Identity and vulnerability
Autobiographical storytelling in a fourth grade classroom
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33178/scenario.19.2.6Keywords:
Autobiographical Performance, Feedback, Spolin, Gender, TensivenessAbstract
Fourth grade students at Buckley School (9–10 years old) create solo, autobiographical performances as part of their year-long theatre curriculum. This paper highlights some of the games/exercises students play as they create this performance, discusses how students and teacher work together to provide formative evaluations of the students’ evolving work, outlines how the performances are shared, and thinks through some of the issues about the relationship between identity and vulnerability that arise as everyone in the classroom tackles this assignment. The paper uses pseudonyms for all students’ names. The performances the paper describes are all imagined works inspired by performances students have created.
References
Bacon, Wallace. (1972). The art of interpretation (2nd ed.). Holt, Reinhart and Winston, Inc.
“Mission, Vision, & Values” (The Buckley School) Link:
http://www.buckley.org/about/mission-vision-values/portrait-of-a-graduate
Spolin, Viola. (1999). Improvisation for the theater (3rd ed.). Northwestern UP.
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Copyright (c) 2025 Steven Totland

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