2014/15 onstage R e s o u r c e G u i d e The wild kratts live! mon, apr 20, 2015 The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 1 Dear Teachers, In this resource guide, you will find valuable information that will help you apply your academic goals to your students’ performance experience. We have included suggestions for activities that can help you prepare students to see this performance, ideas for follow-up activities and additional resources you can access on the web. Along with these activities and resources, we’ve also included the applicable Wisconsin Academic Standards in order to help you align the experience with your curriculum requirements. This Educator’s Resource Guide for this Onstage presentation of the Wild Kratts Live! is designed to: • Extend the scholastic impact of the performance by providing discussion ideas, activities and further reading that promote learning across the curriculum; • Promote arts literacy by expanding students’ knowledge of music, science, storytelling and theatre; • Illustrate that the arts are a legacy reflecting the values, custom, beliefs, expressions and reflections of a culture; • Use the arts to teach about the cultures of other people and to celebrate students’ own heritage through self-reflection; • Maximize students’ enjoyment and appreciation of the performance. We hope this performance and the suggestions in this resource guide will provide you and your students opportunities to apply art learning in your curricula, expanding it in new and enriching ways. Enjoy the Show! Table of Contents About the Wild Kratts Live!.........................2 Activity: the Senses.....................................3 We Want Your Feedback! OnStage performances can be evaluated online! Evaluations are vital to the future and funding of this program. Your feedback educates us about the ways the program is utilized and we often implement your suggestions. Follow this link: https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/onstage2014_15 and fill out an evaluation. We look forward to hearing from you. Activity: Electrostatic Fields........................4 Create a Scene.............................................5 Create your own Creature Suit Power..........8 Animal Identification...................................9 Drama Activity: Bugs and Butterflies........ 10 Books to Read............................................ 13 Academic Standards.................................. 14 About Live Performance............................ 15 The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 2 About Wild Kratts Join the adventures of Chris and Martin Kratt as they encounter incredible wild animals, combining science education with fun and adventure, while traveling to animal habitats around the globe. Each adventure explores an age-appropriate science concept central to an animal’s life and showcases a never-before-seen wildlife moment. It’s all wrapped up in engaging stories of adventure, mystery, rescue, and the Kratt brothers’ brand of laugh-out-loud-comedy that kids love. The real-life Chris and Martin introduce each Wild Kratts episode with a live action segment that imagines what it would be like to experience a never- before-seen wildlife moment, and asks, “What if…?” The Kratt brothers transition into animation and the adventure begins, bringing early-elementary school children into the secret lives of extraordinary creatures, many of which have never been animated before – including proboscis monkeys, draco lizards and caracals! Aided by the brilliant hi-tech inventor and scientist Aviva Corcovado and her team, the adventuring brothers can activate their Creature Power Suits to fly with peregrine falcons, tag along remora-style with a great white shark, or dive to the bottom of the sea with whales and colossal squid! From meeting a young elephant who uses the physics of suction to bring water into her trunk, to poison arrow frogs who use chemistry as their defense, to peregrine falcons who harness the force of gravity to fly so fast, the brothers and viewers learn that animals can take you anywhere in science! Animated Kratt Brothers, Martin and Chris, “come to real life” in a classic Wild Kratts story. In “To the Creature Rescue!” the Kratt Brothers activate some fan favorite Creature Power Suits to confront a comic villain. Through hilarious pratfalls and amazing animal ‘wow facts’ the Wild Kratts team rescues a helpless animal friend and returns her home “Living Free and in the Wild!” The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 3 Activity: the Senses Ages 5-8 Kids are naturally interested in their own bodies. Having five senses is something most take for granted, but kids are curious to understand what senses are and how they help us communicate with our environment. Animals have similar senses to ours and through learning about the five senses, your students can begin to compare human and animals senses. Objectives: Making observations, practice conducting a scientific experiment, and learn about collecting and recording data. Materials: Set up a table with some of the following items: • some different tastes (ex: sweet, sour, salty) • some items with different textures (ex: smooth, soft, rough) • some closed containers with different sounding items inside (ex: cotton balls, marbles, pennies) • some cotton balls with drops of different food extracts (one extract per cotton ball) Procedure: 1. Put a blindfold on your student and start with the different tastes. Have the student try to identify the taste without being able