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Peer reviewedPhillips, Helen – English Language Teaching Journal, 1980
Discusses the advantages of play-acting for teaching English to children. The play is a challenge that is not examination based, it breaks down barriers between teacher and learners, the speaking-load is spread among the students, many different skills are harnessed, and parents can witness their children's progress. Other considerations are…
Descriptors: Children, Class Activities, Dramatic Play, English (Second Language)
Offstein, Alan – TESL Talk, 1980
Presents a model of a communication game involving adult learners in psychosocial roleplaying and decision making. Each adult develops a distinct character by continually making decisions and by relying on the other adults to add to the role-playing drama. In justifying character development choices, conversation skills are exercised. (PJM)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Communicative Competence (Languages), Dramatic Play, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedWallin, Gloria Jane – Personnel and Guidance Journal, 1980
Creative dramatics were used to stimulate the moral development of students in inner-city schools. Moral dilemma situations were dramatized. The dramatic presentations, followed by discussion, may be a method for growth in moral judgments and ultimately in advanced moral behavior. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Creative Dramatics, Elementary Secondary Education, Interpersonal Relationship
Peer reviewedClemmer, Edward J.; And Others – Language and Speech, 1979
When church lectors and beginning and advanced drama students read the same passage, the drama students used faster articulation, faster speech rates, and fewer pauses than church lectors. Expert and nonprofessional evaluators preferred the advanced drama students, followed by the beginning drama students and then the church lectors. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Clergy, College Students, Communication Skills, Comparative Analysis
Caldwell, Bettye; Yowell, Robert – Instructor, 1977
Here is a new approach to kindergarten language arts, developed through a blend of the authors' skills in education and theater. Language enrichment is their goal, action dramatics their technique. Discover how to make your classroom a place where the action is! (Editor/RK)
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Child Development, Class Activities, Dramatic Play
Faessel, Locelyne – Langues Modernes, 1976
This article discusses the uses of dramatics as a teaching technique in the instruction of Spanish as a second language. (Text is in French.) (CLK)
Descriptors: Drama, Dramatics, Instructional Materials, Language Arts
Peer reviewedMorton, Beatrice K. – English Journal, 1977
Suggests twelve listening exercises and their applications to writing, speaking, language and literature. (DD)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Creative Dramatics, Language, Listening
Peer reviewedStodder, Joseph H. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 1995
A performance-oriented approach to teaching William Shakespeare's literature has been found to be effective and enthusiastically received by college students. Ten years of teaching Shakespeare through full play production has shown that the rewards, eloquently expressed in the testimony of students, more than compensate for extra work required of…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Dramatics, Educational Strategies, English Literature
Peer reviewedKemple, Kristen M. – Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 1996
Argues that sociodramatic play in early childhood education provides children with developmental gains in social, emotional, cognitive, intellectual, language, and creative spheres. Stresses the importance of proper teacher education and practice of classroom sociodramatic play. Summarizes survey of preschool and kindergarten teachers regarding…
Descriptors: Child Development, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education, Learning Activities
Peer reviewedLindqvist, Gunilla – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2003
Describes how narratives can stimulate children's play and how it is possible to create playworlds. Shows how cultural context has a positive influence on children's quest for meaningful action. Asserts that a child's imagination is captured by the narrative, which gives objects and actions their meaning. Maintains that when adults play roles and…
Descriptors: Adult Child Relationship, Cultural Influences, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedMcCarty, Tim – Perspectives in Education and Deafness, 1995
A teacher at the Model Secondary School for the Deaf (District of Columbia) discusses the process of creating, rehearsing, and producing a play using sign language as an expressive and artistic tool. The importance of performing often enough to achieve the euphoria of mastery is stressed. (DB)
Descriptors: Creative Development, Deafness, Dramatics, Emotional Response
Green, Connie – Texas Child Care, 2002
Draws on current research to advocate the importance of children's need for physical activity and the benefits of teaming literature with movement and dramatic play. Focuses on: (1) brain research on movement; (2) poems and stories that highlight movement; and (3) movement and imagination. Contains 22 references and lists 39 children's books. (SD)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Dance, Dramatic Play, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedKorat, Ofra; Bahar, Etti; Snapir, Miriam – Reading Teacher, 2003
Reports on an educational project that focused on the nature of the support one teacher gave to the children in her kindergarten class while engaging with them in literacy play. Contends that the project revealed that young children have their own assumptions about and knowledge of the written language, which they actively use in their play. (PM)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Development, Dramatic Play, Emergent Literacy
Nelson, Pauline; Daubert, Todd – Understanding Our Gifted, 2002
This articles describes a Shakespeare Club for elementary school students of all ages and abilities that has created a "Shakespeare Corner" in a school media center and performed a Shakespeare play for the school and community. The benefits of the club for typical students and for gifted students are discussed. (CR)
Descriptors: Classical Literature, Clubs, Creative Activities, Drama
Peer reviewedFancy, Alex – Canadian Modern Language Review, 1991
Use of dramatics in French second language education is advocated with theoretical and practical arguments, and a four-stage approach to language acquisition through theater is proposed. The approach is based on activities of a bilingual theater troupe that offers Mount Allison University (New Brunswick) students an opportunity to participate in…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, College Students, Drama Workshops, Dramatics


