Setting the stage: designing effective professional development in improvisational drama techniques for foreign language teachers

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Abstract

Researchers worldwide have identified affective benefits of improvisational drama techniques (IDTs) on foreign language (FL) learners. Yet the characteristics of professional development programmes (PDPs) that could lead to long-term integration of drama among FL teachers appear largely undiscovered. Through expert interviews, a needs analysis questionnaire and a literature review, this study aimed to determine which design principles a PDP must fulfil to effectively address educational challenges surrounding IDT-implementation. The findings revealed that such training calls for a symbiosis between practical considerations, namely school environment and training conditions, and tapping into a mindset among FL teachers that allows them to (re)discover core beliefs and carry out IDTs with ‘artistry’.

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Goodnight, K., van Beuningen, C., & de Graaff, R. (2023). Setting the stage: designing effective professional development in improvisational drama techniques for foreign language teachers. Research in Drama Education, 28(4), 613–634. https://doi.org/10.1080/13569783.2022.2154143

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