Description

Book Synopsis

John Newman invites teachers to take their students on a playwriting voyage in Playwriting in Schools. The book examines how students who learn to write plays and work with a professional playwright in residence empower themselves and gives instructors tools for teaching the process of playwriting in a way that makes space for the student voice. Playwriting in Schools investigates two main approaches for adult teachers and playwrights to use playwriting as a strategy for student self-expression. One approach is through the creation of fully-developed plays, written either by individual students with instruction from teachers or through interactions between a team of students and a teacher-playwright. The other approach is developing plays through collaborations among professional playwrights, teachers and student actors, crafting new plays in ways that suit the needs, interests and learning of young people. Throughout, Newman and the teachers and playwrights he features express themselves with an artistic generosity that encourages us to widen the scope of our own programmes by introducing students to the vast ocean of playwriting and play development.

Part of the Theatre in Education series.



Table of Contents

Credits

Acknowledgments

Foreword

Introduction: Navigating the Theatre Curriculum with Playwriting

Part I: The Practical Navigator – Charts, Tools, and Dynamics

Chapter 1: Phases of Playwriting

1. Preparation

2. Generation

3. Experimentation

4. Determination

5. Clarification

6. Exhibition

7. Examination

8. Production

9. Evaluation

Mapping devised theatre

Chapter 2: Generating and Workshopping Scripts

Preparing students

Grounding students in dramatic theory

Reading and analyzing plays as a class

Partnering with creative writing teachers

Introducing students to professional playwrights

Generating material

Visual image prompting

Rapid-fire prompting

Card prompting

Interviewing

Winnowing and drafting

Experimenting with possibilities

Classroom readings of initial drafts

Descriptive feedback

Variation drafts

World-building

Determining the center

Mural-making

Character tableau

Role-on-the-wall

Clarifying text

Question selection

Draft-tracking

Chapter 3: Presenting and Premiering Plays

Exhibiting scripts

Theoretical designs

Staged readings

Examining text

Written responses

Post-reading discussions

Day-after responses

In-the-moment responses

Producing new plays

Premiere productions

Actor interviews

Subsequent productions

Evaluating product and process

Chapter 4: Employing the Tarot Card Mode

The Tarot card model and exercise by Suzan Zeder

Why Tarot?

Leading the exercise

Creating the cards

Laying out the cards

Reading the cards

What the Tarot does

What the Tarot does not do

How to use the Tarot to develop plays in schools

Part II: Ports of Call – Learning Environments for Student Playwriting

Chapter 5: School Productions of Student-Written Plays

Collaborating with creative writing classes

Mentoring student directors and producers

Involving student playwrights in rehearsal

Sounding off: Teacher-advisors at East High School

Chapter 6: Developing Plays through Playwriting Contests

Developing plays through Thespian Playworks

Pre-workshop development

Collaborative casting

Role of the adult dramaturg

Role of the adult director

Theoretical designs

Publication of student-written plays

Developing plays through Young Playwrights for Change

Written feedback

Mentoring by adult playwrights

Staged readings and performances

Sounding off: Middle school playwrights

Chapter 7: Team-Playwriting with Students

Playwriting teams at Le Jardin Academy

Preparing student playwrights

Leading playwriting teams

Sounding off: Students on a playwriting team

Team-playwriting at Middleton High School

Chapter 8: Playwriting-Centered Drama Programs

Friends Academy: A community of equals

An inclusive production season

A vertical playwriting curriculum

Sounding off: Graduates of a playwriting-centered curriculum

Cleveland School of the Arts: A constellation of voices

A collaborating literature teacher

Playwriting-centered drama cohorts

Second draft strategies

A repertory of non-traditional productions

A festival of new works

Part III: Apprentice to a Playwright – Modeling Playwriting in School Residencies

