“Tell me and I
forget,
Teach me and I may
remember,
Involve me and I
learn.”
–Benjamin Franklin
To keep my students curious, I want each class to be
different. I want each class to feature different setup styles, different
teaching styles, and different learning activities. I don’t want my students to
get bored of anything, and I hope that my drama lessons will always feature the
unexpected.
For lesson 2, I decided to have a regular classroom setup as
opposed to the empty classroom that my students had experienced for the first
lesson. However, I noticed that I felt more nervous than I had been before. I
felt that perhaps I just wasn’t 100% confident that the activities included in
my lesson would help my students learn most effectively. But I found it
difficult to tailor to different learning styles while still keeping everyone
engaged and involved.
To my great comfort, the students walked into the classroom
with bright smiles. “Hi, Miss Greenwood!” They chirped. Perhaps I wasn’t such a terrible teacher
after all. The students seemed to have liked my first lesson, anyway!
I knew that I had some animal lovers in the classroom, so
when class started by watching a video of a puppy, much of the class sang in a
chorus of “awww”s. We moved into a discussion about what a person does with his
or her voice or body to show that they are upset, tying into the previous
lesson.
As the lesson progressed, I felt terribly boring. I was
letting my nerves get to me, and I felt that I was doing nothing but repeating
myself and overemphasizing things. As we moved into the later activities of the
lesson, students seemed to be more engaged, but I couldn’t shake the feeling
that something was missing. I was so afraid that I would forget a step in my
lesson that I wasn’t letting the students inspire me to try certain points in
my lesson differently or skip steps entirely. I wasn’t letting the students
lead—I was driving the lesson. That’s exactly what this lesson was
missing—inspiration! The lesson stumbled along, lacking the momentum for the
steps to flow together. I was trying too hard.
Despite my unsatisfactory feelings, the lesson ended on a
good note, and I left a room full of excited students with smiling faces. I was
anxious to try again the next week, hoping to redeem myself from this rather
unpleasant lesson.
*********************************************************************************
LESSON PLAN:
Casey Greenwood
Casey Greenwood
BYU Arts Bridge
4th Grade
LESSON 2: Voice
LESSON OBJECTIVE:
Students will demonstrate their ability to use their voice effectively by
portraying a variety of emotions in a vocal “Hot Potato” game.
MATERIALS NEEDED: Computer,
Internet, and sound system access, simple sentence ideas, emotion index cards,
white board and markers
*********************************************************************************
HOOK: Play a
video of a crying puppy as the students are walking into class.
Step 1
TRANSITION: Invite the students to write down an answer to
the following question: How did the puppy make you feel? After writing down an
answer, have them share what they wrote with those at their table. Ask the
students questions such as: What was the puppy doing that made you feel that
way? Answers may include that it was whining/crying.
Step 2
MODEL: Invite the students to show how a human whines.
Step 3
DISCUSSION: Ask the students questions such as: When could
someone whine in real life? Do we ever use our voices in other ways to portray
something to others? When might we do this? What might we do with our voice in
these situations?
Step 4
MODEL: Have the students listen to the "Scared Chinese Girl" video. Ask the students questions such as: What did you
hear? What can you tell me about this person? Answers might include age,
gender, etc. How do you think he feels? Have the students listen to a clip from
the Celtic Woman song “Téir Abhaile Riú.”
Step 5
DISCUSSION: Ask the students questions such as: What did you
hear? What can you tell me about the first girl based off of her voice? Answers
may include that she was young, carefree, kind, gentle, laid back, etc. What
was it about her voice that made us feel this way? Answers may include her
vocal trills, she sang slowly, had a more breathy, softer tone, etc. What can
you tell about the second girl based off of her voice? Answers may include that
she was angry or jealous, etc. What was it about her voice that made us feel
this way? Answers may include that she was singing louder and faster than the
first girl, annunciating more, etc. What was the relationship between the two
girls based off of what we could hear in their voices? Answers may include that
they were arguing about something, don’t like each other very much, etc.
Step 6
MODEL: Ask a student what he or she ate for dinner last
night. Ask another student to give you an emotion, and say “I had … for dinner
last night,” portraying the food and emotion that the students gave you. Have
another student give you another emotion and repeat the exercise once more. Ask
the students questions such as: What was different about the two performances?
What did I do to my voice to portray the emotion?
Step 7
GROUP PRACTICE: Write a simple sentence on the white board.
Provide each table of students with two emotion index cards. Students at a
table will choose one emotion to apply to this simple sentence first and, after
practicing, will stand up and recite it altogether for the class to watch.
Students will do the exercise again with the emotion listed on the other index
card.
Step 8
CHECKING FOR UNDERSTANDING: Ask the students questions such
as: What emotion was your favorite to portray? Why? What did you do to portray
that emotion in your voice? Did your body change at all when you changed your
voice? Why does changing your physicality along with your voice make an emotion
more believable? Answers may include: Because that’s what we do in real life!
Step 9
ASSESSMENT: Stand in a circle. Write a new simple sentence
on the white board. Explain that each person in the circle will repeat the
sentence and pass it along as quickly as possible, one person repeating after
another. Have a practice round once with no emotion. Next, add an emotional
layer on it, such as excitement or sadness. Repeat with a few different
emotions as time allows, allowing students to choose the emotion with each new
round.
LESSON SUPPLEMENTS:
Crying puppy video link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m1pxFUCQ3gg
"Scared Chinese Girl" video link: https://youtu.be/gvfR0PVNsvM
Celtic Woman video link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1g7XO7gICAo
(0:00-1:12)
Simple sentence ideas:
I went to the store yesterday.
We’re going to play basketball at recess.
Pizza was served at lunch today.
My brother is doing his homework.
Thanks for being so candid Casey, I'm sure the lesson was actually better than you felt it was. When I visited you the week following this lesson the kids were excited and happy to see you. I like your lesson plan - would you change the lesson plan next time or the way you presented it? Have you figured out ways to help you remember each step of the lesson? The more confident you are in the knowledge of the flow of your lesson plan, the easier it will be to plug in those "inspiration" moments you were talking about.
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