Finding ideas and characters
Students start the year exploring where stories come from. They pull ideas from their own lives, books, and the world around them, then try out simple characters in short scenes.
This is the year theatre moves from playing pretend to making deliberate choices. Students build characters and scenes on purpose, pulling from their own lives and from the time and place a story is set in. They also start judging plays with real reasons, not just whether they liked it. By spring, they can rehearse a scene, refine it based on feedback, and explain what it means to an audience.
Students start the year exploring where stories come from. They pull ideas from their own lives, books, and the world around them, then try out simple characters in short scenes.
Students move from quick ideas to planned scenes. They work in small groups to organize a beginning, middle, and end, and learn to take notes from classmates to make a scene clearer.
Students pick which pieces are ready for an audience and rehearse them. They practice voice, movement, and timing, and make choices about how a line should sound or where a character should stand.
Students share finished scenes with classmates or families. The focus is on getting the meaning of the story across, not on being perfect, and on handling the nerves and surprises of a live show.
Students close the year by becoming thoughtful audience members. They watch performances and clips, talk about what worked, and connect what they see to history, culture, and their own experiences.
Students connect their own memories and experiences to the choices they make in a scene or performance. Personal history shapes character, setting, and story.
Theatre works don't appear out of nowhere. Students look at plays and performances and ask why they were made, who made them, and what was happening in the world at the time.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect their own memories and experiences to the choices they make in a scene or performance. Personal history shapes character, setting, and story. | TH:Cn10.6 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Theatre works don't appear out of nowhere. Students look at plays and performances and ask why they were made, who made them, and what was happening in the world at the time. | TH:Cn11.6 |
Students brainstorm characters, settings, and dramatic situations to develop original theatre ideas. This is the imagination-and-planning stage, before any script or performance takes shape.
Students take a rough theatre idea and shape it into a scene worth performing. That means making choices about character, dialogue, and setting until the work holds together.
Students revisit a scene or script, make changes based on feedback, and prepare it for a final performance or presentation.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm characters, settings, and dramatic situations to develop original theatre ideas. This is the imagination-and-planning stage, before any script or performance takes shape. | TH:Cr1.6 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take a rough theatre idea and shape it into a scene worth performing. That means making choices about character, dialogue, and setting until the work holds together. | TH:Cr2.6 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students revisit a scene or script, make changes based on feedback, and prepare it for a final performance or presentation. | TH:Cr3.6 |
Students choose a scene or script to perform and explain why it fits the story, character, or idea they want to bring to life.
Students practice and revise their performance choices before presenting, adjusting voice, movement, and staging until the work is ready for an audience.
Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear intent, making choices about voice, movement, and character so the audience understands what the piece is about.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose a scene or script to perform and explain why it fits the story, character, or idea they want to bring to life. | TH:Pr4.6 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice and revise their performance choices before presenting, adjusting voice, movement, and staging until the work is ready for an audience. | TH:Pr5.6 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear intent, making choices about voice, movement, and character so the audience understands what the piece is about. | TH:Pr6.6 |
Students watch a scene or performance and explain what choices the actor or director made, and why those choices matter to the story being told.
Students explain what a scene, character, or design choice means and why the playwright or director likely made it. They look past what happens on stage to discuss the ideas or feelings the work is trying to express.
Students use a set of criteria, like a checklist or rubric, to judge a theatre performance and explain what worked and what didn't.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch a scene or performance and explain what choices the actor or director made, and why those choices matter to the story being told. | TH:Re7.6 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what a scene, character, or design choice means and why the playwright or director likely made it. They look past what happens on stage to discuss the ideas or feelings the work is trying to express. | TH:Re8.6 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students use a set of criteria, like a checklist or rubric, to judge a theatre performance and explain what worked and what didn't. | TH:Re9.6 |
Students build short scenes, play characters, and try out staging choices. They write or improvise their own work, rehearse it, and perform for classmates. They also watch live or recorded theatre and talk about what the choices on stage mean.
Let students practice lines out loud at the kitchen table and read parts back to them. Ten minutes of low-pressure rehearsal builds comfort with the words and the voice. Watching a play or a film together and asking why a character made a choice also helps.
Often yes, for short scenes and monologues. Short daily practice works better than one long session. Running lines while walking, doing chores, or tossing a ball back and forth helps the words stick without feeling like homework.
A common arc starts with ensemble and improvisation games, moves into character work and short scripted scenes, then into a longer devised or scripted project. Responding to live or recorded theatre runs alongside the making, so students build a vocabulary for talking about choices.
Two things tend to lag: giving specific feedback instead of just saying a scene was good or bad, and revising work after a first run. Building a simple criteria sheet students use every time, then requiring one round of changes before the next showing, closes both gaps.
Students look at where a play comes from, who wrote it, and what was happening in the world at the time. They also draw on their own lives and on stories from social studies or literature when they create original scenes. The link to context is part of the work, not a side trip.
By the end of the year, students should be able to develop a character, rehearse with a partner, take feedback, and show a polished short piece. They should also be able to watch a scene and explain what the actors and director were trying to communicate, using specific evidence from the performance.