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What does a student learn in ?

This is the year theatre work gets more deliberate. Students move past playing pretend and start making real choices about a character, a scene, and what the audience should feel. They draft ideas, rehearse, take notes from classmates, and try again. By spring, they can prepare a short scene or monologue, explain why they made the choices they did, and give honest feedback on a peer's performance.

  • Character work
  • Scene building
  • Rehearsal and revision
  • Performing for an audience
  • Giving feedback
Source: Vermont Common Core State Standards
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

    Building the ensemble

    Students start the year by working as a group, trying out theatre games, and pulling ideas from their own lives. They get comfortable taking creative risks in front of classmates.

  2. 2

    Shaping scenes and characters

    Students develop their ideas into scenes, build characters with clear motivations, and shape stories that have a beginning, middle, and end. Improvisation and short scripts are common at this point.

  3. 3

    Theatre in context

    Students look at plays from different cultures and time periods and think about how setting and history shape a story. They start connecting what a play means to the world it came from.

  4. 4

    Rehearsing for performance

    Students choose work to present and sharpen the skills that bring it to life, such as voice, movement, and timing. Rehearsals focus on making choices an audience can read clearly.

  5. 5

    Performing and reflecting

    Students share finished work with an audience, then step back to evaluate it. They use clear criteria to talk about what worked, what the piece meant, and what they would change next time.

Mastery Learning Standards
The required skills a student should display by the end of Grade 7.
Connecting
  • Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art

    Students connect what they already know and what they've lived through to the choices they make in a scene or performance. Personal experience becomes part of the craft.

  • Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural

    Students connect a play or performance to the time and place it came from. Understanding that context helps explain why the story, characters, or themes look the way they do.

Creating
  • Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work

    Students brainstorm original ideas for a scene or performance, then shape those ideas into a plan for what the piece will look, sound, and feel like.

  • Organize and develop artistic ideas and work

    Students take a rough idea for a scene or character and shape it into something stageable, making choices about dialogue, movement, and focus until the piece holds together.

  • Refine and complete artistic work

    Students revise a scene or script based on feedback, then prepare it for a final performance or presentation.

Performing/Presenting/Producing
  • Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation

    Students choose a scene or monologue and explain why it fits the performance they're building. That means looking at what the script demands and deciding whether they can pull it off.

  • Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation

    Students practice and polish a scene or performance piece, making deliberate choices about voice, movement, and staging until the work is ready to show an audience.

  • Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work

    Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear purpose, making deliberate choices about voice, movement, and timing so the audience understands what the piece is really about.

Responding
  • Perceive and analyze artistic work

    Students look closely at a scene or performance and describe what choices the actor or director made, then explain why those choices work or fall short.

  • Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work

    Students explain what a scene, character, or design choice is trying to say and back it up with specific details from the performance or script.

  • Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work

    Students look at a scene or performance and judge it against a clear set of standards, explaining what worked, what didn't, and why.

Common Questions
  • What does a year of theatre look like at this age?

    Students build short scenes, try on characters, and rehearse pieces to show classmates or families. They also watch plays and talk about what worked and why. The work moves between making theatre, performing it, and responding to it.

  • How can I help at home if my child is shy about performing?

    Start small. Read a picture book out loud together and try different voices for each character, or act out a short scene from a favorite movie. Five minutes of low-pressure play at home makes the classroom stage feel less scary.

  • Does my child need to memorize lines?

    Sometimes, but not always. Students often work from a script at first, then rehearse short sections from memory. Practicing a few lines at the kitchen table, one chunk at a time, is a real help.

  • How do I sequence the year across creating, performing, and responding?

    Many teachers open with ensemble and improv to build trust, move into scene work and character study by winter, then spend spring on a polished piece students rehearse and present. Response work runs alongside the whole year through short reflections after each unit.

  • What usually needs the most reteaching?

    Specific character choices and giving useful feedback to peers. Students often play a character as a mood instead of a person with a goal, and their notes to classmates stay vague. Short, repeated practice with both pays off more than one big lesson.

  • How can I support the responding side at home?

    After a movie or show, ask what the character wanted and how they tried to get it. Ask which moment felt true and which felt forced. That kind of talk is the same thinking students do about plays in class.

  • How do I connect theatre to history or culture without it feeling tacked on?

    Pick scenes or short plays tied to a time or community students are studying in another class, and ask what the piece reveals about that world. A quick research task before rehearsal gives character choices something to stand on.

  • How do I know students are ready for next year?

    By spring, students should be able to take a short script, make clear choices about who the character is and what they want, rehearse with a partner, and perform with focus. They should also give a classmate feedback that points to a specific moment.