act like a teacher

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  • 8/7/2019 act like a teacher

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    Act Like A Teacher

    By Don Lipper

    By polishing their thespian skills, educators can make their classes more exciting

    Credit: Courtesy of NJPACs Arts Education DepartmentThe Bard said,"All the world's a stage," but if you want to face the slings and arrows of hostile

    audiences, get thee to a school. Young critics don't hesitate to give their thumbs down (or useother digits) to pass judgment on a teacher's performance, but now, teachers are getting acting

    tips from Broadway and beyond.

    More than a thousand participants, for instance, attend the Lincoln Center Institute's five-dayNational Educator Workshops in New York City each year to learn how they can sing, dance,

    act, and paint their way to becoming better and more entertaining instructors. It's an invigoratingweek for many educators, who go through a wide range of acting exercises -- from throaty vocal

    warm-ups to improvising characters in a royal court during Shakespeare's Twelfth Night -- inorder to discover how gesture and voice enhance a stage persona.

    It's an eye-opening experience for many. "Working with Shakespeare, I learned about using

    language to build excitement," says Kevin Williams, a science teacher at Harlem's FrederickDouglass Academy II. "My teaching persona is a lot more excited now." The workshop, he

    adds,"made me more of a risk taker in the classroom." The butterflies he felt before performingalso made Williams more empathetic to students who perform in front of a class.

    Cathryn Williams, deputy director of the institute, says the acting program opens up the mindsand, consequently, teaching styles of many. Educators learn that interactive conversations, the

    core of good drama, also can play a strong role in the classroom. "Teachers leave the workshopsknowing how to support a richer questioning process," she says. "This leads the students to

    design deeper questions."

    By engaging his students to observe first and then follow up with more thoughtful queries, KevinWilliams has seen positive results. "Their writing skills have improved," he notes."They can

    make more abstract connections."

    Teachers can find similar programs through the Association of Institutes for Aesthetic Education,which tracks at least twenty-five such institutions nationwide. Williams, the reluctant thespian,

    says it's time well spent."My teaching technique improved immediately after I took the course,"he says, and the following year, a local chamber of commerce gave him a Teacher of the Year

    award. Now, that's entertainment.