to see the food. As you move across the table (and the senses) be sure to talk with your child about using different senses to gather information. Ask questions about how the touch items feel, how the different containers sound. Have them compare and contrast how easy or hard it is to identify different items using one sense at a time. 2. Afterward you can have your child test you in the same way. Mix up the items and see how well you do identifying each using only one sense at a time! Take It Further - The Sense of Sight Inquire about visiting a local organization for assistance dogs to the visually impaired. If possible, try to set up a visit with someone who uses an assistance dog for help. Talk about how the dog aids the person to see in their everyday environment. Wild Kratts Video In this short video on Aviva Corcovado explores the “sixth sense” of the platypus using electricity: http://www.pbs.org/parents/wildkratts/activities/discoveringsenses/?guid=0c9cb82e-f892-402d-8a27-e588f8a3cb5b The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 4 Activity: Electrostatic Attraction Ages 6-8 Lizards represent a large group of reptiles with thousands of different species. Each lizard has characteristics that help it live and thrive in it’s particular environment. These activities will enable your students to explore the diversity of lizards in terms of characteristics, behavior, habitat and help them to identify the special characteristics of lizards that help lizards thrive in their habitat. In 2002 the great mystery of how geckos can climb smooth walls and ceilings was finally uncovered. Scientists found that geckos use electrostatic forces in order to keep a firm grip when climbing on smooth walls and across ceilings. Each gecko toe has tiny hairs that branch out into hundreds of tiny endings. Each branch of the hair (also called setae) attach to the surface by a weak electrostatic attraction. A tokay gecko has 6.5 million setae that each branch into hundreds of ends—together these create enough electrostatic attraction to support the weight of two human adults! Gecko toes can detach from a surface in milliseconds, and don’t have any residue. Objectives: Students will practice analysis, observation, conducting an experiment Materials: • 1 balloon • A flat surface (wall, sheet of plywood) • A stop watch • A table to record results (be sure to have columns for Time Charged, Time Held, and Surface) Procedure: 1. One of the best ways to explore electrostatic attraction is the balloon test. Have your students blow up the balloon and tie it off. They should rub the balloon on their hair for 10 seconds to start (mark this time in the Time Charged column) Have them move to the wall (or flat surface) immediately after and try to suspend their balloon gently on the wall (place it gently against the wall). Measure the length of time the balloon stays suspended against the wall. 2. Continue the experiment varying the amount of time the balloons are charged by rubbing against the head. 3. Another option is to vary the surface to which the balloon is suspended. Try incorporating glass, a wall, a blackboard, a flat piece of wood. Encourage your students to seek out other options for the experiment and be sure to record all the results. Reflection: What variables resulted in the longest suspension of a balloon? Did the charge time make a different in the suspension time of the balloon? Did different surfaces make a difference in how well the balloon suspended? The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 5 Create a Scene Ages 3-5 You can print these pages to make cut-outs for your students to create the scenes. Note that the Orangatang is part of the live show! The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 6 Create a Scene Ages 3-5 You can print these pages to make cut-outs for your students to create the scenes. Note that the Orangatang is part of the live show! The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 7 Create a Scene Ages 3-5 You can print these pages to make cut-outs for your students to create the scenes. Note that the Orangatang is part of the live show! The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 8 Draw Your Own Creature Power Suit Ages 3-5 You can print these pages to make cut-outs for your students to create the scenes. Note that the Orangatang is part of the live show! The Wild Kratts Live! Animal Identification Ages 6-8 Use these desecriptions to identify some of the animals in the scene on the next page. Overture Center – OnStage 9 The Wild Kratts Live! Animal Identification Overture Center – OnStage 10 The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 11 Drama Activity: Bugs and Butterflies Ages 5-6 Purpose: Getting acquainted with drama and performance, exploring perceptions through drama, and exploring what students know about the world of insects. Objectives: Students will use imagination, movement, concentration, and simple characterization to become insects. The students will be introduced to drama and performance. The students will explore the perception of self and others through story dramatization. Materials: • Paper • markers • masking tape • tambourine and/or music player • cricket sounds • butterfly puppets • images of insects, and optionally • I Wish I Were a Butterfly by James Howe (or another book of your choice) Scott Robinson, Nightlight, Flickr Proceedure: 1. Place pictures of various insect around the room, and discuss what they think of these insects. If they wanted to be an insect, what would they be? Would they like to fly, crawl, or dig? 2. Gather students into a circle, and ask them to share their insect of choice. All at once, have the students show how that insect moves, then how it sounds, then how it sleeps. 