Connecting Drama and Science – Body Objects: With Setting, Environments and Details

Connecting Drama and Science - Body Objects: With Setting, Environments, and Details

Discover the striking parallels between establishing setting in drama and studying environments from a scientific standpoint. This lesson, designed for grades 3-8, goes in-depth on both topics, challenging students to be detail-oriented and collaborative in their thinking. Students can hone their transformation and body object skills, while integrating science and language arts by identifying the details of different environments and describing them.  

NOTE: Connecting Drama and Science - Body Objects is part of our unique library of integrated lessons. These specialized lessons simultaneously teach concepts and skills related to drama and the other subject(s) targeted in the lesson. In addition, these lessons are designed to meet National Standards for Drama and for the integrated subject(s), so you can reach learning goals across multiple disciplines.

Statue Sentences Lesson

Statue Sentences Lesson

Learning how to write clear, complete sentences can be one of the most challenging concepts for students to learn. This comprehensive integrated lesson combines drama and language arts to help students gain mastery over their writing. Utilizing movement, partner work, and concentration skills, this lesson helps students in grades 2-4 get more comfortable writing complete descriptive sentences and collaborating with one another. 

NOTE: Statue Sentences is part of our unique library of integrated lessons. These specialized lessons simultaneously teach concepts and skills related to drama and the other subject(s) targeted in the lesson. In addition, these lessons are designed to meet National Standards for Drama and for the integrated subject(s), so you can reach learning goals across multiple disciplines.

Poetry Through Vocal Expression

Poetry Through Vocal Expression Lesson

How can we use our voices to express meaning and tell stories? This lesson delves into the wonders of poetry, and eases students from individual work to partner work to whole class performance. Designed for grades 3-12, this lesson is a fantastic way to help students practice concentration, collaboration and vocal skills.

Poetry Through Vocal Expression Rubric

 

 

Building Vocabulary Through Drama: Vocabulary Statues Lesson

Building Vocabulary Through Drama: Vocabulary Statues Lesson

Memorizing vocabulary words can be one of the most tedious tasks for students to do – so how could it possibly lend itself to drama? Using the drama concepts of tableaux, collaboration and planning, this exciting lesson for grades K-12 will break up the tedium of vocabulary learning by challenging students to research their own words, then share vocabulary inspired images with their classmates. This lesson integrates drama with Language Arts by teaching figurative language, dictionary skills, and tableaux in tandem.

NOTE: Building Vocabulary Through Drama: Vocabulary Statues is part of our unique library of integrated lessons. These specialized lessons simultaneously teach concepts and skills related to drama and the other subject(s) targeted in the lesson. In addition, these lessons are designed to meet National Standards for Drama and for the integrated subject(s), so you can reach learning goals across multiple disciplines.

Henry’s Magic Hat – FREE Version

Henry's Magic Hat

What are the essential building blocks of every story? In this lesson, you will have the chance to lead students through a simple yet engaging tale about a boy and his mysterious magic hat. This story is a wonderful way to teach students in grades K-2 about important story elements such as character, conflict and transformation. Students will also get a chance to hone their imagination, concentration and careful listening skills. 

Crossing the Road

Crossing the Road 

This lesson for 6th grade students uses drama to demonstrate the different types of conflict.  You can download our poster with the 5 different types of conflict to post in your classroom.  This also focuses on contrasting story elements (who, what, why, when, where, and conflict/resolution) to literary elements (plot, character, setting, problem, and theme.) This lesson uses the original story The Ghost Who Couldn’t Scare by Karen Erickson - download it to complete the materials.  This lesson is part of our recommended sequence in the Sixth Grade Curriculum.

Classroom Strategies for Drama: Part 3

Five Approaches to Improvisation

Hello friends of OneStopDRAMAShop, and welcome back! In my last blog article, I introduced five more classroom strategies for drama, each linked to an applied example from our lesson library. This installment continues with six more strategies, each including a practical example. As always, please reach out if you have any questions, and happy teaching!

 

1. Jigsaw

Students are placed in “home teams,” and given a problem to solve, a text to read, or a work product to create.  Each member of the team is given a research component, portion of text, or activity related to the “production.”  The teams subdivide and new sub-teams form that have similar tasks. Upon completion of their tasks, the home teams reform with each member of the sub-team bringing the work of their sub-team back to their home team.   I often use this when we are completing complex full class dramas with scenes being devised by individual teams.  One lesson I often use this for is Baking a Cake.  Shake up your teaching and give it a try!

