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Wolf's Courtroom Drama

Drama • 50 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Drama
50
30 students
26 March 2026

Teaching Instructions

I want a drama lesson which is based on the book The True Story of the Three Little Pigs’ by A. Wolf. the children have already completed the story in English class. The drama lesson is set up like a court case for the wolf where children are split into the different parts of the courtroom and are given pieces of evidence to analyze and present

Overview

This 50-minute drama lesson transforms the story The True Story of the Three Little Pigs by A. Wolf into an engaging courtroom trial. Pupils will explore character motives, perspectives, and narrative through performance and critical analysis, fostering communication, collaboration, and empathy aligned with the IE Curriculum for 3rd-4th class students.


Curriculum Alignment

Curriculum Framework for IE: Visual Arts / Drama Strand - Drama

  • Strand: Drama
  • Strand Units:
    • Exploring and Making (3rd-4th class)
    • Reflecting on Drama
  • Learning Outcomes:
    • Drama Strand Unit: Exploring and Making
      • "Explore different roles and situations imaginatively through role-play and improvisation in a variety of situations."
      • "Use voice, movement and simple props to dramatise stories."
    • Reflecting on Drama
      • "Discuss and evaluate their own and others’ drama works using appropriate vocabulary."
      • "Explain simple drama techniques and reflect on what they found challenging or enjoyable."
  • Key Competencies Developed:
    • Being creative
    • Communicating
    • Managing information and thinking
    • Working with others

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, pupils will:

  1. Demonstrate understanding of narrative perspective on The True Story of the Three Little Pigs by performing in assigned courtroom roles.
  2. Use dramatic techniques such as role-play, voice modulation, and expressive movement to present evidence and arguments.
  3. Collaborate in groups representing the prosecution, defence, jury, and court officials to explore different viewpoints.
  4. Reflect on how changing perspectives influence storytelling and character understanding.

Resources Needed

  • Copies of key excerpts from The True Story of the Three Little Pigs (pre-prepared evidence statements)
  • Name tags or badges for courtroom roles (Judge, Prosecutor, Defence Lawyer, Witnesses (pigs and wolf), Jury members, Court Clerk)
  • Simple costume elements (hats, glasses, scarves) to distinguish roles
  • “Evidence” cards with facts or quotes from the story
  • Timer/clock for time management

Lesson Structure

1. Introduction and Setup (10 minutes)

  • Teacher introduces the ‘court case’ theme: The wolf is on trial based on the story. The class will hold a mock trial with assigned roles.
  • Assign roles: Divide class into groups—Judge (1), Prosecutor (2), Defence (2), Witnesses (5-6: Three pigs, wolf, others), Jury (10), Court Clerk (1-2), Audience/Observers (remaining pupils). Use name tags.
  • Explain courtroom rules briefly: respectful listening, taking turns to speak, using evidence to support points.
  • Distribute evidence cards to the prosecutor, defence lawyer, and witnesses with statements/quotes from the book illustrating different perspectives.

2. Rehearsal and Preparation (10 minutes)

  • Pupils in their roles read and rehearse their lines and prepare their "arguments."
  • Witnesses practice their "testimonies" describing their version of the events.
  • Lawyers prepare questions for witnesses and opening/closing statements.
  • Judge and Court Clerk learn their procedural roles (e.g., calling on speakers, timing).
  • Jury and audience prepare to listen attentively and note evidence for verdict discussion.

3. The Mock Trial (25 minutes)

  • Opening by Judge: Sets the scene, explains purpose.
  • Prosecutor opening statement: Argues why the wolf is guilty.
  • Defence opening statement: Argues on wolf’s behalf.
  • Witness testimonies and cross-examinations: Prosecutor and defence ask questions to different witnesses.
  • Closing statements by prosecutor and defence.
  • Jury deliberation (5 minutes): Jury discusses evidence and decides verdict.
  • Judge asks jury to deliver verdict: Verdict and reasoning shared with class.

4. Reflection and Discussion (5 minutes)

  • Whole class discussion on:
    • How did it feel to defend or accuse a character?
    • What new insights did you gain about the story?
    • How did the courtroom format help understand character motives?
  • Teacher links back to learning objectives, emphasising storytelling from multiple perspectives and drama skills used.

Assessment

  • Formative: Teacher observes participation in role-play, use of voice and movement, ability to stay in role, teamwork during preparation.
  • Reflective: Pupils share one thing they learned about perspective or performing in drama.
  • Summative: Teacher collects a short written or oral reflection from selected pupils describing their role and what they learned about viewpoint and narrative complexity.

Differentiation

  • Support: Provide simplified evidence cards for weaker readers; pair weaker pupils with stronger partners for lines.
  • Challenge: Pupils in key roles (e.g., Judge, lawyers) can be encouraged to develop more persuasive arguments and improvise questions based on classmates’ testimony.
  • Inclusion: Roles can be varied in complexity to accommodate diverse learning needs; non-speaking roles (e.g., jury) still essential to class engagement and discussion.

WOW Factor: Drama Courtroom Innovation

  • Use dramatic music cues (e.g., gavel strikes, tension music) at key moments to heighten atmosphere.
  • Pupils can create a ‘news headline’ after the trial to summarise the verdict creatively (e.g., drawing, slogan, mini-article) integrating art with drama and literacy.
  • Incorporate real-time 'jury polling' via a simple show of hands or secret ballot to encourage silent processing and anticipation.

This lesson offers a unique immersive experience building literacy, drama, social skills, and critical thinking based on a familiar story, fully aligned with the IE Curriculum framework for Visual Arts and Drama.

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