In the Footsteps of Others: Process Drama

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Season 1: American Slavery

Episode 5: In the Footsteps of Others: Process Drama

In learning about slavery, students often ask, “Why didn’t enslaved people run away or revolt?” Lindsay Anne Randall explains “process drama” — a method to help build empathy and understand the risks and complexities that enslaved individuals faced. 

Essential Ideas from this Episode

Historical subjects can often seem distant and two-dimensional, making it challenging to convey what was at stake for people living through a particular experience. In learning the hard history of slavery in the United States, process drama can help students build empathy and better understand the complexities and risks that enslaved individuals faced.

Most educators have never encountered this teaching method and are often skeptical because the word drama has connotations of stage performances, costume, sound and lighting. However, process drama lessons are not about creating performances or engaging with an audience. And for the history classroom, they are not even attempts to depict 100% factual scenarios.

What Is Process Drama?

Process drama is a teaching technique in which students are presented with a problem or a situation and interact with one another using improv to move to a conclusion.

  • Process drama lessons are explorative and allow students to use prior knowledge in conjunction with their own life experiences to make meaning of the past.
  • The process is the purpose. The process drama method can help students connect with the content being studied. 

Process drama demonstrates that history is more than the memorization of dates and other facts and creates a unique framework that can cast the student in the role of the historian.

The Process:

  • During the process drama activity, students are allowed to focus only on the facts they deem most important. This mimics the process of identifying and analyzing points while writing a research paper.
  • Throughout the activity, students debate with one another — like working through conflicting historical sources.
  • At the end of the lesson, students reflect not only on their experience but also the experiences of their peers. This step is like synthesizing information into a coherent narrative. 

Process drama allows teachers to answer some universal questions in history education, such as: “Why couldn’t they have done X?” or “Why didn’t they do Y?” 

Concerning the topic of slavery, students often ask, “Why didn’t enslaved people run away or revolt?” Understanding why individuals in the past made the decisions they did is one of the most difficult concepts for students at all grade levels to grapple with.

  • It is crucial to note that process drama, by no means, can or is designed to give students an authentic experience related to any topic such as slavery, nor does it seek to minimize the horrific nature and conditions of slavery. No lesson can or should ever do either of those things. 

What process drama does do is encourage students to look at the facts and situations, to consider the perspectives and motivations of people in the past separate from their own beliefs. It is a tool that fosters empathy in students.