Framework for LEARNING
French Immersion Program
Course Overview
In Grade 4, the learner
- develops language and practices for making drama (Making)
- generates, develops, and communicates ideas for creating drama (Creating)
- develops understandings about the significance of the dramatic arts by making connections to various contexts of times, places, social groups, and cultures (Connecting)
- uses critical reflection to inform dramatic arts learning and to develop agency and identity (Responding)
Although these areas are distinct, their recursive learnings are designed to be achieved in an authentic and interdependent way. They are developed, recombined, and transformed across novel and varied contexts to deepen and broaden learning, which becomes more refined, sophisticated, and complex with time and new experiences.
Guiding Principles for the Design of Learning Experiences and Assessment Practices
The Guiding Principles of Designing Learning Experiences and Assessment Practices in the French Immersion program provide guidance to all Manitoba educators as they design learning experiences and classroom assessments to strengthen, extend and expand student learning. Planning with the learner, the context, and the curricula in mind creates opportunities for the co-construction of inclusive learning experiences and assessment practices where the diverse learning needs, abilities and interests of each learner are met.
Assessment for and as learning involve learners in the process and support learner reflection; assessment of learning (commonly known as summative evaluation) measures final outcomes. All aspects, when done well, contribute to informed teaching and reliable judgment of learner progress.
Guiding Principles for Evaluation and Reporting
The Guiding Principles for Evaluation and Reporting are currently still under development and not yet available. When completed, a notification will be added to the Manitoba Framework for Learning “What’s New?” page on the website.
Learning Outcomes
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4-DR-M1: The learner demonstrates an understanding of and a facility with a variety of dramatic forms.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Participate collaboratively in a variety of grade-appropriate dramatic forms.
Examples:
- pantomime, storytelling, choral speaking, choral reading, improvisation, puppetry, tableau, story theatre
- Readers Theatre
- collective creation
- radio plays, learner in role, mime, monologue, farce, melodrama
- Identify and describe, using appropriate vocabulary, the basic characteristics of dramatic forms in own dramatic arts learning experiences.
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4-DR-M2: The learner develops competencies for using the tools and techniques of body, mind, and voice in a variety of contexts.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Use voice, dialogue, body, gesture, and movement selectively to establish characters and roles and to express feelings.
- Take on different points of view in dramatic play.
- Collect information to stimulate and develop own ideas for dramatic arts creation.
- Collaborate with others in the interpretation of characters.
- Sustain a willing suspension of disbelief by staying focused and in character in play experiences.
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4-DR-M3: The learner demonstrates an understanding of and a facility with theatrical elements that contribute to the dramatic arts.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Demonstrate an understanding of beginning, problem, and resolution as basic components of dramatic play.
- Respond to, use, and create tension to develop dramatic play experiences.
- Demonstrate an understanding of how scripts are organized (e.g., characters, dialogue, stage directions).
- Make, select, and use costumes, props, and sets for specific play experiences.
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4-DR-CR1: The learner generates ideas for creating drama using a variety of sources.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Draw inspiration from personal experiences and relevant sources (e.g., feelings; memories; imagination; themes; observations; visual stimuli; learning in other subject areas; poems; stories; music; daily, family, or community life) to ignite ideas and questions for dramatic arts creation.
- Consider other arts disciplines (visual arts, dance, media arts, music) and other subject areas to inspire and trigger ideas for dramatic arts creation.
- Explore the tools and techniques (body, mind, voice) and use improvisation to generate ideas for dramatic arts creation.
- Create and use play areas for specific play experiences and use a variety of objects imaginatively as props.
- Engage in collaborative idea generation/brainstorming as inspiration for dramatic arts creation.
- Collect information to stimulate and develop own ideas for dramatic arts creation.
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4-DR-CR2: The learner experiments with, develops, and uses ideas for creating drama.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Experiment with drama tools (body, voice, and mind), and costumes, props, or found objects to test and elaborate ideas.
