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Ontario, Canada
Grade 11 - Reflecting, Responding and Analyzing - Drama and Society

2 units • 2 professional development courses aligned to
B.2.2 - identify ways in which drama can influence personal growth, relationships with others, and aesthetic judgement

View all Standards for Ontario, Canada

B.2.2 identify ways in which drama can influence personal growth, relationships with others, and aesthetic judgement

This page lists 2 units and 2 professional development courses aligned to B.2.2 from the Ontario, Canada. Designed for drama teachers, these resources directly address B.2.2 - identify ways in which drama can influence personal growth, relationships with others, and aesthetic judgement

The Role of the Theatre Critic

by Lindsay Price

5 lessons
In the 21st century, we are living in a time of great change for criticism and the role of the critic. Previously, one negative review from the New York Times could close a Broadway show. Now the audience as critic is a topic of much debate. Are professional critics and informed opinions necessary? What is the power of the audience critic? What is the role of the critic and the role of criticism in today’s theatre? This unit will take students through a brief history of the theatre critic from the 500 reviews that came out of Ibsen’s one-night performance of Ghosts in 1891, to the tumultuous landscape of social media criticism. Students will then apply what they’ve learned by writing on or theatricalizing the role of the critic in a culminating assignment.

Tech Theatre Unit: Costuming When You Don't Sew

by Drama Teacher Academy

8 lessons
In this unit, students will take on the role of the costumer, which is different from a costume designer. It introduces costuming concepts in order to execute a costume. No complicated sewing is required, which is great if you don’t have the background, the access, or the resources to have a class of students create costumes. Instead of making costumes from scratch, as a designer would, students will create costumes from stock, borrowed items, or low-cost finds. They will take finished products and adapt them into what they need to create the right atmosphere. In order to help with their adaptations, students will try different distressing techniques and learn three SIMPLE stitches that they’ll be able to use over and over again. It’s a valuable tech theatre skill to teach students how to execute on costumes when you (and they) don’t sew!

View all Standards for Ontario, Canada    Standards Master List