COD 2022 - D644

Webinar - 5' of Active Drama for tired and bored minds

Directed to teachers of any subject (Primary and Secondary) interested in using Drama in their daily plans

1 sesiones, inicia: 14-Feb

Ficha del curso

Ciclo: 2022
Nivel: A Distancia
Idioma: Inglés
Estado: Terminado
Lugar: A Distancia
Capacitador/es: Ms. Susan Cocimano
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Colegios Afiliados
No arancelado
Centros de Examen
ARS 2200.00
No afiliados
ARS 2200.00

Sesiones


Sesiones Fechas Inicia Termina
1 14 Febrero 2022 03:00 pm 04:30 pm

Capacitador/es

Susan Cocimano

Drama Teacher/Trainer, Susan specialises in drama and creativity; tools that enable a novel insight for teaching and learning creatively across the curriculum. She holds a Postgraduate Certificate in Teaching Shakespeare from the University of Warwick. Her aim is to encourage both teachers and students to experience Shakespeare in a more dynamic and challenging manner, introducing new techniques and skills. Susan was Coordinator of the Arts Department in secondary at Cardinal Newman (2009-2016) and taught Drama in Education at St. Trinnean Teacher's College (2001-2017). She is a Cambridge Speaking Examiner and co-founder of Full Circle English.
Directed to teachers of any subject (Primary and Secondary) interested in using Drama in their daily plans
1. Drama strategies to support the learning process
2. Simple class activities that will stimulate imagination and creativity
3. As a warm up to introduce a new topic/ activity
4. To help students relax and focus when concentration is lost
Brian Way stresses “A few minutes of active Drama can do much for tired, strained and possibly bored minds”

A thirty- or forty-minute lesson is an important factor in academic study yet, in Drama, a five-minute activity can be as important as the longer one. Sometimes its place on the timetable is governed by factors of human needs and /or of academic necessity.
Drama is concerned with people and it mustn’t be seen as interfering with an intense curriculum; it is part of education and it aids other studies and achievements. Our challenge is to use this tool with confidence. We will discover that students will continue to pass tests and exams even if time is given to drama.
- I will walk you through different activities
- When to use them.
- Discuss advantages and disadvantages
- Share our ideas
Goodridge, Janet, “Drama in the Primary School.” 1981 Heinemann Educational Books, London
Salisbury, Barbara T., “theatre Arts in the Elementary Classroom” 1986, Anchorage Press, Inc., New Orleans, Louisiana.
Way, Brian, “Development through Drama.” 1980, Longman, London
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