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Drama Games for High School: 3 Easy Improv Games

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Are you looking for ways to integrate drama games for high school? Get started with these three zero-prep improv games!

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Why drama games?

I have loved drama since my 3rd-grade class got to be Arabian dancers in the school’s performance of “The Nutcracker”. When I was in middle and high school, I always wanted to do “acting” options for projects, sometimes asking my teachers ridiculous things like “can I show you the parts of the cell as an interpretive dance?”

As a teacher, I seek to give my students the same opportunities. Drama in the ELA classroom is a great way to build public speaking skills, memory, and community. I have used drama with grades K-12 in France, Germany, the US, and Puerto Rico, and students beg for more. Literally. After finals one year, I was planning to show a movie, and students asked to reprise some improv games instead. Awesome!

So, where do you start?

Start with improvisation.

Improv is spontaneous, unscripted acting, and it is excellent for building student confidence. First off, improv games are short and funny. Secondly, students are working toward a common goal. Third, improv is not graded and it is inherently “low stakes”.

Here are three great games that I’ve used for English, ESL, Creative Writing, and Public Speaking classes and workshops

3 Drama Games for High School to Introduce Drama in the ELA Classroom

1. “Story, Story, Die!”

This is your go-to drama game if you finish your lesson early, particularly if it’s the last class of the day or a Friday.

Choose four students to be Storytellers and one to be the Pointer. The Pointer picks one person to start the story, and then randomly switches between people. The goal is to continue telling a cohesive story, picking up where the last person left off. A participant “dies” if they make a continuity error (accidentally change the setting, for example) or if they hesitate too long before picking up the thread of the story. The audience can be the judge, and participants can “die” an exaggerated stage death for more fun. Last person standing wins.

Why this game is great:

*Students are so focused on the story that they often forget 29 people are listening to them give a speech. Awesome!
*Students have to listen to the other participants in order to succeed. Awesome!
*It is hilarious and no-prep for you.

2. “Park Bench”

This is perfect for building character and motivation.

This is a revolving door game. Person A starts by sitting on the Park Bench (or Bus Stop, etc.) and Person B comes in and joins the conversation. They talk for a while, and Person A motivates an exit. Person C enters and starts a new conversation with Person B (who maintains the same character). Person B motivates an exit. Person D enters. Etc.

Why this game is great:

*Students develop a character and interact with two different characters.
*It is “low stakes” because the scenes are short.
*You can use this with a literature unit by having students draw character names from a hat.

3. “The Boss is Gonna Freak”

This is one of the best team-building drama games for high school. Four students per round.

The premise is that an employee is late to work, and two of his/her coworkers have already given the boss an absurd reason for the tardiness. When the employee enters, the two coworkers must mime the reason behind the boss’ back and the employee must try to explain him/herself.

Set up: the “employee” leaves the room while the audience decides on an absurd reason. The boss knows the reason and is more of a “dummy” figure in this particular game, but it’s a great opportunity for students who want to be bossy/skeptical/etc. My students also like to let the boss “fire” a coworker who gets caught miming instead of working, but you don’t have to do this. The audience claps when the employee “gets it”. You can also impose a time limit.

Why this game is great:

*The coworkers are most successful when they work together to mime the situation.
*The employee must watch carefully and interpret on his/her feet, all while maintaining the conversation.
*The audience is rooting for the employee, but enjoying all of the wrong answers.

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These three drama games for high school are my favorites to introduce drama in the classroom and to get students speaking and listening! If you want even more ideas, check out this post featuring Halloween Themed Drama Games.

I also have some fun activities for learning the elements of drama in my TPT store, like this Drama Vocabulary bundle that features a BINGO review, a matching quiz, and much more!

What are some of your favorite drama games for high school? Share them in the comments!

Happy Teaching!

2 Comments

  • […] [Looking for more ideas to integrate drama? Read more ideas here.] […]

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  • […] Early in the year, I teach my students about Improv and I make sure they know 3-5 games that we can play anytime. My favorite fast-paced game that doesn’t involve any prep is “Story, Story, Die.” Choose 4-5 students and have them create a story popcorn-style, picking up where the last storyteller left off. A storyteller “dies” when they hesitate before starting, or when they contradict an early fact from the story. It’s active and fun, and the audience gets to judge who “dies”, so everyone is tuned in. Read more about Improv in the ELA classroom here. […]

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