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Betty Stanton – ProQuest LLC, 2024
As virtual platforms for secondary education have grown, the performing arts have faced various difficulties in moving to these platforms effectively. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to explore the experiences of five secondary theatre educators transitioning to virtual teaching. This exploration included theatre educators'…
Descriptors: Secondary Schools, Drama Education, Theater Arts, Secondary School Teachers
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Zinaida Andreevna Lurie – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
The article analyses the theatre of Sixt Birck, an evangelical teacher of the Reformation era, within educational and practical pedagogical background of the period. It is proved that in Basel, when school reform was in process, Birck, having studied Melanchthon's commentaries on Terence and Quintilian's theory of imitation and become familiar…
Descriptors: Religious Education, Teaching Methods, Educational Change, Theater Arts
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Carolyn A. Chan; Donna M. Windish; Judy M. Spak; Nora Makansi – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Medical improvisation (improv) applies theater principles and techniques to improve communication and teamwork with health professionals (HP). Improv curricula have increased over time, but little is known about best practices in curricula development, implementation, and assessment. We sought to complete a state-of-the-art review of medical…
Descriptors: Creative Activities, Theater Arts, Health Personnel, Best Practices
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Kronenberg, Deborah – College Teaching, 2021
The author unpacks and utilizes the pedagogical success of improvisational theatre ensembles, offers core course design elements inspired by improv that match best practices, and gives concrete ideas for immediate use to strengthen community and increase engagement in college classrooms. Ensemble Culture is a framework for building community in…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Teaching Methods, Theater Arts, Curriculum Development
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O'Connor, Peter; Gregorzewski, Moema – Teachers and Curriculum, 2022
Underpinning drama education in New Zealand is the desire to improve the lives of individuals, communities and societies by catalysing embodied learning in and through the art form of theatre. Learning in drama is intended to foster well-being, social cohesion and active citizenship. Put another way, drama education in New Zealand has always been…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Drama, Teaching Methods, Indigenous Knowledge
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Justin, Awuawuer Tijime – Journal of Dance Education, 2021
Experientially, this article explores issues and problems vis-à-vis the teaching and learning of dance in Nigeria. The article finds that the relegation of dance education in Nigerian higher schools of learning is linked to many factors which include: lack of manpower, lack of infrastructure and knowledge of the numerous values of dance education…
Descriptors: Dance Education, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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Kulo, Selina; Odundo, Paul; Kibui, Agnes – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
Reading has always been a challenging task especially for struggling learners of English as a second language (ESL). Readers' theatre has been used as a class instruction approach to enable learners to become innovative and active participants in the reading class. During class instruction, teachers use multiple strategies such as modeling reading…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Theater Arts, Reading Instruction, Reading Comprehension
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Miller, Hillary – Research in Drama Education, 2019
The theatre classroom is necessarily a space in dialogue with myths about the marginalisation of theatre as an art and theatre audiences as a public. It is precisely "because" theatre is a marginalised discipline that curricula should incorporate the processes by which the labour of theatre artists changes value and joins the mainstream;…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Teaching Methods, Audiences, Artists
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Sanchez, Sergio L.; Athanases, Steven Z. – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2022
All disciplines have particular ways of knowing, common practices, and means of using language that mediate and potentially support engagement with the discipline. For multilingual learners, language demands of a discipline can be a closed door or a facilitated entryway. Drama and theater arts, the focus of our article, are often marginalized in…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Drama, Theater Arts, Teaching Methods
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Giannouli, Panagiota-Betty – Research in Drama Education, 2016
This vignette focuses on Theatre/Drama in the Greek curriculum. Issues for consideration are presented, such as the minimal space for active learning through theatre, the limited opportunity of teachers to work as critical pedagogues and the problematic conceptual framework. A main issue is the fragmented implementation as Theatre/Drama is not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Drama, Theater Arts, Teaching Methods
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Lenning, Emily – International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 2012
This paper introduces creative pedagogical techniques for exploring theory in the undergraduate classroom. Using criminal justice and criminological theories as a primary example, it describes a technique that professors from any theory-driven discipline can use to engage students through popular music, from hip-hop to musical theater in order to…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Music, Popular Culture, Criminals
Faust, Carl – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2010
Opera is music, art, theater, and storytelling. It resembles many musical, visual, theatrical, and literary forms children have already experienced whether they realize it or not. It is an art form that can reach virtually every child on some level because of its emotional power. It can speak to all types of learners because there are many…
Descriptors: Opera, Teaching Methods, Curriculum Development, Story Grammar
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Palumbo, Anthony; Sanacore, Joseph – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2009
Teachers can help minority children close the academic achievement gap in intermediate and middle school by combining literacy instruction and content-area material. This connection improves reading achievement and increases curriculum knowledge, even if students have previously experienced difficulty with primary school reading. Fortunately,…
Descriptors: School Activities, Theater Arts, Recognition (Achievement), Picture Books
Duncan, Ben – Times Educational Supplement (London), 1974
Author questions the assumptions behind the growing use of drama and theatre in education. (Editor/RK)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Drama, Educational Finance, National Surveys
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Orr, Shelley – Theatre Topics, 2003
Describes the development of an introductory theater course which encourages students to fashion well-informed views of plays. Notes that the skills fostered in this course could start students on the road to becoming active, critically informed practitioners in whatever role they chose to take on in production. Explains that the course…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development, Higher Education, Introductory Courses
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