(Note: This strategy is not included in the currently published version of this lesson. However, it is a very effective way to work on group dramas, and I highly recommend implementing it.)  

2. Higher order inquiry questions

These are often called essential questions or exploratory questions. They have no right or wrong answer and provide a base for long term exploration. This is a great strategy for encouraging group discussions and challenging students to think deeply about the concepts they are learning.

An essential question or exploratory question is included in every single published lesson in the Erickson curriculum.

3. KWL

At the beginning of a lesson, ask students what they “know” about a subject, next ask them “what” they want to learn about that same subject, and at the end of the unit ask them what they have “learned” about the subject.  For older students you might add an “H” for “How will you learn it?”  This makes it a KWHL.  Some instructors add an “F” for “feel.”  How do you feel about this subject, topic, etc.?  This is a great way to hook students into a topic.  When doing the lesson Randolph, I ask the students what they know about bears.  When doing Life in the Colonies or Tax Freeze, I ask what they know about the Revolutionary War.  If I know what they know, it allows me to go deeper into a topic.  Asking them what they know or want to know also helps me gauge their interest on a particular topic and make plans on how to add the research component. Here are some examples of KWHL Questions on the topic of castles:

What do you know about castles? 

What would you like to know?

 How will we find out what you want to know? 

Then, at the end of the unit:

What did you learn about castle life?

4. Mantle of the expert

This strategy comes from the drama world and was coined by Dorothy Heathcote.  Students are put into the character role of an adult expert as they discuss, research, and make decisions about an assignment or real-world problem. You might check out my Art Prints Lesson for an example of this strategy at work.

5. Metaphorical activity

Students are given a metaphorical activity to perform that helps them understand the ideas, themes, or topics being studied.  For instance, when studying the food chain, students might perform a dramatic exercise where a restaurant runs out of food while they are trying to serve dinner to a famous person. The reason the restaurant cannot restock is because the farmer ran out of gasoline for his tractor. Thus, he cannot produce crops and supply them to the grocer who supplies the restaurant.  Students must solve the farmers’ problem to get food to the grocer, to get food to the restaurant so the famous person could be served their meal.  This exercise helps students understand the food chain by demonstrating the difficulties that might arise in natural food chains. Another example of metaphorical activity is in my Revolutionary War: Tax Freeze Lesson, which uses a drama freeze activity to teach students about unfairness.

6. Mystery

Primary documents from a historical period or invented documents with clues imbedded are given to the students, who use them to answer key inquiry questions.

Here are some examples of clues you might give to the students:

  • stories told out of order
  • pictures with portions missing
  • poems with missing lines or stanzas

Students must use these clues to complete the work and justify their decisions.  A simple example in my work is Humpty Dumpty, where so many details are left out of the poem.  As students add the missing material, they create an entirely new work based on the poem.  I have written 50+ poems and added them to the website, most with missing events that must be added and created to complete a drama.

“What do Words Mean?” with Story & Dialogue Lesson

"What do Words Mean?" with Story & Dialogue Lesson

How can we take students from learning a list of new words to feeling true mastery over a new vocabulary?  This lesson helps students deepen their understanding of new words by challenging them to create a story inspired by an assigned word. Perfect for helping students practice collaboration, negotiation and planning, this lesson provides a great opportunity to integrate Language Arts by discussing the use of story elements and dialogue in creating a drama.

NOTE: "What Do Words Mean?" with Story & Dialogue  is part of our unique library of integrated lessons. These specialized lessons simultaneously teach concepts and skills related to drama and the other subject(s) targeted in the lesson. In addition, these lessons are designed to meet National Standards for Drama and for the integrated subject(s), so you can reach learning goals across multiple disciplines.


Personification and Characters Lesson

Personification and Characters Lesson

How do actors bring object characters to life? Designed for students in fourth grade, this lesson helps students move from body object imitation into acting out full dramas with object characters. This challenging lesson helps students practice concentration, transformation and full use of their body and voice. It also provides a great opportunity to integrate Language Arts by identifying and discussing personification in a written text. 

Mime with The Ever-Evolving Green Man Lesson

Mime with The Ever-Evolving Green Man Lesson

Mime is one of the most challenging and most important skills for young actors to learn. Inspired by Gail E. Haley’s The Green Man, this lesson challenges actors to create group mimes based on scenes from the book. This lesson comes with variations for students in grades 3-8 and provides an excellent way for students to practice concentration, collaboration, and transforming into a character.