Sunday, June 7, 2020

importance of theatre practise on education


INTRODUCTION

Theatre is a collaborative form of performing art that uses live performers, typically actors or actresses, to present the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place, often a stage. The performers may communicate this experience to the audience through combinations of gesture, speech, song, music, and dance. Elements of art, such as painted scenery and stagecraft such as lighting are used to enhance the physicality, presence and immediacy of the experience.





THEATRE IN EDUCATION (TIE)

Theatre in education (TIE) originated in Britain in 1965 and has continued to present day. TIE typically includes a theatre company performing in an educational setting (i.e. a school) for youth, including interactive and performative moments.
Theatre as an educational medium uses entertainment and humor to attract children’s attention, and emphasizes learning through the interplay between actual and fictional contexts. The use of ‘Theatre in Education’ (TIE) presents a novel approach to engaging young people in education through art. Evaluations have revealed that the overwhelming majority of students demonstrate enjoyment and enthusiasm through watching educational theatre, are receptive and listen attentively, and can correctly identify the educational messages being portrayed. The use of TIE began in Britain in the mid-1960s, and grew out of recognition for child-centered education, whereby learning is more effective when a child investigates and discovers through active play .
The specific aim of TIE is: to harness the techniques and imaginative potency of theatre in the service of education and to provide an experience for children that will be intensely absorbing, challenging, even provocative, and an unrivalled stimulus for further work on the chosen subject in and out of school.
Through performance-based education, children have the opportunity to discover their place on the ‘world stage’. TIE has been applied to a wide range of educational topics with children, including environmental issues, substance use, accident prevention, abuse, neglect abuse and bullying, social issues, nutrition, disability awareness, etc


PSYCHOLOGY OF THEATRE IN EDUCATION

The use of theatre as an effective means of educating young people has its basis in key psychological theories.  Socio-cultural theory stems from the work of Vygotsky and Bandura.
Vygotsky proposed learning was embedded within social events and occurred as individuals interact with other human beings, objects and events in the environment and this interaction helps the child learn what is important in their culture. Similarly, Bandura emphasized the importance of observational learning whereby children model behaviors, attitudes and emotional responses of others according to the observed benefits and adverse effects of those behaviors.
Participation in drama exercises and games has been proven to bring many psychological, educational, developmental, and sociological benefits to all those involved. By participating in drama and having the ability to identify conflicts, children learn how to face problems head on as well as the process needed to solve problems. They learn how to hypothesize and test possible solutions to their problems, develop alternative ways to approach them if the first way does not work, and even redefine problems if they see others arise. Through creative drama, children are urged to evaluate conflicts, process all the information presented, discover and imagine potential resolutions, think creatively, and work together to solve a problem.


TEACHING AS A PERFORMING ART

Good teaching is one-fourth preparation and three-fourths pure theatre – Gail Godwin



 Lecturing from the front of the room with the students as audience sitting passively in rows is quit a boring task. That is not exactly the real teaching. New teachers need to develop effective ways of being for the classroom. To that end, understanding how performing artists work and how actors approach a role can benefit the new educators. In addition, participation in an acting class designed expressly for teachers will aid new teachers in the development of the vocal, physical, mental and emotional ways of being that will translate to greater classroom success.
Performing, in the classroom sense, means acting in a way that creates a positive classroom environment that encourages student achievement. Effective teachers understand intuitively how to perform in a classroom.
We say and do from the tone of our voice to our gestures, body movements and furniture layout – is performed in an artful way to maximize our effectiveness in promoting student growth and achievement. However, for those teachers for whom performing is not second nature, the skills required to be a most proficient performer can be learned. That is, if there is someone available to teach them. Unfortunately, most college methods courses focus on the whats (planning lessons, knowing about various pedagogical tools and technologies) and focus less on the hows of implementation and ways of being in the classroom. But a teacher has to seek various methods of transaction of the content through various hows. For this a teacher has to practice performing arts. Working in the performing arts sharpens senses. A performer understand when to lighten the mood, when to slow the tempo and when to be still. A teacher should be both teacher and actor; a teacher uses her voice, body and props to establish a sense of trust and rapport, to excite imaginations, as well as to communicate ideas and intentions as clearly as possible. Moreover, this ability had been nurtured and developed in the theater and through practice.

Performing is central to teaching. Professional performing artists in the theater are very careful about how they use their voices, bodies and environment to maximize audience involvement and participation in the presented work. These performing artists spend years, lifetimes even, learning and perfecting their craft. The performing arts have become a great resource in strategies for securing the attention and involvement of audiences. Teachers can (and should) avail themselves of this storehouse of knowledge as we; too, use our voices, bodies and classrooms to create optimal learning environments for our students.

