The following are strategies for bringing together a culminating presentation using the creations the group has developed during their work with We Declare.
Selecting Elements
- Divide participants into small groups.
- Each group should compile a list of all performative items that they have created during work on this topic and performative ways they have shared their work. Participants should determine:
- Which pieces and performance strategies they definitely want to include in their performance and are complete as they currently exist.
- Which pieces they may want to include but that will need some additional work.
- Pieces they do not want to include in the performance.
- Using the pieces they want to include, groups identify common threads:
- Are there themes, ideas, or characters that appear in most or all of the pieces?
- In what ways do the pieces speak to each other? Do any of them answer questions asked by other pieces? Do any pieces directly contradict or debate with any others?
- Are there ways to enhance existing pieces by layering in choral reading or choreographed movement?
- Is there a message or takeaway that can be offered to an audience through these pieces?
- Groups work together to assemble their pieces into one performance. In the process, they should expand pieces that need additional material.
- For an in-class performance, position groups in their own space in a large circle around the room. Determine which group will begin and then the direction the performances will occur in the circle around the room. After a group performs, they immediately turn their attention to the next group, which will begin their performance, until all groups are done.
Structure
- Use a timeline as a structure for performance.
- Create a Continuum in which:
- Tableaux of events on a timeline come to life with dialogue.
- Sculptures of eventual signers of the Declaration of Independence speak monologues about their perspective on the pros and cons of independence.
- Short scenes depict events that are the effect of eighteenth-century events.
Add Production Design
- Select pieces of instrumental music to underscore the performances or readings (or have any musically inclined students perform some music live!).
- Add simple costume pieces such as hats, coats, gloves, or scarves to suggest different characters.
- Use a dry erase board or other room divider on wheels to create a “backstage” space for offstage performers.