Start Here: Teaching Middle School Interp
Interpretation centers upon a student selecting and performing published material and appeals to many who enjoy acting and theater.
In Interp events, students perform a cutting (a selection of one or more portions of a piece) of a play, short story, or other published work. Students may portray one or multiple characters and may “pop” from one character to another. Each character should be uniquely distinct with vocal, physical, and emotional choices carefully thought out. No props or costumes may be used. Interp events are ten minutes long with a 30 second grace period.
This collection covers Humorous, Dramatic, and Duo (partner) Interp.
Students Will Be Able To:
- Determine a theme or central idea of a text, analyze its development over the course of the text, and use this information to cut a piece.
- Describe how a story or drama’s plot unfolds in a series of episodes as well as how the characters respond or change as the plot moves toward a resolution.
- Bring a character to life by analyzing their spoken and unspoken motivations.
- Present claims and findings, sequencing ideas logically and using pertinent descriptions, facts, and details to accentuate main ideas or themes; use appropriate eye contact, movement, adequate volume, and clear pronunciation.
- Cut, block, memorize, perform, and revise a complete Interp.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
LESSON 1: Basic Background Information | 1 |
LESSON 2: Choosing Literature | 12 |
LESSON 3: Cutting Literature | 15 |
LESSON 4: Theme in Cutting | 21 |
LESSON 5: Writing Your Introduction | 28 |
LESSON 6: Characterization in Interp | 38 |
LESSON 7: Environment | 51 |
LESSON 8: Practice and Memorize Your Interp | 54 |
LESSON 9: Judging/Critiquing Peer Speeches | 62 |
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