One time when it’s good to act up
- Share via
Lauren Vane
In place of a lecture on how to behave, Tiffany Winemiller’s class of
sixth-graders at Schroeder Elementary got to act out and learn a
lesson in the process.
On Thursday, the students acted in skits alongside actors from
Stop-Gap Theater, a Santa Ana group that uses interactive theater to
help students learn important lessons, in this case the value of
team-building and listening to one another.
“You can imagine if I was just standing up there lecturing them on
how to behave!” Winemiller said. “Their attention is held because
they’re interacting.”
Three actors from Stop-Gap stood in front of the students and
asked them to be a part of several skits, each one depicting a
certain type of behavior. After each skit was finished, the actors
led a discussion with the students on the pros and cons of the
behavior exhibited in the skit.
Stop-Gap actors Nancy Petersen, Lorena Billings and Kyron Gibbs
used everyday scenarios, such as a man trying to return an item to a
toy store, to show several different kinds of behavior. The students
had the opportunity to join the actors in front of the class and
participate in the skit.
“How was he acting?” asked Billings.
Hands shot up all around the classroom and the students gave their
opinions on whether or not the man’s actions were appropriate in the
situation.
“He has some disrespect in his system,” said sixth-grader Jasmine
Carson.
“He was impatient,” added another student.
In one scenario, Gibbs purposely played the man as overly passive;
in the second skit, he was too aggressive. For the third rendition,
the actors ran the skit again, this time using the students’
suggestions on the correct behavior the man should exhibit in the
situation.
Winemiller said that her class gets along with one another and is
not particularly in need of behavior lessons, but at this age
constructive teamwork is an important value.
“You want them to think about their behavior,” Winemiller said.
The interactive nature of the skits is an effective way for them
to learn, and the students can apply these lessons to the classroom
and the playground, Winemiller said.
“They’re actually practicing the positive behavior and what to do
in that situation,” Petersen said.
The Stop-Gap Institute is a theater company that performs skits
for a variety of audiences, on topics from decision-making and
friendship for middle-schoolers to skits on date rape and drugs for
older audiences.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.