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 »  Home  »  Kids and Teens  »  Drama - The Most Important Subject?
Drama - The Most Important Subject?
By Marilynn McLachlan Author | Published  11/28/2005 | Kids and Teens | Unrated
Drama - The Most Important Subject?
Marilynn McLachlan Author
Marilynn McLachlan
Author: "The New Parent Code: 12 Vital Clues to Achieving Modern Family Sanity",
Penguin Books, 2005.

To learn more about encouraging creativity (and a whole lot more) in YOUR home, visit her site http://www.marilynnmclachlan.com. Sign up for her free ezine and take the $20 dress-up box challenge.

 

View all articles by Marilynn McLachlan Author

Are they a confident, clear speaker?

Chances are, that within the school system, your child spends the majority of time
focused on writing and reading skills, while not so much time on oratory ones. If
you look objectively at your own life for a single day, you will notice that most of
your interactions with other people require you to know how to speak and listen
well. Good oral communicators find it easier to make friends and will find it easier
in the long term to find and hold good jobs.

Good oratory skills are only one of the benefits that learning drama gives your child.

Here are some more:

• In learning drama, your child is learning a wide range of appropriate (and
inappropriate) ways of communicating. They learn to project their voice and to
speak words clearly.

• Your child learns those subtle cues that we all give away when we are interacting
with someone else. It may mean a mannerism, or understanding that someone is
angry - even when they say they are not - but their lips are tightened in a line, arms
are folded across the chest.

• In learning drama, your child is learning that important quality of empathy. It
allows, if only briefly, for the actor to experience how someone else thinks and acts.

• Your child learns how to act, obviously. This may seem a weird thing - who but
actors need to act? We do. We do it every single day. We put on a smile at the
checkout lady when we really feel like crap. We go to a job interview, terribly
nervous and yet hide our nerves (that is act).

• Drama works to promote your child’s imagination. Imagination is one of life’s
essential ingredients. Take for example, the teenager who has just been ‘dumped’
by their boyfriend. In amongst the tears and heartache, imagination (if it has been
allowed to develop) begins to take hold. The ‘minds eye’ starts working, and the
teen can begin to see other possibilities - a new boyfriend, or how staying single
could actually be a good thing. It starts as a seed and grows until what was
imagined becomes reality.

• Imagination gives life excitement - it keeps things interesting. Even our top
scientists need an imagination. In order to find a cure for cancer, for example, the
scientist must first be able to imagine a cure.

• Drama, by its very nature requires that the child be put into circumstances -
physically, mentally and emotionally - that are outside their understanding of how
things should be. This helps them to grow as a person.

So, you can see that by encouraging drama both at school and in the home, you are
giving your child some enormous personal benefits that will stay with them long
into adulthood.

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