Ai 24 Guide To Print
Ai 24 Guide To Print
Ai 24 Guide To Print
Theme
Theme topics should be broad so that students have a wealth of ideas to draw from.
Theme suggestions:
• Dreams
• Emotions
• Geography
• The World Around Me
• The Future
• Secrets
• The environment
• My neighborhood
• Culture
• Work and play
• Hobbies
• Family
• Growing up
• School
• History
• Regions
• Science
• Wisconsin
• Native Americans
• Ancient Civilizations
• Countries
• Fairytales
• Books
• Seasons
• Heroes and History
• Heritage
Creative Writing
Goals: To stimulate imagination, give writers images and ideas for writing, to connect
writers with their bodies and senses, get them out of their heads.
Rules:
• Hands to yourself. Work alone.
• Listen. Listen to instructions and don’t talk about what you’re doing. (At the
beginning of the exercises establish a phrase/visual that students will freeze to when
they need to listen for new directions (repeating a clapping pattern, replicating a
thumb up in the air etc)).
• Appropriate indoor behavior-stay off the furniture, stay in the room, no imaginary
guns, control yourself.
• Keep in mind the theatre activities are meant to inspire writing ideas.
• When it’s time to write, you must write something. Write anything, just write.
• Stretch and Shrink- Have students make themselves as tall as possible and to the
count of 10 must make themselves as small as possible. Be ridiculous, tell them to
open/close their eyes, ears, nose and toes. Make sure students are listening to the
counts so that their movement/change in shape mirrors how close they are to 10
(basically you don’t want them to drop to the floor by the time you make it to
three).
• Have students use their bodies to create the first letter of their name.
• Have students loosen up their bodies by doing simple shoulder and head rolls,
rotating arms, bend over to touch their toes etc.
• Students stand in a circle count off by numbers and each student must be slightly
louder than the person before them. The first person is the quietest and the last
the loudest.
• Have students repeat back various sounds rhythms with their voices.
Character Exercises:
Index Cards
• Ahead of time write on note cards different characters/ideas for kids to act out. Ex:
Topic is Geography: Various card ideas “Hurricane, Hawaii, Farm, Mountain”
Give students a few minutes to look at their card and practice on their own, then
have them stand in a circle and have volunteers act out what was on their card and
have the other students guess what was on their card.
Valuable Object
• Have students think up a character/situation and then find an imaginary object that
their character would want and have them use the object. After a few minutes tell
them the object got 10 times bigger/smaller and they must use this object, change
the size a few times, then have them trade objects with someone else.
The theatre activity should be followed up with discussion about what ideas/characters
students created. Encourage them to borrow/use each other’s ideas as well.
Other exercises that can be used to prompt thinking about creative writing can be:
Tableaux
• Create a tableaux of the pictures- pick a painting/picture that seems to create a
situation that could be expanded on for a story. Have students recreate the picture
using their bodies, then have them come up with the story surrounding the picture.
Is the picture the end product of the story? The beginning? The middle? Have
students write out the story, then as a class write out the script and perform the
story. Or create several other frozen pictures that communicate the story they have
created.
Music
• Listen to a piece of music (it doesn’t have to be long) with very specific
rising/falling/climactic points. Play the piece several times and have students write
a story that reflects the piece. Have students get into groups and create a “silent
movie” or “silent play” that uses the music to show the action of the piece. Have
students write out the script using only movement to tell the story then have them
perform for the class. After they have performed, have the class tell the story of
what they saw. (once again this doesn’t need to be long)
Write
Instructions:
• Write anything, just write.
• Write down what you were acting or develop a new idea.
• Remember you want to write something that could be performed.
• Keep it simple.
• Longer is not better. Free associate. Use the brainstorming list on the board.
• Describe it. Use your senses in your writing. Give it an ending, a shape, an arc.
• Encourage students to write freely about the topic without worrying about
grammar/spelling/punctuation/length/print/cursive
• Tell them to write anything about the topic including poetry, rap, story, dialogue,
rewrite lyrics to the tune of a familiar song
• Remind them they are writing with the idea of performance in mind
• Remind them ideas/writing MUST be their own.
• Look for pieces of writing that have action words in them, or that can involve many
students.
• Pieces should have a beginning, middle and an end.
• Look for interesting characters and events.
• Look for pieces with humor.
• If you find a piece that may be lacking in certain qualities, this may be a great time
to edit and work on a piece as a group, either through discussion, or through
improvisation (ex: what could happen next in this piece).
• Many times the best pieces of writing on paper don’t translate well to pieces being
staged.
• Consider inanimate objects and animals as characters as well.
• Read through the piece as a class and make sure any edits that are made can be made
as a class. Sometimes this may mean that more dialogue/voices are given to
characters.
• Also something to consider and discuss in class is editing. Many times when
writing a first draft writing has many grammatical/spelling errors. By reading
student pieces aloud, this may help students to find errors they may not have seen
when just reading it silently.
• Consider using Narrators if necessary.
How to begin
Scared
Alone
Crying for help
Run
And leave it behind
Get it away
And make
Me
Brave