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Conscience Alley Drama

Drama • 30 • 19 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Drama
30
19 students
19 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

Drama activity of conscience alley to follow up lesson on water pollution in animal habitats for 1st class. Include a stimulus, WALT, WILF EPK and cognitive and social conclusion

Overview

This 30-minute drama session is designed for 1st class students to deepen their understanding of water pollution’s impact on animal habitats through an engaging conscience alley activity. Aligning with the IE Curriculum (Curriculum Framework for IE), the lesson integrates key learning objectives from the Visual Arts and Drama strand, emphasising exploration of moral issues and expressive skills.


Curriculum Links

Strand: Drama

  • Strand Unit: Drama to Explore Feelings, Knowledge, and Ideas
  • Learning Outcome:
    • Develop understanding and empathy by participating in role-play and improvisation based on real-life and imaginary experiences (Drama Strand Unit 3 - Explore moral issues through drama).
    • Use drama to express ideas about the environment and personal responses to social issues (Drama Strand Unit 1 & 3).

Curriculum Competencies:

  • Communicating and expressing oneself confidently through role-play and drama (Oral Language Strand).
  • Exploring feelings and developing empathy for other perspectives (Social, Personal and Health Education - SPHE).

Learning Intentions (WALT)

  • We Are Learning To express the feelings of animals affected by water pollution through role-play drama.
  • We Are Learning To explore different viewpoints and make decisions through conscience alley activity.

Success Criteria (WILF)

  • I can listen carefully to different opinions expressed in the conscience alley.
  • I can speak clearly and express my character’s feelings.
  • I can show understanding of how water pollution affects animals and habitats.
  • I can work cooperatively with classmates to share ideas and feelings.

Equipment, Preparation, Knowledge (EPK)

  • A short visual stimulus: pictures or a brief narrated story showing animals in polluted versus clean water habitats.
  • Space cleared for conscience alley formation (two lines facing each other).
  • Simple props or animal masks (optional) to help students embody different animals.
  • Cards with prompt questions/ideas to guide students' conscience alley contributions (e.g., “How do you feel when the water is dirty?”, “What can humans do to help?”)

Lesson Structure

1. Introduction and Stimulus (5 minutes)

  • Show children the pictures/story of animals in polluted water habitats (e.g., fish, frogs, birds).
  • Briefly discuss what water pollution means and how animals might feel.
  • Ask: “How do you think animals feel when their homes are dirty?” (Capture some initial thoughts.)

2. Explain Conscience Alley Activity (3 minutes)

  • Form two lines facing each other to create the ‘alley’.
  • One child walks down the alley and listens to “voices” from each side giving advice or expressing feelings as if they are the animal affected by pollution.
  • Emphasise respectful listening and speaking clearly.

3. Conscience Alley Activity (15 minutes)

  • Assign roles:
    • Students on lines become ‘voices’ offering statements from different perspectives (e.g., animal’s sadness, hope for clean water, frustration at pollution).
    • One child at a time walks the alley role-playing an animal affected by water pollution.
  • Rotate until all or most children have had a turn.
  • Encourage expressive tone, gesture, and empathy.

4. Group Reflection & Cognitive-Social Conclusion (7 minutes)

  • Gather as a circle. Discuss:
    • How did it feel to be the animal?
    • What did you learn about their feelings and challenges?
    • How can we help protect water habitats?
  • Connect back to social responsibility and caring for the environment.

Assessment Opportunities

  • Formative: Observe students’ participation and understanding during conscience alley and discussion.
  • Use questioning to gauge empathy and knowledge of water pollution’s impact.
  • Encourage peer feedback on expression and cooperation skills.

Additional Notes

  • Tailor language and prompts to suit 6-7 year olds.
  • Use positive reinforcement to build confidence in speaking and listening.
  • Consider integrating a quick closing art activity next lesson (drawing clean vs polluted habitats) to reinforce learning cross-curricular.

By combining creative drama with environmental awareness, this lesson harnesses the IE Curriculum’s holistic approach to education, fostering cognitive, social, and emotional development in an engaging, memorable way.

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