Nurturing Learning - The pursuit of truth, goodness and beauty
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
  • French & Spanish
  • Nature Study
  • Art & Music
    • Art
    • Music
  • Homeschool
    • Our Curriculum Choices
    • Math
    • Science
    • Geography
    • Classical Conversations
  • Shop
  •  
Home
About
    Contact
French & Spanish
Nature Study
Art & Music
    Art
    Music
Homeschool
    Our Curriculum Choices
    Math
    Science
    Geography
    Classical Conversations
Shop
 
Nurturing Learning - The pursuit of truth, goodness and beauty
  • Home
  • About
    • Contact
  • French & Spanish
  • Nature Study
  • Art & Music
    • Art
    • Music
  • Homeschool
    • Our Curriculum Choices
    • Math
    • Science
    • Geography
    • Classical Conversations
  • Shop
  •  
Charlotte Mason, Homeschool, Morning Time

A Shakespeare Resource – Act it Out Shakespeare

Shakespeare Resource Act It Out Shakespeare

Two years ago, when we were reading King Lear with another family, I searched high and low for some paper dolls or paper puppets we could use to keep our characters straight as we read the play aloud. I never found quite what I was looking for.

My daughter has always loved drawing and painting. She started working on a set of people. She came to me one morning to announce that she had created a Shakespeare resource for families who might like to “act out” their Shakespeare as they read it. That gave her the idea to rework Shakespeare’s original play to include only the parts that were in the Lamb’s retellings we’d previously read and have puppets for each of those parts. Her adapted play is not to replace reading the actual Shakespeare play, but to allow co-ops or families to put on a shortened version that keeps the main story intact.

Act It Out Shakespeare

Hence Act It Out Shakespeare came to be. My 12 year old’s entrepreneurial idea. Currently, The Tempest is available for purchase. Complete with 11 puppets to cut out and glue to popsicle sticks (if desired), a play, and a lit of characters per scene so you can easily assign roles without going through the entire play.

Next, she is working on A Midsummer’s Night Dream and Much Ado About Nothing. Leave her comment to let her know which plays you will be doing this school year and she will add them to her running list.

Thank you for using my Amazon link

Recent Posts

A Shakespeare Resource – Act it Out Shakespeare

Adding Diversity to History in Middle School

Some Great Books and What to Do When You Need to Homeschool for a Short Time

Latin Alive! Book 1 Review

Do Your Kids Know How to Cut Safely with a Knife?

Popular Posts

Help Your Preschooler Build a Better Brain by John Bowman

Classical Conversations – Our Homeschool Year in Review

Montessori Print Shop – Classical Conversations Cycle 1 Bundle

Education Cubes – I can’t believe I resisted this long!

BFIAR – Goodnight Moon / Bonsoir Lune

Sponsored by

© 2019 copyright Interactive Labs // All rights reserved
Maintained by Interactive Labs