¡Arriba el telón! Cielo abierto Teatre Anthologies Collection

¡Arriba el telón! Cielo abierto Teatre Anthologies Collection

ABOUT THE USE OF THEATRE IN THE SCHOOL

The val­ues of the use of involv­ing chil­dren with the­atre are mul­ti­ple. Plays can be an excel­lent tool for pro­mot­ing the abil­ity to speak in front of a group, which is a lead­er­ship skill. Since they offer chil­dren the oppor­tu­nity to uti­lize words and lan­guage reg­istries they may not have other oppor­tu­nity to use, plays can be strong vehi­cle for vocab­u­lary and lan­guage development.

When used for choral read­ing plays can strengthen read­ing skills. In addi­tion, act­ing on a play enhances children’s self-confidence and self-esteem while pro­vid­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties to learn about one’s self and oth­ers. Most impor­tantly, putting on a play, no mat­ter how sim­ple, pro­motes the val­ues of col­lab­o­ra­tion and solidarity.

To read more on the sig­nif­i­cance of the­atre click here: Let’s Raise the Cur­tain! The Ben­e­fit of The­atre in the School and for sug­ges­tions on its use in the class­room read the sec­tion “Plays and Dra­matic Games” in Chap­ter 3 of The Mag­i­cal Encounter: Latino Children’s Lit­er­a­ture in the Class­room and for dra­matic responses to books, see the sec­tion “Pro­mot­ing Dra­matic Expres­sion” in Chap­ter 4 of that same book.

ABOUT THE CIELO ABIERTO THEATRE COLLECTION

Each of the seven antholo­gies in this series offers a vari­ety of plays well-suited for either read­ing aloud or for full-scale per­for­mance. For the early grades, Alma Flor Ada and F. Isabel Cam­poy have cre­ated orig­i­nal adap­ta­tions of tra­di­tional children’s sto­ries. Famil­iar tales are retold in the form of plays, choral poems, and the­atre games, invit­ing chil­dren to explore move­ment, char­ac­ter­i­za­tion, and imag­i­na­tive play. The use of tra­di­tional His­panic folk­lore, woven into the dia­logue, enhances the cul­tural set­ting in which the sto­ries have been recast. For the older grades, a selec­tion of the best plays writ­ten for chil­dren through­out the Spanish-speaking world has been care­fully assembled.

The antholo­gies are:

Teach­ers have found the antholo­gies in this col­lec­tion both invit­ing and inspiring.

AUTHOR’S NOTE FROM ALMA FLOR ADA

Pro­mot­ing that chil­dren have access to read and act plays has always been one of my basic con­cerns. Even if it is done with great sim­plic­ity act­ing in a play can have very pos­i­tive results. It cer­tainly was so for me. Encour­aged by my extra­or­di­nary sixth grade teacher, Dra. Rosa María Peyrel­lade, I wrote my first play which we per­formed in class. As a high school stu­dent I wrote three plays, and while very sim­ple, my class­mates per­formed them with enthu­si­asm. We invited the High School Fac­ulty of the Insti­tuto de Cam­agüey to the pre­mier of one of them, which I enti­tled La sonám­bula or The Sleep-walker. Even though some of the pro­fes­sors did not enjoy the crit­i­cism to their very tra­di­tional ped­a­gogy which was part of the play, there was enough inter­ested pub­lic that we rented the best the­atre in town, el Teatro Prin­ci­pal, to give a cou­ple of pub­lic performances.

When I became a High School teacher at the Cole­gio Abra­ham Lin­coln in Lima, Perú, I invited my stu­dents to do the­atre and we had great fun doing so!

My mother, a coor­di­na­tor for FLES [For­eign Lan­guage in the Ele­men­tary School] in Atlanta, Geor­gia, used the­atre very effec­tively in the teach­ing of Span­ish, and wrote a num­ber of plays that were per­formed by chil­dren and broad­casted via the dis­trict TV station.

As a teacher edu­ca­tor in the United States I have con­tin­u­ously empha­sized the use of the­atre. I have had the priv­i­lege of hav­ing my mother co-direct with me three dif­fer­ent per­for­mances of His­to­ria de una muñeca aban­don­ada, by Alfonso Sas­tre dur­ing three sum­mer courses: at the Uni­ver­sity of Texas, at El Paso, in Philadel­phia, and in Puerto Rico. I was later able to con­tinue to invite teach­ers to per­form this out­stand­ing play, in Chicago, through the Asso­ciate Col­leges of the Mid­west, and in Madrid, both at the Uni­ver­si­dad Com­plutense and at the Fun­dación José Ortega y Gas­set. This play is included in this col­lec­tion in the book Ensayo general]

I am con­vinced that one is bet­ter able to teach some­thing one has enjoyed doing. And just as Isabel Cam­poy and I empha­size, in our courses of Authors in the Class­room, that teach­ers who cre­ate their own books will be bet­ter able to get their stu­dents to become authors, I believe that encour­ag­ing teach­ers to do the­atre and expe­ri­enc­ing the rich­ness of the process would bet­ter allow them to incor­po­rate plays in their reg­u­lar teaching.

For a delight­ful anec­dote that shows the magic of the­atre click here: Let’s Raise the Cur­tain! The Ben­e­fit of The­atre in the School.

You can also find more about my per­sonal expe­ri­ence with the­atre in the sec­tion “It’s Play Time!” in Alma Flor Ada and You vol­ume II, pub­lished by Libraries Unlimited.

READERS’ RESPONSES

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