3. Sit in a circle, and discuss - what is drama, what is acting, and pretend? Have you ever seen a play? Have you ever seen someone play music live? How was it different from watching a movie, or listening to a recording? 4. Bug Walk! Have students move around the room, and call out various insects: cricket, lightning bug, glow worm, lady bug, dragon fly, butterfly. You can offere physical adjustments to try: move forwards, backwards, or walk on your toes or heels. Optionally, you can call for the students to freeze between each switch. Once the students have got the hang of this, try adding feelings and emotions to individual insects: happy, sad, angry, distracted, ecstatic, shy, curious, kind, lonely, silly, worried. At the end, have everyone come to sitting or sleeping again. 5. Growing insects. Many insects change forms throughout their life, such as a lightning bug starting as a larva or “glow worm,” and a caterpillar turning in to a butterfly. Have the students pretend we are all in a tiny little caterpillar egg. Grow-grow-grow, hatch out of egg and are caterpillars. Find leaves, eat, find place to make a chrysalis. Grow in chrysalis, transform into butterfly, come out of chrysalis, fly around! The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 12 6. Tell the students to fly all around you - it’s time to tell a story. I Wish I Were a Butterfly by James Howe Note: You do not have to use this story. You can either end the activity here, or if there is another that works better for your students, you can easily adapt the following to your chosen book. The goal is to have the children identify one or two characters, embody them, then discuss. For some other suggestions, see “Books to Read” on page 13. 7. Read up to Old One. Discuss with the students, what is happening in story? Why? What do you think the old one is? What will the old one tell the little cricket? 8. Have the students make cricket sounds. Returning to the previous activity, have all students become the little cricket. Have them show how their little cricket stands, how little cricket walks. Show how their little cricket is feeling. Have them practice what they will tell, and ask the old one. 9. In comes the Old Spider - you can either be the Spider, or have the students imagine him. Have the students tell Old Spider what is going on. You can bring the conversation to the idea of beauty and perceptions. 10. Tell end of the story. 11. Reflection 12. Has anyone ever said something about you that wasn’t true? Like the frog? Why did the frog do that? 13. Did you ever say something like that to someone else? • How do you think someone feels if they hear that? • Did you ever want to be something else? What? Why? • Do you think the cricket is happy now? Why? • If you could give the cricket any advice what would it be? The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 13 Books to Read Aliki. My Five Senses. New York: Crowell, 1989. Ages 5-7. A simple presentation of the five senses, demonstrating some ways we use them. Arnosky, Jim. Field Trips: Bug Hunting, Animal Tracking, Bird Watching, Shore Walking with Jim Arnosky. New York: Harper Collins, 2002. Ages 8-12. Ready to become a young naturalist? Arnosky explains how easy it is to become an observer of birds, bugs, and other creatures near us most of the time. Bredeson, Carmen. Fun Facts about Lizards! Berkeley, NJ: Enslow Elementary, 2008. Ages 6-7 Photographs and text present interesting facts about lizards. Bruchac, Joseph, and Michael J. Caduto. Native American Animal Stories. Golden, CO: Fulcrum Pub., 1992 Ages 7-13 The traditional stories from the author and Michael J. Caduto’s Keepers of the Animals (Fulcrum, 1991) are excerpted for this handsomely designed, well-organized volume. With skill and vitality, Bruchac respectfully retells 24 animal stories from 18 North American tribes. Each story, illustrated with a culturally accurate line drawing, is carefully documented and put into a cultural context by the author’s scholarly notes at the book’s end. A glossary and pronunciation guide will prove helpful for storytellers. Mado, Michio, Mitsumasa Anno, and Michiko. The Animals: Selected Poems. New York: Margaret K. McElderry, 1992. Ages 5-9 Anno’s detailed, delicate cut-paper figures of creatures decorate the pages of an exquisitely designed book revealing for new readers the child appeal and wit of Mado’s poems bearing titles such as “Zebra,” “A Dog Walks,” “Sleep” and “Little Elephant”. Raschka, Christopher. Five for a Little One. New York: Atheneum for Young Readers, 2006. Ages 4-6 A young rabbit explores the world using his five senses. If you are a bunny, try a taste, take a gander, snuffle a sniff, relish a sound, and share a hug. Everything around is waiting. The Wild Kratts Live! Academic Standards Overture Center – OnStage 14 Theatre: predictions, and offer explanations B.4.1 Pretend to be someone else, creating a character based on scripted material or through improvisation, using props, costume pieces, and ideas C.4.3 Select multiple sources of information to help answer questions selected for classroom investigations B.4.2 Create a human or animal character through physical movement with sounds and/or speech, using facial expressions B.4.3 Create a human or animal character based upon a costume or object (prop) B.4.4 Create a human or animal character based upon