Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Week 7--Body Movement and First Final Performance Rehearsal

I had a great time today in Mrs. Kawakami's class. I feel like my lessons always go so smoothly in her class because it's my second time through it.

Today was all about body movement, so we warmed up first! I went through all the different areas of the body (feet, legs, hips, arms, shoulders, neck, face, etc) and moved them in different ways. Then we did a levels activity where I counted from 1-10 and depending on how fast/slow I did it, they had to get from laying down on the ground to standing straight up. Then when I counted back down, they had to get all the way down to the ground by the time I got to 1.

Their favorite part was the second time through when I mixed it up and counted really fast at first and then slowed down or vice versa. Kids love it when you try to trick them.

The next activity we did was called "Talk With Your Body." The kids spread out around the room and use different positions movement, and levels to portray different ideas like:
  • I'm tired
  • It's freezing in here!
  • I'm so excited for Christmas!
  • I'm scared
while reminding them to think about what happens to your eyebrows/mouth/eyes/legs/arms etc. when you feel all these different things. Then you pause them and have them look around the room (with their eyes only) to see the unique ways other kids are portraying the same thing. They LOVED when I pointed out the dramatic things they were doing, the more specific I was, the better!

Then we played "Character Sculpt" where I drew 2 names out of the class jar and one student is the "clay" and the other is the sculptor. The sculptor draws out an emotion (like last week's activity) and they have to shape the "clay" in a way that the class can tell what the person's feeling just by looking at the position of their body. I was impressed with all the different ways the kids came up with portraying the emotion. The kids loved it and wanted to do it longer. Looking back, next time I would probably split the whole class up in pairs and have them all pair up and do the activity.

Then the last part of the lesson, I had Mrs. Kawakami split up the class into 2 groups and we started rehearsing for our final performance! Here are the two stories we'll be performing:
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I just LOVE this story and it lends itself VERY well to a performance!
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This is the best one I could find, although our version is going to be closer to the original Grimm brother's tale.

We read the stories, assigned parts, acted out the basic storyline, and had the kids use their bodies to tell the story. I was amazed at just how excited they were to jump into the story.

When we were choosing parts, I had one boy who wanted to be the shoes. THE SHOES? I was very curious as to HOW IN THE WORLD he was going to do that, but I wasn't going to stop him. He ended up grabbing a big pillow from the classroom and he ended up being the collector of the shoes. Pretty awesome little guy.

Also, all the boys who were not in the beginning (because it's the Princess part) volunteered to be the "old lady" even though I gave them the option of being an old man. Yeah they all wanted to be an old lady. Not sure why they think it's so fun, but apparently it's all the rage in 2nd grade.

At the end of the hour I had with them, they were enjoying the story so much that they were hoping they could perform it for the rest of their class. We were out of time, so we couldn't, but I promised them that they could do it next week. Imagine that, they were so excited about the stories, they wanted to perform it right then! It's a theatre teacher's dream come true!

1 comment:

  1. I'm glad that you got to try "Talk With Your Body" for this class. It sounds like the kids enjoyed it very much and it probably contributed to their excitement for the final performance rehearsal.
    The Character Sculpt activity is wonderful because it really makes the students think about how every part of their body would react to an emotion - not just facial expressions. Maybe you could use that activity during your final performance rehearsals if the students are ever stuck in their blocking or choices.

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