Chapter 9: Preparations for a School Residency 149

Preparing for the voyage

Finding the playwright

Finding the school

Forging the agreement

Financing the venture

Manning the ship

The teacher-director

The teacher-director’s other hats

The playwright

Student actors

Student dramaturgs

Student designers

Expert student participants

Building bridges: Sharing power in play development

Chapter 10: Playwright Residencies at Highland High School

The ARK 5 Project

Development residency at Highland High School

Premiere production at Highland High School

Second production at Middleton High School

Mounting second productions

Developing novel adaptations

Developing a musical

Facilitating playwright residencies in schools

Mounting plays by the teacher-director and students

Addressing technical challenges

Employing guest directors

Reading additional plays by the guest playwright

Letting the playwright process the presentation

Acting with students to experience the text

Sounding off: Student actors in new plays

Chapter 11: Playwright Residencies at Other Secondary Schools

Playwrights In Our Schools residencies at DaVinci Academy

The residency for Escape from the Labyrinth by playwright Ric Averill

Itinerary of a school residency

The residency for Max Bush’s What Remains

Components of Playwrights In Our Schools residencies

Student preparation

Pre-residency development

Workshop exploration

Theoretical designs

Classroom visits

Mentorship of student playwrights

Informal interactions

Staged readings

Post-reading discussions

Chapter 12: Playwright Residencies and Visits at Primary Schools

Developing When She Had Wings with Lucy School students by playwright Suzan Zeder

Engaging with children in research

Discussing the script with children

Exploring design possibilities

Finding an alternate title

Involving children in rehearsal and production

Child learning in the script development of When She Had Wings

Project-based, arts integrated learning

Social skills development

Seeking clarity and dealing with ambiguity

Validating children’s perspectives

Design collaboration with children for When She Had Wings

Confronting limitations creatively

Balancing child perspectives with adult expertise

Emulating the “Wings Project”

Playwright classroom visits for Lily Plants a Garden with the Bonderman Symposium

Epilogue: Embarking on Your Voyage of Discovery

Appendix:

Books on teaching playwriting

Books on play development

Books on devising theatre

Online resources

References

Biographies

Index

Playwriting in Schools: Dramatic Navigation

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      View other formats and editions of Playwriting in Schools: Dramatic Navigation by John Newman

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 18/12/2018
      ISBN13: 9781783209071, 978-1783209071
      ISBN10: 1783209070

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      John Newman invites teachers to take their students on a playwriting voyage in Playwriting in Schools. The book examines how students who learn to write plays and work with a professional playwright in residence empower themselves and gives instructors tools for teaching the process of playwriting in a way that makes space for the student voice. Playwriting in Schools investigates two main approaches for adult teachers and playwrights to use playwriting as a strategy for student self-expression. One approach is through the creation of fully-developed plays, written either by individual students with instruction from teachers or through interactions between a team of students and a teacher-playwright. The other approach is developing plays through collaborations among professional playwrights, teachers and student actors, crafting new plays in ways that suit the needs, interests and learning of young people. Throughout, Newman and the teachers and playwrights he features express themselves with an artistic generosity that encourages us to widen the scope of our own programmes by introducing students to the vast ocean of playwriting and play development.

      Part of the Theatre in Education series.



      Table of Contents

      Credits

      Acknowledgments

      Foreword

      Introduction: Navigating the Theatre Curriculum with Playwriting

      Part I: The Practical Navigator – Charts, Tools, and Dynamics

      Chapter 1: Phases of Playwriting

      1. Preparation

      2. Generation

      3. Experimentation

      4. Determination

      5. Clarification

      6. Exhibition

      7. Examination

      8. Production

      9. Evaluation

      Mapping devised theatre

      Chapter 2: Generating and Workshopping Scripts

      Preparing students

      Grounding students in dramatic theory

      Reading and analyzing plays as a class

      Partnering with creative writing teachers

      Introducing students to professional playwrights

      Generating material

      Visual image prompting

      Rapid-fire prompting

      Card prompting

      Interviewing

      Winnowing and drafting

      Experimenting with possibilities

      Classroom readings of initial drafts

      Descriptive feedback

      Variation drafts

      World-building

      Determining the center

      Mural-making

      Character tableau

      Role-on-the-wall

      Clarifying text

      Question selection

      Draft-tracking

      Chapter 3: Presenting and Premiering Plays

      Exhibiting scripts

      Theoretical designs

      Staged readings

      Examining text

      Written responses

      Post-reading discussions

      Day-after responses

      In-the-moment responses

      Producing new plays

      Premiere productions

      Actor interviews

      Subsequent productions

      Evaluating product and process

      Chapter 4: Employing the Tarot Card Mode

      The Tarot card model and exercise by Suzan Zeder

      Why Tarot?

