Overview
Unit One:
Drama in Context
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Time Frame: 18 - 22 weeks
This unit focuses on choosing topics of interest with grade seven
students and then working within contextual dramas.
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Foundational Objectives
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Vocabulary and Concepts
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The students will:
- demonstrate belief in a dramatic situation
- demonstrate belief in roles assumed within the dramatic
situation
- work co-operatively within dramatic situations when shaping
ideas toward collective creation
- develop an understanding of the processes and elements
involved in creating works of dramatic art
- demonstrate the ability to reflect on the work of the group
and on their individual contributions to it
- examine ways in which drama mirrors and influences
individuals, societies and cultures, past and present
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- contextual drama
- episodes
- elements of theatre form: focus, tension, contrasts,
symbol
- belief
- commitment
- negotiation
- drama strategies
- reflection
- perspectives
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Common Essential Learnings
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Resources
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- develop a positive disposition to life long learning (IL)
- develop both intuitive, imaginative thought and the ability
to
evaluate ideas, processes, experiences and objects in
meaningful contexts (CCT)
- develop compassion, empathy and fairmindedness in order to
make positive contributions to society as individuals and as
members of groups (PSVS)
- use a wide range of language experiences to develop their
ability to express their knowledge about interests and
concerns (C)
- understand and use the language, structures and forms of
expression which characterize dramatic art form (C).
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- current reports/articles dealing with topics and issues
relevant to middle years students
- local media reports
- content from other curricular areas
- community, national and global events and issues
- drama/theatre (students' own dramas and plays they have
seen)
- literature (stories, poems, myths, legends, plays,
students'
own stories)
- art works (paintings, drawings, sculpture, film, video,
installations, photographs, artifacts, book illustrations)
- music and song lyrics
- dance (students' own dances and dances of others)
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Instruction | Assessment
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- discussion
- questioning
- brainstorming
- selected drama strategies
individual and pair work
- small and whole group work
- journal writing
- research
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Student assessment in Arts Education is based on the foundational
objectives in each strand. Teachers should take into account
students' perceptual development, procedural and conceptual
understanding, and personal expression. Assessment should be
ongoing and include a wide range of assessment techniques in
relation to the student's creative and responsive processes, as
well as taking into account any culminating product. In Arts
Education, teachers must rely to a great extent on their
observation and record-keeping abilities. Students should be
encouraged to take an active role in their own assessment.
The teacher should:
- discuss objectives and assessment criteria with students
- select criteria for assessment based on the foundational
objectives for the unit
- observe and record students' ongoing development related to
the selected criteria
- design assessment charts
- keep anecdotal records
- keep cumulative records
observe students' contributions and commitment to individual
and group experiences
- discuss students' arts experiences with them
listen to students' reflections on their own arts
experiences
- assess student progress over time.
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