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5 Reasons Theater Makes Kids Better People: Kids Act LA

While your children are still young one-on-one acting instruction for them may be intimidating and probably won't be nearly as much fun for your kids. They usually do best with acting classes within a group setting.


Kids Act LA acting classes are fun and they have added advantages that will help children as they grow after the classes end. This type of class shows a wide array of choices of teaching courses, programs and routines designed to provide the awareness that any young actor needs in order for him to discover the skills of acting.

Acting lessons at Kids Act LA are ideally age-appropriate. Most of our acting classes use age appropriate, fun lessons to educate our students. Even though the description of a class is similar to all age groups, the intensity of work changes as it relies on the age of the class so the kids are determined and challenged.

No matter who your kid is or what their interests are, there are 5 key reasons why being involved with theater makes your kid a better person.

1. She is discovering her Real Talents
Theater is a multidisciplinary art form. Successful theater productions at every level from Broadway to after school drama club to your backyard are dependent on a group of diverse people with diverse talents coming together towards one common goal. Theater needs performers and directors and writers and designers and musicians. Theater needs people who are strong leaders and marketers and managers and financial decision makers. There is a place for everyone in the theater and being involved can help your kid discover just where she fits into the big picture.

2. He is learning Collaborative Problem Solving
When you have all of these diverse folks coming together towards one common goal, there will inevitably be hundreds, even thousands of "good ideas." And all of these ideas have to somehow create 1 play that the audience will understand and enjoy. According to the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning, there are 5 core areas of competency in social/emotional learning; self-awareness; self management; social awareness; relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. Theater offers the ideal playground for children and youth to practice and strengthen these competencies. Being involved in a theatrical production means:

Constantly negotiating how and when to contribute or not contribute your ideas to the group
Bouncing back when you don't get the part you want or your idea does not make it into the play
Handling your emotions when you have received some tough feedback or you are tired and frustrated during a long rehearsal or you are nervous about opening night or one of your parents can't make it to the play
Handling disagreements when someone thinks the play should go in one direction and you think it should go in another direction
Overcoming the inevitable mistakes that are made -- lines are forgotten, cues are missed, sets fall down, costume pieces don't hold up -- deciding they are not the end of the world and figuring out how to learn from these mistakes

3. She is learning to Respect Differences
Theater can bring you all around the world and back again. Stories can take us anywhere we want to go without ever leaving the stage. On a theatrical expedition, we are required to enact and embody characters, ideas, and situations that are outside of our own experiences, our own comfort zones. When your kid takes on the stories and ideas of others, she is in the process of understanding life outside of themselves, their families, their towns. In learning how to appreciate and respect people who are different from them, kids are preparing to better navigate all areas of their life, work and play.

4. He is learning to succeed academically
A wide range of research has shown that involvement in theater strengthens students reading and writing skills. According to Americans for the Arts, who have compiled a summary of some of the key findings, "Learning and participation in music, dance, theater, and the visual arts are vital to the development of our children and our communities." Through dramatic play, very young children are learning the building blocks of language development necessary to make them stronger oral and written communicators. School age children engaged in theater are learning to comprehend, recall, and restate what they are reading; how to ask critical questions for clarification and deeper comprehension; memorization and problem solving skills; elements of story for creative and non-fiction writing; and speaking in front of others. One study even shows that, as high school students read and analyze difficult dramatic texts such as Shakespeare, they are improving their ability to analyze all types of difficult materials including math and science texts. Through their involvement in theater, not only are your kids learning interesting facts, they are really learning how to learn.

5. She is making Great Friends
The friends your child will make in the theater are some of the best friends they will ever have. We all know that the folks who are closest to us are the ones who have seen us at our best and our worst and have stuck by us after it's all said and done. Being involved with theater will give your kids a chance to "go through it" with a group of people; tackling a difficult project and coming out the other side so proud of what they have achieved together. It is similar to winning the championship game or traveling in a foreign land. The work is challenging but so rewarding. It teaches you more about yourself and the other people who are on the journey with you. It teaches you how to support each other on and off the stage.

So what are you waiting for, come and enroll your kid today with Kids Act LA (Specialize in Children).

Visit: http://www.kidsactla.com/
Call 949-273-8804

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