      Leading the exercise

      Creating the cards

      Laying out the cards

      Reading the cards

      What the Tarot does

      What the Tarot does not do

      How to use the Tarot to develop plays in schools

      Part II: Ports of Call – Learning Environments for Student Playwriting

      Chapter 5: School Productions of Student-Written Plays

      Collaborating with creative writing classes

      Mentoring student directors and producers

      Involving student playwrights in rehearsal

      Sounding off: Teacher-advisors at East High School

      Chapter 6: Developing Plays through Playwriting Contests

      Developing plays through Thespian Playworks

      Pre-workshop development

      Collaborative casting

      Role of the adult dramaturg

      Role of the adult director

      Theoretical designs

      Publication of student-written plays

      Developing plays through Young Playwrights for Change

      Written feedback

      Mentoring by adult playwrights

      Staged readings and performances

      Sounding off: Middle school playwrights

      Chapter 7: Team-Playwriting with Students

      Playwriting teams at Le Jardin Academy

      Preparing student playwrights

      Leading playwriting teams

      Sounding off: Students on a playwriting team

      Team-playwriting at Middleton High School

      Chapter 8: Playwriting-Centered Drama Programs

      Friends Academy: A community of equals

      An inclusive production season

      A vertical playwriting curriculum

      Sounding off: Graduates of a playwriting-centered curriculum

      Cleveland School of the Arts: A constellation of voices

      A collaborating literature teacher

      Playwriting-centered drama cohorts

      Second draft strategies

      A repertory of non-traditional productions

      A festival of new works

      Part III: Apprentice to a Playwright – Modeling Playwriting in School Residencies

      Chapter 9: Preparations for a School Residency 149

      Preparing for the voyage

      Finding the playwright

      Finding the school

      Forging the agreement

      Financing the venture

      Manning the ship

      The teacher-director

      The teacher-director’s other hats

      The playwright

      Student actors

      Student dramaturgs

      Student designers

      Expert student participants

      Building bridges: Sharing power in play development

      Chapter 10: Playwright Residencies at Highland High School

      The ARK 5 Project

      Development residency at Highland High School

      Premiere production at Highland High School

      Second production at Middleton High School

      Mounting second productions

      Developing novel adaptations

      Developing a musical

      Facilitating playwright residencies in schools

      Mounting plays by the teacher-director and students

      Addressing technical challenges

      Employing guest directors

      Reading additional plays by the guest playwright

      Letting the playwright process the presentation

      Acting with students to experience the text

      Sounding off: Student actors in new plays

      Chapter 11: Playwright Residencies at Other Secondary Schools

      Playwrights In Our Schools residencies at DaVinci Academy

      The residency for Escape from the Labyrinth by playwright Ric Averill

      Itinerary of a school residency

      The residency for Max Bush’s What Remains

      Components of Playwrights In Our Schools residencies

      Student preparation

      Pre-residency development

      Workshop exploration

      Theoretical designs

      Classroom visits

      Mentorship of student playwrights

      Informal interactions

      Staged readings

      Post-reading discussions

      Chapter 12: Playwright Residencies and Visits at Primary Schools

      Developing When She Had Wings with Lucy School students by playwright Suzan Zeder

      Engaging with children in research

      Discussing the script with children

      Exploring design possibilities

      Finding an alternate title

      Involving children in rehearsal and production

      Child learning in the script development of When She Had Wings

      Project-based, arts integrated learning

      Social skills development

      Seeking clarity and dealing with ambiguity

      Validating children’s perspectives

      Design collaboration with children for When She Had Wings

      Confronting limitations creatively

      Balancing child perspectives with adult expertise

      Emulating the “Wings Project”

      Playwright classroom visits for Lily Plants a Garden with the Bonderman Symposium

      Epilogue: Embarking on Your Voyage of Discovery

      Appendix:

      Books on teaching playwriting

      Books on play development

      Books on devising theatre

      Online resources

      References

      Biographies

      Index

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