BURLEY and Woodhead Church of England Primary School has teamed up with Leeds Beckett University and the Alive and Kicking Theatre Company to investigate creative ways of increasing children’s motivation for writing.

At a time when government testing of spelling, punctuation and grammar could lead to less creativity in the teaching of writing, the project provides alternative approaches for the school and their teachers. These approaches will engage children and give them a strong investment in their writing, whilst also being able to satisfy curriculum demands and statutory testing.

During the seven months project, funded by the United Kingdom Literary Association (UKLA), teachers at Burley and Woodhead School will be trained by Alive and Kicking and Leeds Beckett researchers to use drama and to adopt the identity of a writer when teaching writing to their classes.

Andrew Wilkinson, deputy head teacher of Burley and Woodhead School, said: “It is important that we continually inspire and excite the children we teach and continue to provide them with opportunities to express their creativity. At our school we know how valuable drama is for inspiring and motivating children with their writing. It is also a powerful tool to enable children to investigate and explore their ideas, as well as for addressing social and emotional aspects of learning. I am keen to help our teachers to develop their understanding of how drama can help children.

“The pupils are going to absolutely love the sessions. Working through drama allows children to immerse themselves in a story so that they know it and own it. Being involved in story-making in this way gives children the space to play around with and develop their ideas. It will deepen their engagement and strengthen their motivation for writing.

“As the practice becomes embedded within the school, we will be able to expand it into other curriculum areas such as history, geography or science where the children can address problems within particular settings and empathise with characters, dilemmas and different subject matter. It is not about acting: we want to use the project to build a story-making community at the school.”

Dr Tom Dobson, Principal Lecturer in the Carnegie School of Education and project leader, said: “National curriculum changes in England, and the accompanying testing of technical aspects of writing, have created a situation where the teaching of writing is at risk of becoming very one-way and instructive, and less engaging, for children.

“At the same time, there is a strong evidence-base indicating that the use of dramatic enquiry – a drama-based practice where the teacher and pupils work in roles within a fiction to explore a story in a particular setting with developing characters – as well as the creation of a ‘community of writers’, where the teacher writes alongside the children as a role model, can make the process of writing more meaningful for children.”

John Mee, Associate Director at Alive and Kicking Theatre Company, said: “We will go into the classroom with the structure of a story – a setting, a time and place – and offer opportunities for the children to build the piece – who are the characters, and why are they there? This gives the children lines of enquiry and encourages them to lead the process.

“We will then show the teachers how the practice works in the classroom before assisting them in planning future work, whilst supporting them and building their confidence to run their own sessions. The idea is that we provide the structure for support and provoke children into thinking and writing.”