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Colorado Academic Standards - Drama and Theatre Arts
Seventh Grade

3 units • 2 professional development courses aligned to
DT.7.2.3.a - Students Can: Incorporate music, dance, art, and/or media to heighten the connection between performer and audience in a drama/theatre work.

View all Standards for Colorado Academic Standards - Drama and Theatre Arts

DT.7.2.3.a Students Can: Incorporate music, dance, art, and/or media to heighten the connection between performer and audience in a drama/theatre work.

This page lists 3 units and 2 professional development courses aligned to DT.7.2.3.a from the Colorado Academic Standards - Drama and Theatre Arts. Designed for drama teachers, these resources directly address DT.7.2.3.a - Students Can: Incorporate music, dance, art, and/or media to heighten the connection between performer and audience in a drama/theatre work.

Unit 11 of 14 in Drama One Curriculum

Japanese Theatre

by Karen Loftus

4 lessons
This unit will enable students to identify, compare, and contrast three different styles of Japanese theatre: Noh, Bunraku, and Kabuki. There are three proposed projects in this unit: a research assignment where groups delve into further detail about one of the three styles; a performance project where students utilize what they’ve learned by enacting a scene from a Kyogen (comedic) play; and a Bunraku puppet play.

East Meets West: Theatre Traditions

by Marsha Walner

9 lessons
We spend a lot of time in the classroom exploring, applying, and creating in a western theatrical tradition. But there are many more styles that students can explore, particularly to the east: Kabuki, Noh, Chinese Opera, and Sanskrit Theatre, for example. In this unit, students will be introduced to an element from each of these eastern styles, they will apply that element and build towards a culminating project. Throughout, students will develop a stronger understanding of both the theatre from their own culture and that of Eastern cultures.

Aristotle's Elements

by Lea Marshall

12 lessons
Aristotle was a huge fan of the theatre. He philosophically believed in it and argued with other great thinkers at the time about the necessity and good results of theatrical pursuits. This makes him a great topic for a drama classroom unit. Aristotle identified six elements that needed to be in a play for it to be worthy: plot, thought, character, diction, spectacle, and sound. This unit by Lea Marshall focuses on and offers exercises for each of Aristotle’s elements - from using fairy tales to examine plot, to re-imagining movie trailers to explore music.

View all Standards for Colorado Academic Standards - Drama and Theatre Arts    Standards Master List