Educational Pedagogy
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Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Teaching during COVID-19
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The Drama Teacher 

The Drama Teacher  | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it

The Drama Teacher is a blog created and maintained by Justin Cash and is packed with resources for drama and theatre teachers at all levels of education. 


Here you’ll find posts that are reflective, academic and personal. If you love teaching drama, then make The Drama Teacher your home away from home. You can read about the joys and frustrations of teaching the best subject in the world and share stories with others by commenting on posts on this blog. 


Whether you’re a graduate drama teacher, a highly experienced educator or someone in-between, we never stop learning. On this site you’ll find: 


- definitions to dozens of theatrical genres and styles from farce to naturalism and everything in-between 

- drama and theatre lesson plan ideas for the classroom 

- industry news from Broadway, West End theatre and Australia 

- casual musings about the joys and frustrations of teaching Drama 

- additional resources such as Theatresports™ games, the elements of drama and stagecraft ideas 

- links to great theatre websites from across the globe


Via Kim Flintoff
Kim Flintoff's curator insight, March 22, 2020 3:49 AM
I've known Justin Cash for many years and between the two of us we used to have the largest curated collections of theatre and drama resources in the world - I moved away from the drama classroom and eventually gave away most of my drama-specific activities - but Justin has been your rock!
Maddi McDonald's curator insight, May 7, 2020 12:09 AM
This blog comes across as a successful and approachable source when looking deeper into resources, ideas and pedagogy for the drama classroom. I love how it integrates the importance of real industry news and not only academic style definitions but also lesson plans, games and stagecraft ideas. 
Rescooped by Dennis Swender from Professional Learning for Busy Educators
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Giving students more music, theater, and dance boosts writing scores (and compassion), big new study finds

Giving students more music, theater, and dance boosts writing scores (and compassion), big new study finds | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it
When you’re the big fish, it’s not OK to pick on the little fish just because you can.

That’s an important lesson for everyone. But some Houston first-graders got a particularly vivid demonstration in the form of a musical puppet show, which featured fish puppets and an underlying message about why it’s wrong to bully others.

The show left an impression on the students at Codwell Elementary, according to their teacher Shelea Bennett. “You felt like you were in that story,” she said. “By the end of the story they were able to answer why [bullying] wasn’t good, and why you shouldn’t act this way.”

The puppeteer’s show was part of an effort to expand arts education in Houston elementary and middle schools. Now, a new study shows that the initiative helped students in a few ways: boosting students’ compassion for their classmates, lowering discipline rates, and improving students’ scores on writing tests.

It’s just the latest study to find that giving students more access to the arts offers measurable benefits. And adding time for dance, theater, or visual arts isn’t at odds with traditional measures of academic success, according to the research — which amounts to one of the largest gold-standard studies on arts education ever conducted.

“Arts learning experiences benefit students in terms of social, emotional, and academic outcomes,” write researchers Dan Bowen of Texas A&M and Brian Kisida of the University of Missouri.

The study, released Tuesday through the Houston Education Research Consortium, looked at elementary and middle schools — which predominantly served low-income students of color — that expressed interest in participating in Houston’s Arts Access Initiative. There appeared to be significant need: nearly a third of elementary and middle schools in the district reported lacking a full-time arts teacher.

Via John Evans
Rachel Mazzotta's curator insight, June 18, 2019 9:40 AM
The power of the arts to create empathy in students as well as build other cognitive skills. 
Rescooped by Dennis Swender from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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Deep Learning Through Music - Congratulations to #ocsb teacher Natalie Andrews featured in Ottawa Life Magazine

Deep Learning Through Music - Congratulations to #ocsb teacher Natalie Andrews featured in Ottawa Life Magazine | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it
It’s not every day you meet a music/math polymath, but some lucky kids at St. Martin de Porres Catholic Elementary School in Kanata get to meet one every school day.

Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
Mijair sinclair's curator insight, March 22, 2020 11:25 PM
I think it’s cool that there’s a teacher out there that can teach her students through music. I definitely could imagine it making learning more fun for the students.

The article was written by Michael Bussiėre from the OLM OTTAWALIFE magazine company which seems like a good source.

I think this could be good information to audio professionals because it lets them know more kids are being exposed to music at young ages which might get more people into the music business in the future.


Rescooped by Dennis Swender from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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Why dance class is just as important as math class via Sir Ken Robinson + Lou Aronica

Why dance class is just as important as math class via Sir Ken Robinson + Lou Aronica | Educational Pedagogy | Scoop.it
Sir Ken Robinson + Lou Aronica

Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
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