Hero background

Summer Drama Exploration

Drama • 45 • 26 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

Download now

Free PDF · we'll email you a copy

Drama
45
26 students
4 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

Theme – Summer – Drama – Must include 3 drama strategies and one drama warm up game All lesson must be based on the Irish Primary School Curriculum. Please include breakdown of times at each main part of the lesson. Please use the word ‘students’ not pupils or children. What must be included in lesson plan: • Subject title • Strand • Strand Units • Learning outcomes/ content objectives (directly from curriculum) • Learning objectives (minimum of 2, maximum of 3). Each one needs to start with ‘The child should be enabled to:’ Keep them in simple language • Assessment section – to include method of assessment, assessment of, and where assessment will be recorded. • Teaching Questioning (lower and higher order questions) for the lesson and must indicate where they apply in the lesson (introduction, development or conclusion part marked with I, D, or C) • Language development opportunities in the lesson • Literacy development opportunities in the lesson • The body of the lesson needs an Introduction section, a Development Section and a Conclusion section. All points need to be in bullet points. • The introduction section needs to include a Stimulus at the start related to the lesson (like a game or something to get the children engaged), how to elicit prior knowledge, and a WALT (what we are learning to) in simple language for children to read and know what they are doing and a WILF (what I (teacher) am looking for) keep it simple language. • The development section needs to set out each step of the lesson, using the teacher will etc • The conclusion must include cognitive piece, social and transition points. Including a maybe discussion, questions, reflection and recap of WALT & WILF. • UDL section at the end to include reason, method and additional comments grid for o pupil 12 with ASD o Pupil 23 with dyslexia o Pupil 25 & 26 EAL o Pupil 4 – hearing impairment o Pupils 24, 9, 17 high ability maths o Pupil 22 lower ability o Pupil 15 social and emotional support • The learning environment. e.g. classroom • List of resources/ materials needed (including IWB, PowerPoint etc)

Summer Drama Exploration

Subject Title

Drama

Strand

Drama

Strand Units

  • Drama Skills and Conventions
  • Imaginative Exploration and Drama Contexts

Learning Outcomes / Content Objectives

From the Irish Primary School Curriculum (Drama Strand, 3rd Class):

  • Develop drama skills and understand drama conventions through participation.
  • Use imagination to explore themes and characters in drama.
  • Communicate ideas, stories and feelings through drama.

Learning Objectives

The child should be enabled to:

  1. Use drama strategies (role play, mime, and tableau) to tell a story about summer.
  2. Participate confidently in a drama warm-up game that prepares the body and mind.
  3. Express ideas and emotions about summer creatively and with teamwork.

Assessment

  • Method of Assessment: Teacher observation of student participation and creativity during drama activities, checking for use of drama strategies and ability to communicate ideas about summer.
  • Assessment of: Drama understanding, communication, cooperation, and creativity.
  • Recorded in: Teacher's Drama Observation Notebook and anecdotal notes.

Teaching Questioning

QuestionTypeLesson Part
What comes to your mind when you think of summer?Lower order (Recall)Introduction (I)
How can you show feeling hot or cold without speaking?Higher order (Analysis)Development (D)
Why is it important to listen carefully in drama?Higher order (Evaluation)Conclusion (C)
How did the warm-up game prepare your body?Lower order (Recall)Conclusion (C)

Language Development Opportunities

  • Use of descriptive vocabulary related to summer (e.g. sunshine, waves, heat, picnic)
  • Encouraging oral storytelling and explanation of ideas during drama work
  • Use of expressive language while doing role-play and mime

Literacy Development Opportunities

  • Reading aloud the WALT and WILF with class
  • Writing/drawing reflections on summer drama ideas post-activity (optional extension)
  • Story sequencing through drama tableaux

Body of Lesson

Introduction (10 minutes)

  • Stimulus: Play the warm-up game “The Hot Sun and Cooling Breeze” – Students move around slowly imagining they are warming under a sun (slow, heavy movements) and then cooling down under a breeze (light, floating movements).
  • Elicit prior knowledge: Ask students what they think of when they hear “summer” to activate ideas.
  • Teacher displays WALT and WILF on board:
    • WALT: We are learning to show summer stories using drama.
    • WILF: I show summer themes with my body, listen carefully, and work with friends.
  • Set expectations: Explain that drama today uses fun ways to tell a summer story without many words.

Development (27 minutes)

  • Step 1: Teacher introduces Role Play (8 minutes)

    • Teacher will model a simple summer story (e.g. going to the beach) using role play.
    • Students practice in pairs acting out ideas linked to summer (e.g. sunbathing, building a sandcastle).
    • Teacher circulates, supports, and prompts use of expressive body language.
  • Step 2: Teacher introduces Mime (8 minutes)

    • Teacher demonstrates miming actions such as waving, swimming, eating an ice cream.
    • Students work individually to mime a summer action.
    • Class guesses each other’s mime to build engagement and vocabulary.
  • Step 3: Teacher introduces Tableau (9 minutes)

    • Teacher shows how students can freeze in a still image that tells a summer story (e.g. picnic scene).
    • In groups of 4-5, students create a tableau representing a summer moment.
    • Groups present their frozen pictures to the class.
  • Throughout, teacher revisits questioning and encourages descriptive language.

Conclusion (8 minutes)

  • Cognitive: Discuss with the class “What was your favourite summer drama part today and why?”
  • Social: Reflect on how they worked with friends and listened carefully.
  • Transition: Recap WALT and WILF with students—check if they feel they have met the success criteria.
  • Optional quick breathing/stretch exercise to ease transition to next lesson.

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) Adaptations

PupilReasonMethodAdditional Comments
12 (ASD)Sensory sensitivitiesProvide visual schedules and clear step-by-step instructions with iconsUse quiet space if overstimulated
23 (Dyslexia)Reading challengesUse oral instructions and picture cues for WALT/WILFPeer support for reading activities
25 & 26 (EAL)Language developmentPre-teach key vocabulary with visuals; allow extra time for responsesUse gestures and modelling for clarity
4 (Hearing impairment)Hearing difficultySeat near teacher; use clear facial expressions and gestures; write key words on boardUse visual drama cues
24, 9, 17 (High ability)Advanced learnersChallenge to create complex tableaux with multiple emotionsEncourage leadership in groups
22 (Lower ability)Needs extra supportPair with supportive partner; use simplified drama tasksShorten activity times as needed
15 (Social and emotional support)Emotional regulationUse clear expectations; allow breaks; positive reinforcementEncourage peer acceptance and teamwork

Learning Environment

  • Spacious classroom, with desks moved aside to create open floor space for movement
  • Quiet corner for students needing calm space
  • Bright, natural lighting with some stimulating summer images on walls to maintain theme

Resources/Materials Needed

  • Interactive Whiteboard (IWB) to display WALT, WILF, and visual aids
  • Summer-themed picture cards for vocabulary
  • Open floor space for movement
  • Music device for light background music during warm-up game (optional)
  • Teacher’s Drama Observation Notebook for assessment
  • Visual schedules and cue cards for UDL support

This detailed, curriculum-aligned, inclusive lesson plan utilises drama strategies to engage 3rd class students creatively around the summer theme, while supporting diverse learning needs and fostering communication, imagination, and social skills in line with the Irish Primary School Curriculum.

Create Your Own AI Lesson Plan

Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications in minutes, not hours.

AI-powered lesson creation
Curriculum-aligned content
Ready in minutes

Created with Kuraplan AI

🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools

Join educators across Ireland