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  • Drama and Theatre Studies

    Drama and Theatre Studies

    Head of Department

    Mr T Newman, PGCE, BA (Hons), NPQML+, NPQSL

    Statement of Intent

    Drama makes learners of us all by offering an integral view of society. It delivers meaning to its students, purpose to its performers, and understanding to its audiences. All the while challenging society to reflect upon itself and the world we have created.

    Drama instils a passion for the Performing Arts and teaches the students at DHSG to explore performance skills, enhance academic skills, and refine interpersonal skills. Our students have a dynamic and ambitious curriculum evolving from the foundations of KS2 skills and knowledge, leading to a framework of knowledge and skills, deliberate practice, and self-evaluation in the lower years. This allows further building blocks based on theatre history, influential practitioners, and the ability to operate as an actor, director, and designer in the Middle years. Consolidating all this knowledge and theorising on the psychology of the character, conceptual vision of the director, and the thematic choices of the designer equip students as active practitioners encompassing all the above in the upper years.

    With a reflective and academic approach to all aspects of the course, we aim to explore both process and performance theatre. Process theatre being the progressive tradecraft where students actively learn skills as they engage with stimuli, explore techniques in rehearsals, and devise scenes all to learn in the moment. Performance theatre being the traditional approach to starting a production and working with a stimulus or script, developing acting, directing, and designing skills with previously learnt techniques to produce a completed performance for assessment, analysis, and evaluation.

    We take as many students to theatre as possible during their time at DHSG, believing that the cultural investment deepens and broadens minds and benefits the students in all aspects of their learning and of their life.

    Contribution to School Curriculum

    Drama’s place, both in lessons and in the wider extracurricular program, is to offer an incredible set of skills vital to all students’ social, cultural, historical, and political (SCHP) education during their informative schooling years. We pride ourselves on being a modern subject that explores any human need or issue through the medium of performance and reflect the learning from many other curricular subjects such as English, History, Psychology, Music, Dance, to name a few.

    Drama brings value to students using their brain uniquely, introducing them to alternative learning methods. We balance adaptive and critical thinking with an open and creative mind-set needed to not only envision a performance, but to access the skills and knowledge as an actor, director, and designed to see the idea of the performance become a production.

    Many of the practical and academic skills practised and refined within Drama compliment many other subjects, such as an investigative analysis and evaluation of one’s performance has pedagogical links to a scientific experiment in Chemistry, Biology, and Physics, whereupon the student will analyse and evaluate their findings.

    It is the positive performance pressure and individual resilience our students embrace that reinforces the self-belief and confidence we see in cycle assessments and GCSE examinations. Coupled with desirable 'soft skills' our students present themselves as confident, purposeful, and communicative individuals, which are the qualities further education and future employers require. The students are increasing their chances for success in future interview prospects such as university and employment opportunities, by applying their learning beyond the classroom and using it for real world purposes.

    Curriculum Programmes of Study

    Year

    Cycle Content

    Year 7

    Cycle 1

    Theatre Roles (Theory 1): Where students begin to understand how the industry connects together.

    Cycle 2

    Mr Fox: A scheme of practically creative work in which the students approach their work through process theatre, employing techniques practically each lesson.

    Cycle 3

    Stage Types (Theory 2): Where students learn about the different stage type, along with their strengths and weaknesses.

    Fairy Tale Fights: A performance theatre scheme of work where the students play extraordinary characters in a normal environment to boost characterisation.

    Year 8

    Cycle 1

    Genres: Where students learn about the types of theatre, the different features and how different genres can impact audiences

    Cycle 2

    Darkwood Manor: A performance scheme of work where students experience process theatre and explore the horror genre, using a stimulus, to create their own narrative

    Cycle 3

    Radio Play: Where students experience a written play script and learn about the mechanics of a radio play and explore on vocal techniques

    Year 9

    Cycle 1

    Alternative duologues: A practical scheme of work where students develop and understanding of duologues and explore performance concepts

    Cycle 2

    Epic Theatre: Students learn about their first theatre practitioner and explore the techniques of Epic theatre and it’s impact of audiences

    Cycle 3

    Naturalism: Students learn about a second theatre practitioner and explore techniques and how to create believable and realistic characters and narratives.

    Year 10

    Cycle 1

    Theatre In Education: Where students learn about a third theatre practitioner and explore the techniques employed to evoke educational elements within the audience.

    Cycle 2

    Devising Theatre: NEA-Component 1 (40%) where students devise an original piece of theatre based on a stimulus. Students complete a 900 word creative log, performance and undertake a 1.30 hour analysis and evaluation

    Cycle 3

    Introduction to An Inspector Calls: Students learn their set text for Component 3- exploring the play, characters, acting and directing skills

    Year 11

    Cycle 1

    An Inspector Calls: Students continue to learn their set text for Component 3- revision of acting and directing. Learning and exploring design elements

    Cycle 2

    Performing from a Text: Component 2 (20%) where students gain a deeper understanding of how to interpret a text for performance and realise artistic intentions. Visiting examiner

    Cycle 3

    Component 3: Students continue to revise the set text (40%): An Inspector Calls’; Evaluation of live theatre; Writing structures; Acting- Motivation; Voice; Movement; Interaction; Directing- Context; Intention; Techniques; Result; Designer- Mood and atmosphere; Intention; Effect/ Equipment; Product; Constructive Criticism; Analysis and Evaluate; Mock papers for A + B

    Lower Years Assessment Framework

    To view the Lower Years Assessment Framework for Drama, please click here

    Middle Years Exam and Specification Information

    Full details of the specification and assessment criteria can be found on the WJEC website GCSE Drama Specification

    Extra-curricular activities

    At DHSG we make sure that all students have access to drama through a bi-annual large-scale musical production, such as Bugsy Malone, cast, rehearsed and performed to the highest possible standard. Students from year 7 to year 13 were involved in acting, singing, dancing, backstage management, lighting, sound, props, costume, and set design to produce a truly memorable experience for all. In the desire to create as close to a professional experience as possible for our students, we perform with a live band to accompany the performance and radio mics to showcase our amazing talent.

    On the opposing bi-annual year we present a Sixth Form production performed at the Plymouth University theatre to create further access for our students to experience, in a first-hand manner, the reality of the profession in acting, directing, and designing, which can be a uniquely developed, and originally devised performance or a play script that is re-interpreted for a modern-day audience.

    A student favourite, also on the bi-annual Drama extra-curricular calendar, is the ‘Theatre Land’ London residential trip. This comprises 3 days and 2 nights of backstage tours of the National Theatre and Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre, whilst seeing a play at the National Theatre such as Phaedra, a play at the Globe Theatre such as Tutus Andronicus, and West End musical such as Matilda. This once in a lifetime experience provides our students access to the country’s best Live Theatre that they will need to analyse and evaluate in their Component 3 written exam, but offers incredible aspiration for those students who wish to pursue a career within the performing arts. Not only is this a wonderful cultural experience in the country’s capital, it is also an opportunity to view the career paths that branch out from Sixth Form, university, and apprenticeships within the professional world of drama.

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