Module Information
Course Delivery
Delivery Type | Delivery length / details |
---|---|
Seminars / Tutorials | 10 x 3hr: The work will be guided by a number of staff-led seminars and working sessions and will be subject to continuous monitoring through regular viewing sessions, tutorials and feedback sessions |
Assessment
Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | Group Performance (45-60 minutes) | 60% |
Semester Assessment | Creative Portfolio | 40% |
Supplementary Assessment | Creative Portfolio | 40% |
Supplementary Assessment | Critical Essay (4000 words) | 60% |
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this module, students should be able to:
1. locate and implement appropriate rehearsal methodologies and identify and implement appropriate compositional skills.
2. create a live performance that negotiates issues of collaboration, dramaturgical form, resources and performer-audience relationships.
3. demonstrate increasingly sophisticated judgments in their response to a given brief.
4. show innovation and imagination in the compositional strategies used.
5. analyse the collaborative and compositional working processes involved in making a performance and situate these within a wider understanding of contemporary theatre and performance
Brief description
This module offers an opportunity for students to conceive, develop, rehearse, produce and present their own full-length performance project in collaborative groups. With tutorial support from staff, students create a 45-minute live performance, which can be studio-based or site-based.
Content
The process that students will undergo as part of the development of a, collaborative performance piece will typically include the following:
- the exploration of a series of choices regarding the formation of a collaborative group
- the negotiation of roles within the group, starting points for the work, aesthetic choices and collaborative theatre-making methodologies
- research into and the application of different dramaturgical models
- appropriate scoring or scripting
- the planning and implementation of rehearsals and appropriate training
- the planning and implementation of scenographic and technological elements
- the management of budget, time and technical resources
- the identification and evaluation of audience-performer relationships and the generation of an audience for the live event
- the culmination in a public live event
Throughout students will be encouraged to apply reflexive and critical self-evaluation of the process leading up to and the realisation of the performance event in the context of a wider understanding of contemporary theatre and performance.
Aims
- consolidate and extend students' conceptual and compositional skills by offering them an opportunity to conceive, develop, rehearse, produce and present a full-length live performance
- encourage the development of independent, self-directed learning by making students responsible for the negotiation and realisation of all aspects of the performance, under tutor's supervision
- develop student's critical tools by inviting them to apply reflexive evaluation of the process up to and including the live performance in the context of a wider understanding of contemporary theatre and performance.
Module Skills
Skills Type | Skills details |
---|---|
Application of Number | |
Communication | The ability to communicate ideas effectively orally is assessed directly through Assessment 1 and 2. Written communication is developed through Assessment 2. |
Improving own Learning and Performance | Self-regulation, motivation and time-management skills are developed through the module and are demanded for the successful completion of its assignments. These skills are directly assessed through Assessments 1 and 2. |
Information Technology | N/A |
Personal Development and Career planning | Transferable skills (managing personal workloads and meeting deadlines, designing and realizing assessment project) are developed through the completion of assessment tasks 1 and 2. Assessment task 1 provides students with an awareness of an skills in the devising of performance work, which are regarded as being valuable preparation for their move into professional practice. |
Problem solving | Analytical problem solving, outcome recognition and the identification of appropriate strategies and procedures are encouraged and assessed through both assessments. |
Research skills | Appropriate personal and collaborative research and the development of effective personal and collaborative research practices are encouraged and assessed through both assessments. |
Subject Specific Skills | See QAA Dance, Drama and Performance Subject Benchmark Statement (Version 2007). The following subject specific skills are developed and partly assessed: * reading the performance possibilities implied by a script, score and other textual or documentary sources * realising a script, score and other textual or documentary sources in public performance * engaging in performance and production, based on an an acquisition and understanding of appropriate performance and production vocabularies, skills, structures and working methods * contributing to the production of performance and/or film and/or television, for example, through direction, choreography, dramaturgy, stage management, scenography, sound and lighting production, editing, promotion, administration and funding * creating original work using the skills and crafts of performance making * using performance techniques associated with particular cultural forms and/or practitioners * developing physical skills and applying them ef |
Team work | The application of skills necessary to conduct collaborative activity, such as negotiating ideas and opinions, are developed throughout the module and directly assessed through Assessments 1 and 2. |
Notes
This module is at CQFW Level 6