Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 117 - TEXAS ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FOR FINE ARTS
Subchapter A - ELEMENTARY, ADOPTED 2013
Section 117.119 - Theatre, Grade 5, Adopted 2013
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 117.119
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Introduction.
(1) The fine arts incorporate
the study of dance, music, theatre, and the visual arts to offer unique
experiences and empower students to explore realities, relationships, and
ideas. These disciplines engage and motivate all students through active
learning, critical thinking, and innovative problem solving. The fine arts
develop cognitive functioning and increase student academic achievement,
higher-order thinking, communication, and collaboration skills, making the fine
arts applicable to college readiness, career opportunities, workplace
environments, social skills, and everyday life. Students develop aesthetic and
cultural awareness through exploration, leading to creative expression.
Creativity, encouraged through the study of the fine arts, is essential to
nurture and develop the whole child.
(2) Four basic strands--foundations: inquiry
and understanding; creative expression; historical and cultural relevance; and
critical evaluation and response--provide broad, unifying structures for
organizing knowledge and skills students are expected to acquire. Through the
foundations: inquiry and understanding strand, students develop a perception of
self, human relationships, and the world using elements of drama and
conventions of theatre. Through the creative expression strand, students
communicate in a dramatic form, engage in artistic thinking, build positive
self-concepts, relate interpersonally, and integrate knowledge with other
content areas in a relevant manner. Through the historical and cultural
relevance strand, students increase their understanding of heritage and
traditions in theatre and the diversity of world cultures as expressed in
theatre. Through the critical evaluation and response strand, students engage
in inquiry and dialogue, accept constructive criticism, revise personal views
to promote creative and critical thinking, and develop the ability to
appreciate and evaluate live theatre.
(3) Statements that contain the word
"including" reference content that must be mastered, while those containing the
phrase "such as" are intended as possible illustrative examples.
(b) Knowledge and skills.
(1) Foundations: inquiry and understanding.
The student develops concepts about self, human relationships, and the
environment using elements of drama and conventions of theatre. The student is
expected to:
(A) develop characterization
using sensory and emotional recall;
(B) develop body awareness and spatial
perceptions using pantomime;
(C)
respond to sounds, music, images, language, and literature using
movement;
(D) express emotions and
relate ideas using interpretive and planned movement and dialogue;
(E) integrate life experiences in dramatic
play;
(F) portray environment,
character, and actions; and
(G)
demonstrate correct use of basic theatrical terminology.
(2) Creative expression: performance. The
student interprets characters using the voice and body expressively and creates
dramatizations. The student is expected to:
(A) demonstrate safe use of the voice and
body;
(B) describe characters,
their relationships, and their surroundings in detail;
(C) create movements and portray a character
using dialogue appropriately;
(D)
dramatize literary selections in unison, pairs, or groups, demonstrating a
logical connection of events and describing the characters, their
relationships, and their surroundings; and
(E) create simple stories collaboratively
through imaginative play, improvisations, and story dramatizations,
demonstrating a logical connection of events describing the characters, their
relationships, and their surroundings.
(3) Creative expression: production. The
student applies design, directing, and theatre production concepts and skills.
The student is expected to:
(A) demonstrate
character, environment, action, and theme using props, costumes, and visual
elements;
(B) alter space
appropriately to create suitable performance environments for
playmaking;
(C) plan dramatizations
collaboratively; and
(D) interact
cooperatively with others in dramatizations.
(4) Historical and cultural relevance. The
student relates theatre to history, society, and culture. The student is
expected to:
(A) explain theatre as a
reflection of life in particular times, places, cultures, and oral traditions
specific to American history;
(B)
examine the role of live theatre, film, television, or electronic media
throughout American history; and
(C) analyze and compare theatre artists and
their contributions to theatre and society.
(5) Critical evaluation and response. The
student responds to and evaluates theatre and theatrical performances. The
student is expected to:
(A) analyze and apply
appropriate audience behavior at a variety of performances;
(B) compare visual, aural, oral, and kinetic
aspects of informal and formal theatre with the elements of art, dance, or
music; and
(C) identify and discuss
how movement, music, or visual elements enhance ideas and emotions depicted in
theatre.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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