Jordan Clark: Advanced Acting Intro To Directing Lesson Plan
Jordan Clark: Advanced Acting Intro To Directing Lesson Plan
Jordan Clark: Advanced Acting Intro To Directing Lesson Plan
Advanced Acting
Intro to Directing
Lesson Plan
Goal:
For students to understand the process of directing and get a baseline background into
how directing has developed over the centuries.
Essential questions:
What are the main roles of a director?
Lesson objectives:
Students will be able to better understand the role of the director. Students will be able
to start the process of analyzing a play and looking at the basic functions of a directors
need for vision, collaboration, and having something to say.
Informal assessments:
Brainstorm ideas from students with the role of directing.
Formal Assessment:
1. Direct scenes with partners. Students will act out their scenes t. Students will be
graded on memorization, transitions, authenticity and focus during their scenes as part
of their acting portion of the projects. Students will also be graded on their directing,
through vision, blocking,
Diagnostic Data
I have 14 students. 5 males, 9 females. I have one male student with complications
reading out loud. 1 female student with a history of seizures. 3 Gifted and talented
students.
Lesson Materials
1. Journal
2. pen/pencil
3. Theatre Space
4. TV
5. Computer
5. Scripts
LESSON PLAN
1. Begin with Do Now exercise that addresses the importance of directing
I see the job of directing as creating an atmosphere in which everyone
can reach their full potential.
-Joe Wright
Overdirecting
6. Pick plays
Students will each pick a play that they will read, analyze
and direct a scene from.
Each student will be in two different scenes over the course
of this process.
Students will draw numbers and then pick from a selection of
predetermined plays to perform their scenes.
Quality Standard II: Teachers establish a safe, inclusive and respectful learning
environment for a diverse population of students.
Element a: Teachers foster a predictable learning environment in the classroom in which each
student has a positive, nurturing relationship with caring adults and peers.
Element b: Teachers demonstrate a commitment to and respect for diversity.
Element c: Teachers engage students as individuals with unique interests and strengths.
Element d: Teachers adapt their teaching for the benefit of all students, including those
with special needs, across a range of ability levels.
Element e: Teachers provide proactive, clear and constructive feedback to families about
student progress and work collaboratively with the families and significant adults in the lives of
their students.
Element f: Teachers create a learning environment characterized by acceptable student
behavior, efficient use of time, and appropriate intervention strategies.
Quality Standard III: Teachers plan and deliver effective instruction and create an
environment that facilitates learning for their students.
Element a: Teachers demonstrate knowledge of current developmental science, the ways in
which learning takes place, and the appropriate levels of intellectual, social, and emotional
development of their students.
Element b: Teachers plan and consistently deliver instruction that draws on results of student
assessments, is aligned to academic standards, and advances students level of content
knowledge and skills.
Element c: Teachers demonstrate a rich knowledge of current research on effective instructional
practices to meet the developmental and academic needs of their students.
Element d: Teachers thoughtfully integrate and utilize appropriate available technology in
their instruction to maximize student learning.
Element e: Teachers establish and communicate high expectations for all students and plan
instruction that helps students develop critical-thinking and problem solving skills.
Element f: Teachers provide students with opportunities to work in teams and develop
leadership qualities.
Element g: Teachers communicate effectively, making learning objectives clear and
providing appropriate models of language.
Element h: Teachers use appropriate methods to assess what each student has learned,
including formal and informal assessments, and use results to plan further instruction.
Prepared Graduates:
Employ drama and theatre skills, and articulate
the aesthetics of a variety of characters and roles
Grade Level Expectation: High School Expectation
Extended Pathway
Evidence Outcomes
a.
21st Century
Skills and
Readiness
Competencies
1.
Inquiry Questions:
What choices must you
Prepared Graduates:
Use a variety of methods, new media, and
technology to create theatrical works through the
use of the creative process for performance,
directing, design, construction, choreography,
playwriting, scriptwriting, and dramaturgy
Create drama and theatre by interpreting and
appreciating theatrical works, culture, and
experience through scenes and scenarios,
improvisation, creating environments, purposeful
movement, and research
Grade Level Expectation: High School Expectation
Extended Pathway
Evidence Outcomes
21st Century
Skills and
Readiness
Competencies
Inquiry Questions:
1.
Why is the technical
design crucial to a theatrical
endeavor?
2.
How do the efforts of
theatrical managers, technical
designers, and artisans affect the
final presentation or production?
3.
How does the inclusion of
media, cinema, film, and
environmental and technical
effects enhance the final product?
4.
How can music, visual
arts, and dance be utilized in a
theatrical performance?
Relevance and Application:
1.
Exploring alternative
choices in technology helps to
convey a production concept.
2.
Investigating historical
progress and diverse cultures
informs theatrical decisions.
3.
Understanding the roles of
live drama and theatre arts, film,
cinema, television, and electronic
media help to deconstruct and
reinvent the world at large.
4.
Applying knowledge in
theatrical technical arts and
production staffing leads to viable
careers such as stage design,
architecture, interior design,
construction arts, television, and
film production.
Nature of Drama and Theatre
Arts:
1.
Drama and theatre are
multifaceted collaborations that
involve numerous levels of
production aspects, problemsolving, and critical thinking skills
to achieve a vision or concept.
Standard: 1. Create
Prepared Graduates:
Use a variety of methods, new media, and
technology to create theatrical works through the
use of the creative process for performance,
directing, design, construction, choreography,
playwriting, scriptwriting, and dramaturgy
Content Area: Drama and Theatre Arts
Standard: 1. Create
Prepared Graduates:
Create drama and theatre by interpreting and
appreciating theatrical works, culture, and
experience through scenes and scenarios,
improvisation, creating environments, purposeful
movement, and research
Grade Level Expectation: High School Expectation
Extended Pathway
Evidence Outcomes
21st Century
Skills and
Readiness
Competencies
Students in the extended pathway can:
a.
Select a one-act play for public performance,
and write a director's concept statement for the
interpretation of the work (DOK 2-4)
b.
Develop a plan for the audition casting
process, and create and implement a complete
rehearsal production schedule (DOK 2-3)
c.
Prepare a directors promptbook to record
blocking and other notation, while maintaining a
journal of approaches to coaching actors and solving
artistic problems (DOK 2-4)
Inquiry Questions:
1.
How can a one-act play
that is relevant to a time, place,
or social situation be selected?
2.
Does the selection of a
one-act play and writing a
directors concept statement
reflect the capabilities of the
ensemble process?
3.
How does the knowledge
of historical periods impact overall
production value?
4.
What are the best
methods to determine effective
casting, staging, and technical
choices?
5.
How can current visual
arts methods and materials aid in
dramatic interpretation?
Relevance and Application:
1.
Creating a promptbook
and researching the background
of a play expands ones
knowledge base and enhances
the overall product.
2.
Understanding historical
timelines and a plays influence
on society gives one a basis for
interpreting current events.
3.
Determining relevance and
truth in artistic choices expands
ones global awareness about
topics such as the power of
negotiations, diplomacy, social
interactions, and critical
awareness.
4.
Incorporating technological
advances to recreate environment
builds ones awareness of the
production process.
Prepared Graduates:
Make informed, critical evaluations of theatrical
performance from an audience member and a
participant point of view, and develop a
framework for making informed theatrical choices
Grade Level Expectation: High School Fundamental
Pathway
Concepts and skills students master:
2. Evaluation of elements of drama, dramatic techniques,
and theatrical conventions
Evidence Outcomes