Sparking ideas for the stage
Students dream up characters and short scenes drawn from their own lives, books, and imaginations. Expect kids to come home talking about a make-believe person they invented and the situation that character is stuck in.
This is the year acting moves from playing pretend to building a character on purpose. Students plan scenes, rehearse, and make real choices about voice, movement, and timing. They also start tying stories to their own lives and to the times and places the stories come from. By spring, students can shape a short scene with classmates and explain why they made the choices they did.
Students dream up characters and short scenes drawn from their own lives, books, and imaginations. Expect kids to come home talking about a make-believe person they invented and the situation that character is stuck in.
Students work in small groups to shape their ideas into short scenes with a beginning, middle, and ending. They try out different choices for how a character might move, sound, and react before settling on what works best.
Students sharpen the basic tools of an actor: clear voice, body movement, and facial expression. They learn to read a short script, pick out what the character wants, and practice saying lines so a person in the back row can hear and understand them.
Students share polished scenes with classmates and watch others perform. They learn to give kind, specific feedback, explain what a play seemed to be about, and talk about how a story connects to people in real life or in history.
Students connect real moments from their own lives to the characters and stories they perform or create in class.
Students connect a play or performance to the time period or culture it comes from. Understanding that context helps them make more sense of what they see and why it was made.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect real moments from their own lives to the characters and stories they perform or create in class. | TH:Cn10.4 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students connect a play or performance to the time period or culture it comes from. Understanding that context helps them make more sense of what they see and why it was made. | TH:Cn11.4 |
Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a scene or character. They turn those ideas into a plan for a performance.
Students take a rough idea for a scene or character and shape it into something that can actually be performed, making choices about what to say, how to move, and what the story needs.
Students revisit a scene or short play they've written, making changes to dialogue or action until the piece feels finished and ready to share.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a scene or character. They turn those ideas into a plan for a performance. | TH:Cr1.4 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take a rough idea for a scene or character and shape it into something that can actually be performed, making choices about what to say, how to move, and what the story needs. | TH:Cr2.4 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students revisit a scene or short play they've written, making changes to dialogue or action until the piece feels finished and ready to share. | TH:Cr3.4 |
Students choose a scene or character to perform and explain why it fits the story and their own strengths as a performer.
Students practice and improve a scene or performance before showing it to an audience. They adjust how they move, speak, and use the stage until the work is ready to present.
Students perform a scene or character and make deliberate choices, like tone of voice or movement, to communicate a specific feeling or idea to the audience.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose a scene or character to perform and explain why it fits the story and their own strengths as a performer. | TH:Pr4.4 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice and improve a scene or performance before showing it to an audience. They adjust how they move, speak, and use the stage until the work is ready to present. | TH:Pr5.4 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students perform a scene or character and make deliberate choices, like tone of voice or movement, to communicate a specific feeling or idea to the audience. | TH:Pr6.4 |
Students watch a scene or performance and describe what they notice, explaining what the actor or story choices make them think or feel.
Students explain what a scene or character is meant to show, pointing to specific choices in the script, movement, or costume that support their reading of it.
Students look at a scene or performance and decide what works and what doesn't, using specific reasons to back up their opinion.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch a scene or performance and describe what they notice, explaining what the actor or story choices make them think or feel. | TH:Re7.4 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what a scene or character is meant to show, pointing to specific choices in the script, movement, or costume that support their reading of it. | TH:Re8.4 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students look at a scene or performance and decide what works and what doesn't, using specific reasons to back up their opinion. | TH:Re9.4 |
Students make up characters, build short scenes, and perform them for classmates. They also watch plays or videos and talk about what the story meant and how the actors made choices. Expect a mix of acting, writing, designing, and reflecting.
Read a picture book aloud together and take turns voicing the characters with different voices and faces. Ask what the character wants and why. Five minutes of pretend play, puppet shows, or acting out a favorite scene gives plenty of practice.
Some memorizing helps, but it is not the main goal at this age. Students learn to stay in character, speak clearly, and react to other actors. Short memorized lines or improvised scenes both count.
No. Many fourth graders feel nervous on stage. Start small at home with puppets, masks, or acting behind a chair. Confidence usually builds once students realize the goal is to tell a story, not to be perfect.
Start with imagination and character work, then move into building short scenes with a clear beginning, middle, and end. Save polished performances and peer feedback for later in the year, once students trust each other and know the basic vocabulary.
Giving useful feedback is the hardest part. Students default to saying a scene was good or bad. Plan to model specific feedback language several times, tied to clear criteria like voice, focus, and storytelling.
Pick a story, folktale, or event students are already studying and let them stage a short scene from it. Ask what the people in that time and place might have felt. The connection lands when the performance grows out of real content.
Students can take an idea, shape it into a short scene with characters and a problem, rehearse it, and perform it for an audience. They can also watch another scene and explain what worked, what it meant, and what they would change.