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Mt. Hope High School
The Arts: Theatre
The standards on this page come from The
National Standards for Arts Education, developed by the Consortium
of National Arts Education Associations. (There are additional standards
for Dance, Music,
and Visual Arts.) The standards document includes
the following description:
The standards establish "proficient" and "advanced"
achievement standards for grades 9-12 in each discipline. The proficient
level is intended for students who have completed courses of study involving
relevant skills and knowledge in that discipline for one to two years beyond
grade 8. The advanced level is intended for students who have completed
courses of study involving relevant skills and knowledge in that discipline
for three to four years beyond grade 8. Students at the advanced level
are expected to achieve the standards established for the proficient as
well as the advanced levels. Every student is expected to achieve the
proficient level in at least one arts discipline by the time he or she
graduates from high school.
Click on any of the items below to see my work in that area.
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Theatre Standards
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Entries
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Grade 9
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Grade 10
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Grade 11
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Grade 12
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| Content Standard #1: Script writing through
improvising,
writing, and refining scripts based on personal experience and heritage, imagination, literature, and
history |
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students construct imaginative scripts and collaborate with actors to refine
scripts so that story and meaning are conveyed to an audience
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students write theatre, film, television, or electronic media scripts in
a variety of traditional
and new
forms that include original characters with unique dialogue that motivates
action
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Content Standard #2:Acting by developing, communicating, and sustaining
characters in improvisations
and informal
or formal
productions |
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students analyze the physical, emotional, and social dimensions of characters
found in dramatic texts from various genres and media
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Students compare and demonstrate various classical
and contemporary acting techniques
and methods
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Students in an ensemble,
create and sustain characters that communicate with audiences
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students demonstrate artistic discipline to achieve an ensemble in rehearsal
and performance
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Students create consistent characters from classical, contemporary, realistic,
and nonrealistic dramatic texts in informal and formal theatre, film, television,
or electronic media productions
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Content Standard #3: Designing and producing by conceptualizing
and realizing artistic interpretations for informal or formal productions |
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students explain the basic physical and chemical properties of the technical
aspects of theatre (such as light, color, electricity, paint, and makeup)
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Students analyze a variety of dramatic texts from cultural and historical
perspectives to determine production requirements
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Students develop designs that use visual and aural elements to convey environments
that clearly support the text
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Students apply technical knowledge and skills to collaboratively and safely
create functional scenery, properties, lighting, sound, costumes, and makeup
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Students design coherent stage management, promotional, and business plans
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students explain how scientific and technological advances have impacted
set, light, sound, and costume design and implementation for theatre, film,
television, and electronic media productions
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Students collaborate with directors to develop unified
production concepts that convey the metaphorical nature of the drama
for informal and formal theatre, film, television, or electronic media
productions
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Students safely construct and efficiently operate technical aspects of
theatre, film, television, or electronic media productions
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Students create and reliably implement production schedules, stage management
plans, promotional ideas, and business and front
of house procedures for informal and formal theatre, film, television,
or electronic media productions
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Content Standard #4: Directing by interpreting dramatic texts and
organizing and conducting rehearsals for informal or formal productions |
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students develop multiple interpretations and visual and aural production
choices for scripts and production ideas and choose those that are most
interesting
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Students justify selections of text, interpretation, and visual and aural
artistic
choices
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Students effectively communicate directorial choices to a small ensemble
for improvised or scripted scenes
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students explain and compare the roles and interrelated responsibilities
of the various personnel involved in theatre, film, television, and electronic
media productions
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Students collaborate with designers and actors to develop aesthetically
unified production concepts for informal and formal theatre, film, television,
or electronic media productions
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Students conduct auditions, cast actors, direct scenes, and conduct production
meetings to achieve production goals
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Content Standard #5: Researching by evaluating and synthesizing
cultural and historical information to support artistic choices
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students identify and research cultural, historical, and symbolic clues
in dramatic texts, and evaluate the validity and practicality of the information
to assist in making artistic choices for informal and formal productions
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students research and describe appropriate historical production designs,
techniques, and performances from various cultures to assist in making
artistic choices for informal and formal theatre, film, television, or
electronic media productions
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Content Standard #6: Comparing and integrating art forms by analyzing
traditional theatre, dance, music, visual arts, and new
art forms |
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students describe and compare the basic nature, materials, elements, and
means of communicating in theatre, dramatic
media, musical theatre, dance, music, and the visual arts
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Students determine how the nondramatic art forms are modified to enhance
the expression of ideas and emotions in theatre
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Students illustrate the integration of several arts media in informal presentations
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students compare the interpretive and expressive natures of several art
forms in a specific culture or historical period
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Students compare the unique interpretive and expressive natures and aesthetic
qualities of traditional arts from various cultures and historical
periods with contemporary new art forms (such as performance art)
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Students integrate several arts and/or media in theatre, film, television,
or electronic media productions
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Content Standard #7: Analyzing, critiquing, and constructing
meanings from informal and formal theatre, film, television, and electronic
media productions |
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students construct social meanings from informal and formal productions
and from dramatic performances from a variety of cultures and historical
periods, and relate these to current personal, national, and international
issues
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Students articulate and justify personal aesthetic
criteria for critiquing dramatic texts and events that compare perceived
artistic intent with the final aesthetic achievement
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Students analyze and critique the whole and the parts of dramatic performances,
taking into account the context, and constructively suggest alternative
artistic choices
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Students constructively evaluate their own and others' collaborative efforts
and artistic choices in informal and formal productions
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students construct personal meanings from nontraditional dramatic performances
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Students analyze, compare, and evaluate differing critiques of the same
dramatic texts and performances
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Students critique several dramatic works in terms of other aesthetic philosophies
(such as the underlying ethos of Greek drama, French classicism with its
unities of time and place, Shakespeare and romantic forms, India classical
drama, Japanese kabuki, and others)
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Students analyze and evaluate critical comments about personal dramatic
work explaining which points are most appropriate to inform further development
of the work
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Content Standard #8: Understanding context by analyzing the role
of theatre, film, television, and electronic media in the past and the
present |
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Achievement Standard, Proficient:
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Students compare how similar themes are treated in drama from various cultures
and historical periods, illustrate with informal performances, and discuss
how theatre can reveal universal concepts
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Students identify and compare the lives, works, and influence of representative
theatre artists in various cultures and historical periods
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Students identify cultural and historical sources of American theatre and
musical theatre
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Students analyze the effect of their own cultural experiences on their
dramatic work
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Achievement Standard, Advanced:
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Students analyze the social and aesthetic impact of underrepresented theatre
and film artists
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Students analyze the relationships among cultural values, freedom of artistic
expression, ethics, and artistic choices in various cultures and historical
periods
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Students analyze the development of dramatic forms, production practices,
and theatrical traditions across cultures and historical periods and explain
influences on contemporary theatre, film, television, and electronic media
productions
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