Warm-ups featured here have been used by drama practitioners, educators, and artists in various formats for many years. If we have sourced a warm-up from a specific website, it is credited at the end of the description.

Most of these warm-ups can be adapted up or down with the right supports (i.e. providing accommodations so that everyone's access needs can be met). Use your professional judgment about whether these warm-ups are right for your group.

Notes:

  • It may be worthwhile to review procedures for participating safely in drama warm-ups before engaging (e.g., be prepared to stop when the teacher needs your attention, etc.). Explicit rehearsal of procedures and routines are beneficial for all students and essential for some.
  • Warm-ups should include the right to pass and the right to return when students are ready and able to participate again. This honours the social and emotional access needs of students including the need for longer transitions and opportunities to observe before participating, and physical access needs including the need for rest if an activity is overstimulating or tiring. It also honours preferences if a warm-up includes touch that does not feel safe or appropriate for a student (for any reason).

Games

Skills/Focus

Panel

Articulation, Pronunciation, Concentration

Any

Articulation, Pronunciation, Concentration, Ensemble-building, Active Listening

Senior

Articulation, Non-verbal Communication, Risk-taking, Ensemble-building, Sending & Accepting Offers

Junior/Intermediate/Senior

Concentration, Ensemble-building, Energizer

Any

Articulation, Non-verbal communication, 

Intermediate/Senior

Further Resources

  • Booth, David. Games For Everyone. Pembroke Publishers Limited, 1986.
  • Booth, David & Charles Lundy. Improvisation, Learning Through Drama. Harcourt Brace Jananovich, 1985.
  • Boal, Augusto. Games For Actors and Non-Actors. Routledge, 1992.
  • DeVore, Kate & Starr Cookman. The Voice Book: Caring For, Protecting, and Improving Your Voice. Chicago Review Press, Inc., 2009.
  • Neelands, Jonothan.  Beginning Drama 11-14.  David Fulton, 1997.
  • Rooyackers, Paul. 101 Drama Games: Fun and Learning with Acting and Make Believe. Hunter House, 1997.
  • Rooyackers, Paul. 101 Dance Games for Children: Fun and Creativity with Movement. Hunter House, 1996.
  • Spolin, Viola. Theatre Games for the Classroom: A Teacher’s Handbook. Northwestern University Press, 1986.
  • Swartz, Larry. The New Dramathemes. Pembroke Publishers, 2002.
  • https://www.childdrama.com/lessons.html

Do you have a warm-up you'd like to add?  Let us know using the Feedback form in the menu on the left!