Teaching with
Dramatized
Experiences
Content
• Formal plays
• Pageant
• Pantomime
• Tableau
• Puppets
• Role playing
Dramatized
Experience
All dramatization is essentially a
process of communication, in which both
participant and spectators are engaged. A
creative interaction takes place, a sharing of
ideas. – Edgar Dale
Plays
Depict life, character, or culture or a
combination of all three. They offer
excellent opportunities to portray vividly
important ideas about life.
Pageant
Are usually community dramas that are based
on local history, presented by local actors. An
example is a historical pageant that traces the
growth of a school.
Pantomime
Is the “art of conveying o story through bodily
movements only”( Webster’s New Collegiate
Dictionary ). Its affect on the audience depends
on the movements of the actors.
Tableau
( a French word which means picture ) is a
picture-like scene composed of people against a
background. A tableau is often used to celebrate
Independence Day, Christmas and United Nation
Day.
Puppets
Dale (1996) claims that puppets, unlike the
regular stage play, can present ideas with
extreme simplicity – without elaborate scenery
or costume- yet effectively.
Role Playing
Is an unrehearsed, unprepared and spontaneous
dramatization of a “let’s pretend” situation where
assigned participants are absorbed by their own
roles in the situation described by the teacher.
Types of Puppet
• Shadow Puppets
• Rod Puppets
• Hand Puppets
• Glove-and-Finger Puppets
• Marionettes
Shadow Puppets
falt back silhouette made from
lightweight cardboard and show behind a screen.
Rod Puppets
flat cut out figures tacked to a stick, with one
or more movable parts, and operated from below
the stage level by wire rods or slender sticks.
Hand Puppets
the puppet’s head is operated by the forefinger
of the puppeteer, the little finger and thumb
being used to animate the puppet hands.
Glove-and-finger puppets
make use of old gloves to which small
costumed figure are attached.
Marionettes
flexible, jointed puppets operated by strings
or wires attached to a cross bar and maneuvered
from directly above the stage.
THANK
YOU

Teaching with dramatized experiences

  • 1.
  • 2.
    Content • Formal plays •Pageant • Pantomime • Tableau • Puppets • Role playing
  • 3.
    Dramatized Experience All dramatization isessentially a process of communication, in which both participant and spectators are engaged. A creative interaction takes place, a sharing of ideas. – Edgar Dale
  • 4.
    Plays Depict life, character,or culture or a combination of all three. They offer excellent opportunities to portray vividly important ideas about life.
  • 5.
    Pageant Are usually communitydramas that are based on local history, presented by local actors. An example is a historical pageant that traces the growth of a school.
  • 6.
    Pantomime Is the “artof conveying o story through bodily movements only”( Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary ). Its affect on the audience depends on the movements of the actors.
  • 7.
    Tableau ( a Frenchword which means picture ) is a picture-like scene composed of people against a background. A tableau is often used to celebrate Independence Day, Christmas and United Nation Day.
  • 8.
    Puppets Dale (1996) claimsthat puppets, unlike the regular stage play, can present ideas with extreme simplicity – without elaborate scenery or costume- yet effectively.
  • 9.
    Role Playing Is anunrehearsed, unprepared and spontaneous dramatization of a “let’s pretend” situation where assigned participants are absorbed by their own roles in the situation described by the teacher.
  • 10.
    Types of Puppet •Shadow Puppets • Rod Puppets • Hand Puppets • Glove-and-Finger Puppets • Marionettes
  • 11.
    Shadow Puppets falt backsilhouette made from lightweight cardboard and show behind a screen.
  • 12.
    Rod Puppets flat cutout figures tacked to a stick, with one or more movable parts, and operated from below the stage level by wire rods or slender sticks.
  • 13.
    Hand Puppets the puppet’shead is operated by the forefinger of the puppeteer, the little finger and thumb being used to animate the puppet hands.
  • 14.
    Glove-and-finger puppets make useof old gloves to which small costumed figure are attached.
  • 15.
    Marionettes flexible, jointed puppetsoperated by strings or wires attached to a cross bar and maneuvered from directly above the stage.
  • 16.