an original idea D.4.3 Identify what they need to do to make their character or scene more believable and/or understandable D.4.4 Share their comments constructively and supportively within the group Science A.4.1 When conducting science investigations, ask and answer questions that will help decide the general areas of science being addressed C.4.4 Use simple science equipment safely and effectively, including rulers, balances, graduated cylinders, hand lenses, thermometers, and computers, to collect data relevant to questions and investigations C.4.5 Use data they have collected to develop explanations and answer questions generated by investigations C.4.6 Communicate the results of their investigations in ways their audiences will understand by using charts, graphs, drawings, written descriptions, and various other means, to display their answers C.4.7 Support their conclusions with logical arguments C.4.8 Ask additional questions that might help focus or further an investigation F.4.1 Discover how each organism meets its basic needs for water, nutrients, protection, and energy* in order to survive F.4.2 Investigate how organisms, especially plants, A.4.2 When faced with a science-related problem, decide respond to both internal cues (the need for water) and what evidence, models, or explanations previously studied external cues (changes in the environment) can be used to better understand what is happening now F.4.3 Illustrate the different ways that organisms grow A.4.3 When investigating a science-related problem, through life stages and survive to produce new members decide what data can be collected to determine the most of their type useful explanations A.4.4 When studying science-related problems, decide which of the science themes are important A.4.5 When studying a science-related problem, decide what changes over time are occurring or have occurred C.4.1 Use the vocabulary of the unifying themes to ask questions about objects, organisms, and events being studied C.4.2 Use the science content being learned to ask questions, plan investigations, make observations, make The Wild Kratts Live! Overture Center – OnStage 15 About Live Performance Theater, unlike movies or television, is a LIVE performance. This means that the action unfolds right in front of an audience, and the performance is constantly evolving. The artists respond to the audience’s laughter, clapping, gasps and general reactions. Therefore, the audience is a critical part of the theater experience. In fact, without you in the audience, the artists would still be in rehearsal! Find Your Seat When the performance is about to begin, the lights will dim. This is a signal for the artists and the audience to put aside conversations. Settle into your seat and get ready to enjoy the show! You are sharing this performance space with the artists and other audience members. Your considerate behavior allows everyone to enjoy a positive theater experience. Be sure to use the restroom before the show begins! Look and Listen There is so much to hear (dialogue, music, sound effects) and so much to see (costumes, props, set design, lighting) in this performance. Pay close attention to the artists onstage. Unlike videos, you cannot rewind if you miss something. Energy and Focus Artists use concentration to focus their energy during a performance. The audience gives energy to the artist, who uses that energy to give life to the performance. Help the artists focus that energy. They can feel that you are with them! Talking to neighbors (even whispering) can easily distract the artists onstage. They approach their audiences with respect, and expect the same from you in return. Help the artists concentrate with your attention. Laugh Out Loud If something is funny, it’s good to laugh. If you like something a lot, applaud. Artists are thrilled when the audience is engaged and responsive. They want you to laugh, cheer, clap and really enjoy your time at the theater. Discover New Worlds Attending a live performance is a time to sit back and look inward, and question what is being presented to you. Be curious about new worlds, experience new ideas, and discover people and lives previously unknown to you. Your open mind, curiosity, and respect will allow a whole other world to unfold right before your eyes! Please, don’t feed the audience. Food is not allowed in the theater. Soda and snacks are noisy and distracting to both the artists and audience. Unplug. Please turn off all cell phones and other electronics before the performance. Photographs and recording devices are strictly prohibited. American Girl’s Fund for Children Funding for this resource guide and the OnStage Performing Arts Series for Students is provided by a generous grant from American Girl’s Fund for Children, a philanthropic foundation created to support programs and services for school-age children in Dane County. Since its founding in 1992, American Girl’s Fund for Children has supported programs in the arts, culture, and environment. Additional funding provided by the DeAtley Family Foundation, Teresa Welch and Nancy Barklage, The A. Paul Jones Charitable Trust, the Wisconsin Arts Board, and by contributions to Overture Center for the Arts. Learn how you can help make arts experiences real for hundreds of thousands of people in the greater Madison area at at overturecenter.org/about/support. © 2014/15 Overture Center for the Arts 201 State Street, Madison, WI 53703 | 608.258.4165 onstage@overturecenter.com | overturecenter.com
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