Residencies

Our immersive Shakespeare residency gives students tools to access Shakespeare through movement, voice, history, and safe stage combat. Each day is active and standards-friendly: students read and perform original text, analyze character objectives, practice collaboration and communication, and build confidence through embodied learning. Residencies are adaptable for grades 5–12 and can be run as a 1–4 day sequence or as single workshops. The residency can also be easily adapted to accommodate any Shakespeare play that your students might be working with. While most classes opt for the traditional Romeo and Juliet, from Henry IV to The Tempest, we’ve got ways to make Shakespeare engaging for young learners.

Questions? Contact anna.klein@unionartscenter.org

Learn About Our Residencies!

Remove the mystery around Shakespeare and give students a joyful, curiosity-driven starting point. Great as a stand-alone intro or the kickoff for a multi-day residency.
Materials / space: open floor for movement, whiteboard for key terms, printed Prologue lines (provided). 45–65 minutes recommended.
Student takeaways: greater familiarity with Shakespeare’s language; physical strategies for interpreting text; confidence using original lines.
Learning objectives:
Activities (in-class):
Teaches students how physical action and text work together to tell a story—while emphasizing safety, consent, and responsibility. Powerful for social-emotional learning and ensemble-building.
Differentiation / safety: moves are non-contact (or minimal-contact) illusions and scaled for grade/ability; risk-assessment conversation and boundaries are built into the lesson.
Materials / space: clear, non-slippery floor; comfortable clothes and secure shoes; copies of the opening brawl scene. 60–80 minutes recommended. We bring scripts and insult sheets.
Student takeaways: physical confidence, communication and consent skills, ability to analyze how violence functions in a story.
Learning objectives:
Activities (in-class):

Uses costume, manners, and dance to teach historical context and character motivation — excellent for kinesthetic learners and cross-curricular tie-ins (history, social studies, art).

Materials / space: music player (provided), open floor, playing cards (provided), costume photos (provided). 45–65 minutes recommended.
Student takeaways: concrete historical context for the Capulet Ball; embodied understanding of status and ritual; teamwork through partnered dance.
Learning objectives:
Activities (in-class):
Deep dive into the language and acting choices of the characters in a given Shakespearean scene. Perfect as a culminating day where students move from page to stage with practical acting tools, or as an independent lesson in performance.
Materials / space: printed scenes (provided), whiteboard for tactics list, open performance area. 60-80 minutes recommended.
Student takeaways: pragmatic acting toolkit (objectives, obstacles, tactics), stronger text comprehension, rehearsal strategies.
Learning objectives:
Activities (in-class):
Students become the directors, reframing a Shakespeare play in a brand-new setting and style. They learn how timeless themes can be reimagined for modern audiences—just like 10 Things I Hate About You or The Lion King. Perfect as a creative capstone to a residency or a standalone workshop in adaptation and storytelling.
Materials / space: Large paper or poster boards (provided for small additional fee), markers (provided, though classrooms may want to suppliment depending on class size), basic plot summaries and theme lists (provided), wild card prompts (provided). Open space for group collaboration. 80-100 minutes recommended, but can be scaled down as needed.
Student takeaways: Creative ownership of a Shakespeare play, understanding of adaptation as an artistic process, collaborative storytelling skills, and a pitch-ready concept for an original production.
Learning objectives:
Activities (in-class):

Information for Teachers

Grade range: lessons can be tailored for middle or high school levels (5–12).
Group size: ideal 15–30 students; adaptable for larger classes as needed
Time: each lesson is 45–90 minutes (with some exceptions); we can compress to 1–2 intensive days or expand into a weekly residency. You can also choose certain lessons to host a la carte.
Standards alignment: supports CCSS reading for drama and speaking/listening standards, SEL competencies (collaboration, self-management), and movement/PE objectives. We’re happy to map to specific state standards on request.
Accessibility & inclusion: all activities can be adapted for neurodiverse learners and students with mobility differences — we’ll collaborate with teachers ahead of time to meet needs.
Materials we bring: lesson packets, printed scenes/photos, insult sheets, card decks, music.
What school provides: open floor space (gym, multipurpose room, classroom with cleared area), and writing area (whiteboard or the like).