Viewpoints
Viewpoints
Viewpoints
Tracy Hirsch(s)
July 1, 2005
Table of Contents
Unit Summary ....page 3 Stage One: Standards
Stage One identifies the desired results of the unit including the broad understandings, the unit outcome statement and essential questions that focus the unit, and the necessary knowledge and skills. The Understanding by Design Handbook, 1999
.. pages 8-13
Appendices
...... page 13
Tracy Hirsch(s)
July 1, 2005
Unit Summary
Specialized Performance Studies is the third course in a sequence of three courses at Farmington High School. Each year the focus of the course changes, so that students can repeat the course year after year. Despite the different focus, each year the course aims to concentrate on a specific aspect of theatre history; the concentration could be a playwright, artistic movement, or acting/directing methodology. Last year, the focus was Theatre of the Absurd. This year, the focus will be on director Anne Bogarts theory of performance called Viewpoints. The unit assumes basic knowledge and skills learned in Introduction to Theatre and Acting and Directing. These include elements of character, text analysis, and the roles of actors and director in rehearsal and performance.
Tracy Hirsch(s)
July 1, 2005
Essential Understandings and Content Standards *Note from curriculum writer: Since Farmington Public Schools does not have essential understandings or content standards for theatre, these standards come from the Connecticut State Department of Educations Connecticut Curriculum Framework. Content Standard One: Creating - Students will create through improvising, writing, and refining scripts. Corresponding Performance Standard A: Students will construct imaginative scripts and collaborate with actors to refine scripts so that story and meaning are conveyed to an audience. (The Viewpoints shift the burden of creating fr0m the playwright and director to the actors, who are actively involved in the constructing and composition of a theatrical production. A study of the Viewpoints gives actors wonderful opportunity to create!) Content Standard Two: Acting- Students will act by developing, communicating and sustaining characters. Corresponding Performance Standard B: Compare and demonstrate acting techniques and methods from a variety of periods and styles. (The Viewpoints provide an approach to acting which varies immensely from methods in realism, which are studied in Introduction toTheatre and Acting and Directing.) Content Standard Four: Directing - Students will direct by planning or interpreting works of theatre and by organizing and conducting rehearsals. Corresponding Performance Standard A: Develop multiple interpretations and visual and aural production choices for scripts and production ideas and choose those that are most appropriate. Corresponding Performance Standard B: Justify selection of text, interpretation, and visual/aural choices. Content Standard Seven: Analysis, Criticism and Meaning Students will analyze, critique and construct meanings from works of theatre. Corresponding Performance Standard C: Analyze and critique performances and constructively suggest alternative artistic choices. Corresponding Performance Standard D: Constructively evaluate their own and others collaborative efforts in informal and formal productions. Technology Standard Two: Communication Technology can be used to create written, visual, and multimedia products to communicate ideas, information, or conclusions to others. Technology Standard One: Information Accessing-- Information skills and strategies are necessary to effectively locate and use resources for solving problems, conducting research and pursuing personal interest.
Tracy Hirsch(s)
July 1, 2005
As a result of this unit, students will understand that acting methods in general, and specifically Anne Bogarts Viewpoints, directly influence how actors and directors rehearse a play, and that using the Viewpoints can shift the joy and burden of creating from the playwright and director more heavily to the actors. They also will understand how selecting a text and interpreting it through aural and visual choices affect the meaning that is conveyed to an audience. They will understand: Anne Bogarts Viewpoints as an acting method especially how it compares to acting traditions rooted in realism The role of the Viewpoints in organizing and running rehearsals Selection, interpretation, and production of text as important steps in the creative process. Essential Questions
These questions help to focus the unit and guide inquiry.
How do the Viewpoints help and challenge you as actors and directors? How do different acting methods influence the final performance? How do staging and aural/visual choices contribute to the final performance?
Tracy Hirsch(s)
July 1, 2005
Knowledge Key Concepts: Representational Theatre and Realism ViewPoints: Tempo, Duration, Kinesthetic Response, Repetition, Shape, Gesture, Architecture, Spatial Relationship, Topography Sourcework Composition Skills/Processes