Reader's Theater: having fun while re-creating stories!
I love to play.
I am a child at
heart. Most of us can think of some kind of activity where we
feel like a kid again. There are many moments in the school day when I feel the joy of being a kid again. My favorite activity, which brings out the kid in me is having the children act it out a Reader's Theater script.
As a teacher, I
love to see my young students play. And I have found they key to having them
play, be engaged and improve their literacy skills at the same time: reader’s
theater.
My students clamor
for opportunity to read another script. And so do I. I love reader’s theater
too. I love to see my students so engaged. No one wastes time. They jump to the
task and lesson flows effortlessly. The class almost teaches itself. A teachers
dream!
However, it is
not entirely easy, as it appears at times.
I have to do a lot of front-loading for an effective Reader’s Theater
experience. First, I choose a script that meshes with our theme, in this case storytelling,
as Nessa, the main character looks for a story of her own to tell.
All students participate;
the artists of the class will create props; other students assign the character
roles; still others practice their lines and help other students master theirs.
Some students plan to invite parents and the principal to watch the play during
the school day. Everyone is engaged and the play lends itself to repeated
readings since students want to do their best for the performance.
In his famous
play, Hamlet, Shakespeare said, “The play
is the thing; to catch the conscience of the king.” Yes, he was right
especially in my classroom my students would agree, “The play is the thing!”
I would agree,
the play is the thing to capture the imagination of my students AND increase
their motivation for reading!

Great ideas!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! The students are acting out Nessa's Story, a reading theater script I adapted from the book. Do you have a blog?
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