Monday, May 20, 2013
Resources Shakespeare Early Shakespeare: A Midsummer Night's Dream

MND-earlyshakespeare

This CD-ROM presents an abridged animated version of A Midsummer Night's Dream broken down into forty simple scenes. Children click on the 'Next' button once they have finished listening to and watching a scene. Each scene has a one sentence summary for children to read and listen to and they can click on a character to hear an extract of a speech from that scene. The scene summaries use the first 100 high-frequency words, while the speeches are in Shakespeare's original language. The text is illustrated with associated symbols aimed at visual learners.

Three activities are offered in the form of games: characters, sequencing and comprehension. Teachers can switch between four levels to allow differentiation. The CD-ROM also offers resources including varied worksheets such as masks, colouring sheets and matching activities and a copy of the abridged script.

The scenes are presented simply using colourful backgrounds, attractive cartoon characters and lively audio recordings. SEN Assist products are designed to include all children aged 3-11 years, but younger children may find it difficult to sustain their interest throughout the forty scenes. However the CD-ROM does offer other activities and it would be a useful resource to supplement a literacy scheme presented by the teacher - perhaps with some drama activities! I noticed that in the Comprehension section, speeches sometimes get repeated. A version of Romeo and Juliet is in the pipeline.

A Midsummer Night's Dream CD-ROM is for PC only, with a recommended price of £29.99. It is published by SEN Assist and available from www.earlyshakespeare.com (where a demonstration can be seen) and from the RSC web site.

Featured Articles

  • 12 Tips for Learning Lines
    I often have to learn lines for plays and storytelling. There is no shortcut to learning words but these are some methods that I find useful. David Farmer is the Director of Drama Resource and was previously...
    Read More...
  • Fairy Tales Fairy Tales
    Fairy and folk tales are useful in drama sessions for children and adults as they provide a common point of reference and contain universal characters and themes. They offer an opportunity to develop new...
    Read More...
  • Commedia d'ell Arte Commedia d'ell Arte
    Marketplaces in sixteenth-century Europe thronged with barkers and costermongers calling their wares and travelling shows where mountebanks staged miraculous recoveries amidst masks and music. Within this...
    Read More...
  • Developing Improvisation with Children Developing Improvisation with Children
    And ACTION! Working with freeze-frames and still images is a very accessible...
    Read More...
  • Creative Drama and Enrichment in New York State Creative Drama and Enrichment in New York State
    By Ellen Flaks As a Theater Major at Syracuse University in the ‘80’s, I had an opportunity to teach young children in a Saturday morning creative drama class at the local community center. I...
    Read More...
  • The Dragon Speaks The Dragon Speaks
    By Anna Kemp For the last few years, I have been running theatre workshops for kids in the Alpujarra mountains in the south of Spain. I moved to a village there with my husband and our three young kids...
    Read More...
  • Writing Plays for Children Writing Plays for Children
    By Alison Chaplin Nearly 30 years ago I co-founded a youth theatre and it very quickly became a popular place for young people to cut their theatrical teeth. In the early days – during that stage...
    Read More...
  • Dorothy Heathcote Dorothy Heathcote

    The ethos of drama in education today owes an enormous debt to the inspiration of one woman. Dorothy Heathcote (MBE) began her working life as a weaver in a Yorkshire worsted mill at the age of...
    Read More...
  • Story Books to use for Drama
    Stories can provide the launch pad for a one-off drama session or several weeks of work. Drama strategies can be drawn on to deepen the understanding of characters and situations or to explore alternative...
    Read More...
  • Seven Levels of Tension Seven Levels of Tension
    Jacques Lecoq developed an approach to acting using seven levels of tension. These changed and developed during his practice and have been further developed by other practitioners. The following suggestions...
    Read More...
  • Whoosh! Whoosh!
    This engaging and interactive storytelling technique enables any kind of story - simple or complex - to be brought alive, even without prior knowledge of the characters or plot. As well as being...
    Read More...
  • Devising Theatre Devising Theatre
    By David Farmer
    (First published in Teaching Drama Magazine) Getting Started Devising a piece of theatre can be a stimulating and exciting journey towards the development of a performance which...
    Read More...
  • Drama for Language Learning Drama for Language Learning
    Drama is an effective way of helping students to learn languages including English as a Second Language (ESL), as it uses active teaching and learning styles likely to motivate and sustain the attention...
    Read More...
  • Forkbeard Fantasy - Multimedia Theatre of the Absurd - 4 Forkbeard Fantasy - Multimedia Theatre of the Absurd - 4
    Educational programme Forkbeard Fantasy run regular workshops and residencies as an integral part of their artistic programme. Courses range from one-day workshops to their popular six-day Read More...
  • 1
  • 2