Imagining characters and stories
Students start the year by inventing characters and short scenes from their own ideas and experiences. Parents may hear stories about made-up people with names, voices, and problems to solve.
This is the year theatre work starts to feel like real craft. Students build characters and scenes from their own lives and from stories they have read, then rehearse and revise instead of settling for the first try. They also start asking why a play was written, what it means, and whether it worked. By spring, they can help shape a short scene, perform it for an audience, and explain what they were going for.
Students start the year by inventing characters and short scenes from their own ideas and experiences. Parents may hear stories about made-up people with names, voices, and problems to solve.
Students work with classmates to turn rough ideas into scenes with a beginning, middle, and end. They learn to listen to other suggestions and change their own work based on what the scene needs.
Students practice their scenes and try out different choices for voice, movement, and feeling. They revise lines and blocking until the scene is ready for an audience.
Students present scenes or short plays to classmates and sometimes families. They focus on making the meaning of the story clear to the people watching.
Students watch performances and talk about what worked and why, using shared standards instead of just personal taste. They also connect plays to real history, cultures, and their own lives.
Students connect what they already know and what they've lived through to the choices they make in a scene or performance. Personal experience shapes how a character is built or a story is told.
Students look at a play or performance and connect it to the time period, place, or community it came from. That context helps explain why the story was told and why it still matters.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| 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 shapes how a character is built or a story is told. | TH:Cn10.5 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students look at a play or performance and connect it to the time period, place, or community it came from. That context helps explain why the story was told and why it still matters. | TH:Cn11.5 |
Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a scene or performance, moving from a first spark of inspiration to a plan they can actually stage.
Students take their ideas for a scene or character and shape them into something others can actually perform, deciding what stays, what changes, and how each part fits together.
Students revise a scene or character choice based on feedback, then put the finishing touches on their work before sharing it with an audience.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students brainstorm and develop original ideas for a scene or performance, moving from a first spark of inspiration to a plan they can actually stage. | TH:Cr1.5 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students take their ideas for a scene or character and shape them into something others can actually perform, deciding what stays, what changes, and how each part fits together. | TH:Cr2.5 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students revise a scene or character choice based on feedback, then put the finishing touches on their work before sharing it with an audience. | TH:Cr3.5 |
Students choose a scene or monologue to perform and explain why it suits the story, character, or audience they have in mind.
Students practice and improve a scene or performance before showing it to an audience. That means running lines, taking notes, and making changes until the work is ready to present.
Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear purpose in mind, making choices about voice, movement, and expression so the audience understands what the piece is really about.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose a scene or monologue to perform and explain why it suits the story, character, or audience they have in mind. | TH:Pr4.5 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice and improve a scene or performance before showing it to an audience. That means running lines, taking notes, and making changes until the work is ready to present. | TH:Pr5.5 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students perform a scene or monologue with a clear purpose in mind, making choices about voice, movement, and expression so the audience understands what the piece is really about. | TH:Pr6.5 |
Students watch a scene or performance and explain what choices the performer or playwright made, such as how a character moves or speaks, and why those choices shape the story's meaning.
Students explain what a scene or performance is really about, looking past the surface to describe what the playwright or actor was trying to say and why it matters.
Students look at a piece of theatre and judge it using a clear set of criteria, such as whether the acting, dialogue, or staging fit the story. They explain why a choice works or falls short, using specific reasons instead of just personal opinion.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students watch a scene or performance and explain what choices the performer or playwright made, such as how a character moves or speaks, and why those choices shape the story's meaning. | TH:Re7.5 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what a scene or performance is really about, looking past the surface to describe what the playwright or actor was trying to say and why it matters. | TH:Re8.5 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students look at a piece of theatre and judge it using a clear set of criteria, such as whether the acting, dialogue, or staging fit the story. They explain why a choice works or falls short, using specific reasons instead of just personal opinion. | TH:Re9.5 |
Students move from playing pretend to building short scenes on purpose. They invent characters, write or improvise dialogue, rehearse with a group, and perform for classmates. They also watch plays or scenes and talk about what worked and why.
Ask students to act out a scene from a book or retell a story as a character. Five minutes of pretend play, puppet shows, or reading a picture book in different voices builds the same skills. Going to a school play and talking about it afterward also counts.
No. Plenty of strong students start the year nervous about being watched. Small steps help: reading a poem aloud at dinner, voicing a character in a bedtime story, or making up a skit with a sibling. Confidence grows from low-pressure practice.
Most teachers start with ensemble and improvisation games, move into building characters and short scripted scenes, then end with a rehearsed performance students plan themselves. Weave in watching and responding to performances throughout the year so students learn the vocabulary before they need it.
By spring, students can take a story or idea, shape it into a short scene with other students, rehearse and revise it based on feedback, and perform it for an audience. They can also watch a scene and explain what the makers were trying to say.
Making theatre and watching theatre feed each other. When students name what made a scene clear or confusing, they get better at fixing the same problems in their own work. Expect students to use words like character, setting, motivation, and intent when they talk about a performance.
Students this year start linking scenes to real settings, time periods, and cultures. A scene about pioneers or immigration pulls in social studies; a scene built from a novel pulls in reading. Talking at home about when and where a story happens supports this work.
Giving useful feedback and revising a scene based on it. Students can generate ideas and perform, but stopping to refine the work often gets skipped. Build in short revision cycles with simple criteria so students learn that a first run is a draft, not the final.
Ready students can collaborate in a small group without an adult driving every choice, hold a character through a short scene, take a note and try it again, and explain why they made a creative choice. If those four habits are in place, the next grade will build on solid ground.