NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Taft-Kaufman, Jill – Communication Education, 1980
Presents a rhetorical perspective for examining Shakespearean dramatic texts and an instructional framework for translating that perspective into the teaching of solo performance of Shakespearean dramatic literature. Describes techniques for implementing classroom performance that will develop and demonstrate student understanding of the text.…
Descriptors: Audiences, Characterization, Drama, Dramatics
Ratliff, Gerald Lee – 1980
The creative use of dramatic performance in the senior high school and college introductory literature classroom involves students as participants rather than as spectators, and encourages recognition and understanding of poetic images, character relationships, symbols, and other literary principles essential to comprehend if students are to…
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Dramatics, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
Gross, Roger – 1974
That a play has one central action which is its formal cause is the most influential interpretative idea to emerge among theatre writers since the old model of situation/incident/complication/climax/denouement. Unfortunately, the action concept has been insufficiently developed, excessive hopes have been pinned on it, and it has become a reductive…
Descriptors: Acting, Drama, Dramatics, Higher Education
Gross, Roger – 1978
Directors of plays can make rehearsals interpretively productive, but they must first reject directorial approaches such as beginning rehearsals without analyzing the script, projecting images of the play as it is read, and using the script merely to summarize meanings, static themes, morals, and nothing more. Making rehearsals interpretively…
Descriptors: Acting, Critical Reading, Dramatics, Higher Education
Sweet, Bruce – Secondary School Theatre Journal, 1980
Presents the text of an interview with John Hodgson, British proponent of educational theater. His use of improvisation as a teaching technique and contrasts between the American and British systems of educational theater are discussed. (JMF)
Descriptors: Acting, Characterization, Classroom Techniques, Drama
Roberts, C. Janene – 1980
Frame analysis is an approach to social situations that can be applied profitably to literature and performance. A frame is the reality status of a situation; keys are the characteristics that define a frame. Most literary works are keying on real life frameworks. Literary works that are based on other literary works, such as parodies, are…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Dramatics, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
Bacon, Wallace A. – Speech Teacher, 1973
How teachers can help students overcome resistance to the language of Shakespeare. (CH)
Descriptors: Dramatics, Higher Education, Interpretive Reading, Literature Appreciation
Shaw, Charla L. Markham – 1996
Teachers, researchers, and performers in the field of Performance Studies often find themselves defining what it is that they do. Boundaries are often hard to draw, however. Is the work they are doing "art?" The distinction is important to funding agencies, tenure committees, and university administration. One definition of art…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Activities, Art Expression, Audience Response
Davis, David, Ed. – 1997
This book contains papers presented at an "Interactive Research Conference" held in June 1996 at the University of Central England. The conference focused on the pioneering work of Professor Dorothy Heathcote in the field of drama in education. Twenty-three different countries were represented at the conference. The book has three…
Descriptors: Acting, Creative Dramatics, Drama, Dramatic Play
Taft-Kaufman, Jill – 1981
The extensive use of improvisational techniques in rehearsals for chamber theatre productions develops for the performer a strong engagement with the text. The director can channel the movement and gestures that emerge from these techniques into the production itself, with results that more effectively convey the literature than traditional…
Descriptors: Acting, Creative Activities, Dramatics, Higher Education
Meyer, Janice Jones – 1980
Composing oral poems and storytelling are two exercises that speech teachers can use in oral interpretation courses. Conducting the oral poetry exercise early in an introductory interpretation course allows students to become acquainted with each other and to encourage each other while sharing something of themselves with the entire class. This…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Dramatics, Higher Education, Narration
Smith, V. A. – 1993
For 3 years, Texas A and M University Kingsville (formerly Texas A and I University) has provided a basic oral interpretation course for teachers specializing in reading on the elementary level. After teaching the course once, the instructor decided to adapt the course to the needs of the students by using children's literature instead of adult…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Communication Skills, Course Content, Dramatics
Owens, Rosemary J. – Speech Journal, 1970
If dramatic characters are to be rendered "three dimensional" in performance, both the dramatist and the actor/interpreter must create them with proper attention to the physical, sociological, and psychological aspects of character. If oral interpreters understand these dimensions of a particular character, they can analyze such elements as…
Descriptors: Characterization, Communication (Thought Transfer), Drama, Dramatics
ERIC Clearinghouse on Reading and Communication Skills, Urbana, IL. – 1985
This collection of abstracts is part of a continuing series providing information on recent doctoral dissertations. The 18 titles are as follows: (1) Physical and Oral Behaviors of the Solo Interpretive Performer; (2) Music in English Children's Drama; (3) Playwriting in the Maritime Provinces: 1845-1903; (4) Dance in Denver's Pioneer Theatres:…
Descriptors: Acting, American Indians, Communication Research, Doctoral Dissertations
Gamble, Teri Kwal – 1976
This study investigated the effect of the sex of an oral interpreter and the sex of the dramatic character portrayed on audience evaluation of performer effectiveness and audience comprehension of the passage presented. Two interpreters, one male and one female, each performed six monologues, three of which were feminine and three of which were…
Descriptors: Audiences, Behavioral Science Research, Credibility, Dramatics
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2