Yes, as teachers, our collaborators, our audience, are first and finally our students. Yet, real-life students do not enter into the traditional teacher preparation model until the very end, during student teaching. Theoretical discussions of “students” abound, but there is precious little contact with the children themselves. There is scant time for novice teachers to get up on their feet and rehearse how to enter their classrooms, call a class to order, take attendance, counsel students, provide clear instructions, focus a chaotic classroom, raise the energy level in the room, elicit more thoughtful responses from reluctant students, question effectively, implement rules and consequences or give meaningful praise and constructive feedback. These are all acts; these are performances that can and should be rehearsed. A teacher should do much rehearsal before entering into a class.


DIFFERENT  TEACHING  TECHNIQUES WHICH CAN BE INCORPORATED IN CLASSROOM WITH THE HELP OF THEATRE

1.   Act out the Dialogue
One of the easiest ways to incorporate drama in the classroom is to have students act out the dialogue from their textbooks. Simply pair them up, have them choose roles, then work together to act out the dialogue, figuring out for themselves and the stage movements. This is effective for a beginning activity of incorporating drama in the classroom.
2.   Perform Reader’s Theater
Another good beginning exercise is to do Reader’s Theater. Hand out copies of a short or one-act play, have students choose roles, and then read the play from their seats without acting it out. However, do encourage them to read dramatically, modeling as necessary.
3.   Act out the Story
If students are reading a short story, the students act out this story or part of the story, working in groups and assigning roles and determining the blocking. This is particularly effective with short stories or one-scene stories with limited characters.
4.   Give “Voice” to an Inanimate Object
A monologue is a short scene with just one character talking, either addressing the audience .After writing them, students can read the monologues aloud
5.   Create a Character
Have students develop a character, writing a one-page profile on the character’s background, appearance, personality, etc. Have them introduce the character to the class, explaining what interests them about their character.
6.   Write a Monologue
Using the character they’ve already developed, have students write a monologue for that character then perform it.
7.   Mime and Dubbing
Have students act out short scenes without dialogue. The rest of the class then supplies the dialogue, developing the “script.
Improvise Put students in groups of two or three, and assign the characters and the situation to the groups, perhaps using 3x5 index cards. Give a time limit of two to three minutes per scene. Students go from there, extemporaneously creating the dialogue and movement themselves.
8.   Puppet-performed theatre Puppets have demonstrated potential as an educational and clinical tool and have relevance for counselling, health education and nursing services, through  providing opportunities for creative expression and learning through play  . Many theatre-based education programs have utilised puppets as performance figures .

9.   Actor-performed theatre Actor-performed theatre has been utilised as a means of educating young people. Group discussion and, in some instances, role play followed the performance. The intervention focused on social issues particularly around the transition from primary to secondary school.

10.Research/theory based performances
Several of the programs reviewed here that found positive effects were based on theoretical understandings of any topic. Particularly with elementary or primary school children, a sound knowledge base of developmental issues and risk factors is necessary to be able to change children’s intention to engage in risky behavior.

BENEFITS OF THEATRE IN EDUCATION

Increase concentration of students:
Playing, practicing, and performing develop a sustained focus of mind, body, and voice which helps with other areas of life including school.
Increase Communication Skills:
Drama enhances verbal and nonverbal expression of ideas. It improves voice projection, articulation, fluency of language, and persuasive speech.
Increase Problem Solving skills:
Students learn to communicate the who, what, where, when, and why to the audience. Improvisation fosters quick-thinking solutions, which leads to greater adaptability in life.
Provide Fun and entertainment:
Theatre brings play, humor, and laughter to learning; this improves motivation and reduces stress.
Build Trust:
The social interaction and risk taking in drama develop trust in self, others, and the process.
Increase Memory
Rehearsing and performing the words, movements, and cues strengthen this skill like a muscle
Increase Social Awareness:
Legends, myths, poems, stories, and plays used in drama teach students about social issues and conflicts from cultures past, present, all over the world.
Increase Aesthetic sense:
Teaches Empathy.
Creates Strong Communication
Demands Creative Thinking
Builds Teamwork and Collaboration
Relieves Stress.
Ridiculously Low Cost.
Easy to Integrate.

CONCLUSION

Theatre in education programmes are designed to maximize pupils’ learning and cater for a variety of pupils’ preferred learning styles. Based on Fleming’s VARK (Visual, Aural, Read/write, and Kinesthetic) learning style directed pedagogy to ensure maximum engagement and retention of messages, TIE programmes combine contemporary technologies with tried and tested drama based communications to connect, inspire and change young people’s attitudes and behavior. New TIE production sets incorporate a back projected media screen which is used to ensure a multi-sensory learning experience that maximizes pupil learning and supports delivery of key learning objectives. We can conclude that theatre practice is an essential entity in teaching learning environment.

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