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💡 Last week, I wrote a piece called #75 To-Don’t list for improv teachers.
I got two bits of feedback:
i) DON’T lists are too negative
ii) I thought there was going to be 75 points
So anyway, here’s a list of 76 things you should do as an improv teacher.
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- Get there early and set up the room so it feels welcoming - whatever works for you, I put chairs in a circle and play fun music.
- Remember class sizes aren’t merely a financial consideration. They affect what you can achieve in a given time frame too.
- Greet new people and introduce yourself before the class begins.
- Encourage students to chat and learn each other’s names.
- Have a plan but don’t stick to it rigidly if the room needs something different.
- Teach what is there, not what you wish was there.
- Plan your class around a specific topic - ideally everything you subsequently do should feed into this idea.
- Think about appropriate warm-ups, exercises & scenic opportunities that support your theme.
- But it’s also ok to do an exercise just because you love it.
- People learn in different ways - make sure your exercises vary so people can learn by watching, learn by doing, learn by asking questions etc.
- Make your classes accessable to people of diverse backgrounds - not everyone grew up with the same shows and references.
- Start with a check-in about any boundaries and accommodations yours students might have.
- In fact, it’s best practice to check in with your students about their boundaries via email before they even step foot in class.
- Always share a boundary of your own to model the behaviour.
- Boundaries and accommodations can be physical (I don’t like people touching my hair, I can’t stand for long periods of time) or non-physical (I won’t do a scene about child birth, I’d prefer not to even see a scene about a messy divorce).
- Once you’ve set boundaries - address poor attitudes, offensive statements & bad behaviour in class when they happen.
- Give your students a clear way of stopping scenes they don’t feel safe to continue in. Like a time out gesture.
- If someone uses a time out, don’t stop the class to find out what’s wrong immediately. Move to a new scene and catch up with the student in question in a break, after class or via email.