Imagining characters and stories
Students use their own ideas and memories to invent characters and pretend situations. They explore how a person might move, sound, or feel in a made-up moment.
This is the year pretend play grows into small, planned scenes that students can share with classmates. Students invent characters, picture where the story happens, and try out voices and movements to bring it to life. They also start watching others perform and saying what they noticed and what it made them feel. By spring, students can act out a short scene with a clear character and tell you what the story was about.
Students use their own ideas and memories to invent characters and pretend situations. They explore how a person might move, sound, or feel in a made-up moment.
Students shape their ideas into short scenes with a clear beginning and end. They practice working with classmates to decide what happens and who plays each part.
Students rehearse their scenes and try changes that make them clearer or more fun to watch. They learn that acting takes practice, like any other skill.
Students perform short pieces for classmates and family. They focus on speaking so the audience can hear and showing what their character is feeling.
Students watch plays and classmates' scenes and talk about what they noticed. They share what they liked, what the story meant, and how it connected to their own lives.
Students connect something they know or have lived through to a character, story, or scene they create in class.
Students connect a play, puppet show, or story performance to something real in their own life or community. Noticing those links helps them understand both the art and the world around them.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Synthesize and relate knowledge and personal experiences to make art | Students connect something they know or have lived through to a character, story, or scene they create in class. | TH:Cn10.1 |
| Relate artistic ideas and works with societal, cultural | Students connect a play, puppet show, or story performance to something real in their own life or community. Noticing those links helps them understand both the art and the world around them. | TH:Cn11.1 |
Students make up characters and short scenes using their own imagination. They practice turning a simple idea ("what if a dragon came to school?") into something they can act out.
Students pick a character to play and decide how that character moves and talks. They practice their choices and make changes until the scene feels right.
Students practice a scene or character choice more than once, then decide when it feels ready to share with others.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Generate and conceptualize artistic ideas and work | Students make up characters and short scenes using their own imagination. They practice turning a simple idea ("what if a dragon came to school?") into something they can act out. | TH:Cr1.1 |
| Organize and develop artistic ideas and work | Students pick a character to play and decide how that character moves and talks. They practice their choices and make changes until the scene feels right. | TH:Cr2.1 |
| Refine and complete artistic work | Students practice a scene or character choice more than once, then decide when it feels ready to share with others. | TH:Cr3.1 |
Students choose a character or short scene to act out, then practice showing the character's feelings and actions clearly for an audience.
Students practice a short scene or song more than once, making small fixes each time until the performance feels ready to share.
Students act out a short scene or character so the audience understands the story or feeling being shared. Every choice, from how they move to how they speak, works together to get that meaning across.
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Analyze, interpret, and select artistic work for presentation | Students choose a character or short scene to act out, then practice showing the character's feelings and actions clearly for an audience. | TH:Pr4.1 |
| Develop and refine artistic techniques and work for presentation | Students practice a short scene or song more than once, making small fixes each time until the performance feels ready to share. | TH:Pr5.1 |
| Convey meaning through the presentation of artistic work | Students act out a short scene or character so the audience understands the story or feeling being shared. Every choice, from how they move to how they speak, works together to get that meaning across. | TH:Pr6.1 |
Students look at a short performance and describe what they noticed, such as what a character did or how the story felt. They start to see how choices like costumes or movement shape what an audience experiences.
Students explain what they think a story, character, or scene in a play is really about and share why they see it that way.
Students look at a scene or performance and say what worked and why, using simple ideas like "the voice was clear" or "the story made sense."
| Standard | Definition | Code |
|---|---|---|
| Perceive and analyze artistic work | Students look at a short performance and describe what they noticed, such as what a character did or how the story felt. They start to see how choices like costumes or movement shape what an audience experiences. | TH:Re7.1 |
| Interpret intent and meaning in artistic work | Students explain what they think a story, character, or scene in a play is really about and share why they see it that way. | TH:Re8.1 |
| Apply criteria to evaluate artistic work | Students look at a scene or performance and say what worked and why, using simple ideas like "the voice was clear" or "the story made sense." | TH:Re9.1 |
Theatre at this age is mostly pretend play with a purpose. Students act out short stories, take on simple characters, and use their voice and body to show feelings. Most of the work happens on the classroom floor, not on a stage.
Read a picture book together and act out one page. Try different voices for each character, or freeze in a pose that shows how the character feels. Five minutes of pretend play after a story does more than any worksheet.
No. At this age the focus is on making choices and trying ideas out loud, not on polished performances. If a class show happens, the lines are short and the goal is comfort in front of an audience.
Start with voice and body warm-ups and simple imitation, then move into short pretend scenes built from familiar stories. By spring, students can plan a short scene with a partner, rehearse it, and share it with the class.
By June, students can take on a character in a short scene, make a choice about how that character moves and speaks, and say one thing they liked about a classmate's work. They can also connect a scene to something from their own life.
Giving useful feedback is the hardest piece. Students default to saying a scene was good or bad. Plan to revisit simple sentence stems for noticing specific choices, and expect to model this many times before it sticks.
Start small and private. Act out a story with stuffed animals or puppets so the focus is on the toy, not the speaker. Confidence in front of others grows from lots of low-pressure pretend play at home first.
Students learn to name one specific thing they noticed, such as a voice choice or a facial expression, and guess what the character was feeling. This builds the habit of watching closely before judging. The same skill carries over into reading and listening.