Essay On Musical Theatre

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Musical theatre is a widely diverse, entertaining, and fascinating field. Yet, it is misunderstood by so many. Young students with interests in theatre are constantly insulted. Those trying to succeed in theatre as a career are looked down on. The world of musical theatre is neglected, forgotten, and ridiculed in modern society. As a result of this behavior, musical theatre and art activities in general suffer extreme budget cuts and attention loss in schools. Administrators put their funds and focus on their losing high school football team rather than the drama club which includes a handful of students who could very well be successful on Broadway one day. “Ideology, practice and evaluation: Developing the effectiveness of Theatre in Education” …show more content…

In “Ideology, practice and evaluation: Developing the effectiveness of Theatre in Education”, an experiment is conducted where a school puts on a play with a specific lesson, and students’ reactions and thoughts are recorded. Months later, the students are asked what they remembered about the play, and their responses were recorded to see how creative lessons impact a student’s ability to learn content. Garth, Allen, and Dalrymple describe, “The enthusiasm of the children we spoke to and their recall of the detail of the play some time later (down to the accents and mannerisms of specific characters) suggested that the day offered an enhanced learning experience.” (Garth et al.) Evan when approached months later, students were still able to remember the lesson of the play, due to the art’s unique way of posing an issue. Additionally, Garth, Allen, and Dalrymple explain, “It was often pointed out that drama is important for a child's emotional development and as a counter or balance to science and mathematics. However, in The Rationality of Feeling David Best (1992) challenges assumptions about the separation of the human faculties of feeling (affective/creative realms) and objective reasoning (cognitive/rational realms), and the consequent notion that art is, therefore, concerned primarily with feelings, and science with rationality.” (Garth, et al.) Scientifically, creative lessons stick in students’ brains in a different way that mathematic or scientific lessons do. This way, if lessons are posed in a more creative way, or even if this creative aspect was left available to students, they might perform better in school. Even if a drama program was available in school and it wasn’t connected to specifically learning, the student could internally connect the art and learning and perform

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