- Make decisions, with increasing independence, about the selection and use of ideas and dramatic elements and forms in own original work and in interpreting the work of others.
- Explain own decisions regarding the selection and use of ideas and dramatic elements and forms.
- Incorporate serendipitous discoveries into own creative work, as appropriate.
- Develop and extend dramatic arts ideas individually and in collaboration with others.
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4-DR-CR3: The learner revises, refines, and shares dramatic arts ideas and creative work.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Share work in progress to inform revisions.
- Revise, refine, and rehearse drama work in response to peer/teacher feedback with communicative intent and audience in mind.
- Finalize own dramatic works (e.g., make appropriate decisions as to whether own work is “finished”).
- Share own dramatic work with others through performances, scripts, or video recordings.
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4-DR-C1: The learner experiences and develops an awareness of people and practices from various times, places, social groups, and cultures.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Perform, observe, and demonstrate an understanding of plays and stories from different times, places, social groups, and cultures (include plays and stories from past and present and from global, Canadian, and Manitoban cultures, including First Nations, Métis, and Inuit,).
- Identify, share, and talk about examples of dramatic play and dramatic performances experienced at home, at school, and in the community.
- Demonstrate an awareness of drama artists, venues, and/or companies in own community, in Manitoba, in Canada, and in various global contexts.
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4-DR-C2: The learner experiences and develops an awareness of a variety of dramatic forms, styles, and traditions.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Demonstrate an awareness of different kinds of drama and theatre.
- Recognize that the dramatic arts are an art form, along with dance, literary arts, music, and visual arts.
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4-DR-C3: The learner demonstrates an understanding of the roles, purposes, and meanings of the dramatic arts in the lives of individuals and in communities.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Explain a variety of purposes and roles for the dramatic arts in own community and in other places and times.
- Demonstrate an awareness of the intended meanings and/or purposes of the dramatic arts encountered in own performance and viewing experiences.
- Demonstrate an appreciation of the dramatic arts as a means of experiencing and exploring own and others’ lives (e.g., feelings, values, stories, events, cultures).
- Demonstrate an awareness of ways in which the dramatic arts reflect, influence, and shape issues and events, as well as traditions, values, beliefs, and identities of individuals and groups.
- Demonstrate an understanding of ways to interact appropriately in dramatic arts situations as participants, audience members, and performers.
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4-DR-R1: The learner generates initial reactions to dramatic arts experiences.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Take time to perceive dramatic arts experiences before sharing opinions and making judgments.
- Make personal connections to previous experiences with the dramatic arts and other art forms.
- Express first impression of own and others’ dramatic arts work (e.g., thoughts, feelings, intuition, associations, questions, experiences, memories, stories, connections to other disciplines).
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4-DR-R2: The learner observes and describes dramatic arts experiences.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Discern details about drama/theatre elements, forms, styles, tools, and techniques.
- Use appropriate dramatic arts vocabulary to observe and describe dramatic arts experiences.
- Recognize different noticings and build common understanding about dramatic arts.
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4-DR-R3: The learner analyzes and interprets dramatic arts experiences.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Analyze how dramatic arts elements communicate meaning.
- Reflect, share, and explain personal responses (e.g., feelings, thoughts, images) evoked by dramatic arts experiences.
- Examine others’ interpretations to understand diverse perspectives and inform new thinking about dramatic arts.
- Co-construct criteria to critically analyze and evaluate dramatic arts works and experiences.
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4-DR-R4: The learner constructs meaning and applies new understandings from dramatic arts experiences.
The learner is able to do the following:
- Justify own preferences, ideas, and interpretations about the dramatic arts.
- Recognize and respect that individuals and groups may have different preferences, ideas, interpretations, and opinions about the dramatic arts.
- Make informed choices for decision-making about dramatic arts.
Curriculum Implementation Resources
Grade 4 - Curriculum Implementation Resources: Web Pages
Grade 4 - Curriculum Implementation Resources: Multimedia
Grade 4 - Curriculum Implementation Resources: Documents