happens in a story or play

Students look at a short performance or puppet show and say what they notice, like who was in it and what happened.

CA-TH:Re7.k.K

What art means to you

Students look at a short play or puppet show and say what they think the performers were trying to show, using words like happy, scared, or trying to be funny.

CA-TH:Re8.k.K

Deciding what makes a performance good

Students look at a classmate's performance and say what they liked and why. They start learning that opinions about theater can be backed up with a reason.

CA-TH:Re9.k.K
Common Questions
  • What does theater look like at this age?

    Most of the work is dramatic play. Students pretend to be characters, act out short stories, and use their voice and body to show feelings. There is very little memorizing of lines and almost no formal performance.

  • How can families practice theater skills at home?

    Act out favorite picture books together. Take turns being different characters, try silly and serious voices, and ask what the character is feeling. Five minutes of pretend play after a story counts.

  • Does a child need to perform in front of people?

    Not really. Small group sharing and acting out stories with classmates is plenty. Shy students can start by playing a character with a partner before sharing with the whole class.

  • How should theater be sequenced across the year?

    Start with imagination and pretend play in the fall, then add character voice and body work in the winter. By spring, students can act out short familiar stories in small groups and talk about what they noticed in each other's work.

  • Which skills usually need the most reteaching?

    Staying in character and watching as an audience are the two hardest. Students need repeated practice listening to a classmate's choices and then giving simple, kind feedback before they can do it on their own.

  • How does theater connect to other subjects?

    Acting out stories supports reading comprehension, and naming a character's feelings supports social skills. A short drama activity also gives students another way to show what they learned in a science or social studies lesson.

  • What does ready for first grade look like?

    By the end of the year, students can take on a simple character, use voice and body to show a feeling, and share a short scene with a partner or small group. They can also say one thing they liked about a classmate's acting.