IntroductionManagingYear 7Year 8Year 9ResourcesIndex
  Introduction    Slapstick    Pantomime    Peer pressure    Shoplifting    Script    Battle cries  

Shoplifting

In this project, students tell a story on the theme of shoplifting. At the end of the project, they perform a scene about the key moment when a person starts to shoplift, and how this changes their life and the lives of those around them. The performance includes a range of techniques introduced over the project.


The aims are to:

  • tell a story using a range of drama techniques
  • develop understanding about choices that people can make and the effects these can have
  • learn more about performance skills
  • understand more about character development and portrayal.

By the end of this project, students are expected to:

  • have developed a deeper understanding of different ways to tell a story
  • have developed more knowledge of dramatic techniques
  • have worked on confidence for performance, both solo and in a group
  • be able to develop a character, different from themselves, that has meaning and depth.

The skills covered in this project include (but are not limited to) devil and angel, freeze frame, hot seating, marking the moment, thoughts aloud, thought tunnel.

The techniques which are covered in lessons in this project include:

  • devil and angel
  • freeze frame
  • hot seating
  • marking the moment
  • monologue
  • physicalised monologue
  • thought tunnel
  • thoughts aloud
  • thought-tracking.

The key words which are used in this project include:

  • freeze frame
  • hot seating
  • marking the moment
  • monologue
  • performance
  • physicalised monologue
  • proxemics
  • rehearsal
  • self-evaluation
  • staging
  • thought-tracking
  • thought tunnel
  • thoughts aloud.

The text which students encounter during this project includes the personal story of a shoplifter, the personal story of a store detective, a poem (‘Jabberwocky’ by Lewis Carroll) and an account of the sinking of the Titanic.

This series of lessons has cross-curricular links with Citizenship, History and English.

Students should be assessed in this project on the extent to which they:

  • develop an understanding of the techniques
  • create a character from written stimuli
  • portray the character and perform their role successfully
  • evaluate their work and that of others.

Web sites which could be used for further information on this topic include:

This project meets the following recommendations from Drama in Schools (Second Edition) (Arts Council England, 2003). For a complete mapping, see Managing: Drama in Schools.

Level 4: Making

  • Work confidently in groups using a range of drama techniques to explore situations and devise dramas for different purposes

Level 4: Responding

  • Discuss the themes or issues in the drama and the way they were presented

Level 5: Making

  • Explore and interpret ideas, issues and relationships in their drama work, and structure it using appropriate dramatic forms, eg documentary drama, and conventions such as the use of the aside

A printable version of the project is provided here:

A summary of the project is provided here:


© Anspear www.anspear.com
If you would like to order a copy of Complete Drama KS3, please click here.