The Drama curriculum is designed to develop students’ confidence, creativity and critical understanding through exposure to a broad range of global performance traditions. Students are introduced to the key conventions of theatre from Ancient Greece, Renaissance England and early modern Europe, as well as selected world theatre forms including Kabuki, Noh and Commedia dell’Arte. Knowledge of theatrical style is embedded alongside core performance skills to ensure that students acquire a secure foundation for progression to GCSE Drama.
The curriculum seeks to equip students with the ability to interpret text, devise original performance material and evaluate the work of themselves and others. Through regular practical exploration, students learn to communicate meaning using vocal and physical skills, respond to artistic stimuli and apply practitioner techniques with increasing clarity. Students encounter diverse cultural and historical perspectives to develop an informed awareness of global theatre traditions.
Enrichment opportunities, including workshops, theatre visits and cocurricular performance events, are provided to strengthen cultural capital and promote engagement with live theatre. The curriculum aims to foster a sense of responsibility, collaboration and discipline, enabling students to contribute effectively within the school community and beyond.
The overarching concepts for Drama at Bishop Wordsworth’s School are:
Greek Theatre
Commedia dell’Arte
Japanese Theatre
Berkoff & Stylised Performance
Physical Theatre / Ensemble
KS3 Shakespeare
Narrative Foundations / Story Structure
Theatrical Skills / Cultural Knowledge
GCSE Setwork
Additional Modern Drama texts suitable for GCSE
GCSE Theatre Production
National Theatre
The National Theatre provides accessible learning guides, rehearsal insights, practitioner information, and theatre‑making explanations.
This includes:
Oak National Academy
Although originally created for remote learning, these are student-facing lessons covering performance skills, Shakespeare, devising, voice, physicality, and live theatre response. Oak Academy resources.
By the end of Key Stage 3, students will be able to apply a range of performance skills with confidence, demonstrate secure knowledge of global theatre traditions, and interpret text for performance at a foundational level. They will be able to articulate creative intentions and evaluate performance work using appropriate terminology.
Drama is taught as a timetabled subject across Years 7–9 by a specialist Drama teacher. Students follow a structured programme of study that introduces major theatrical traditions, key terminology, and essential performance skills. The curriculum is sequenced to build cultural knowledge, confidence and technical control.
Year 7
Year 8
Year 9
By the end of Key Stage 4, students following OCR GCSE Drama will be able to create and develop ideas for devised performance, apply technical and performance skills to communicate meaning, and analyse and evaluate live and recorded theatre. They will demonstrate coherent understanding of theatrical style, context and processes in line with OCR assessment criteria.
Drama students will leave with enhanced communication skills, resilience, collaborative discipline and an informed appreciation of theatrical practice. These attributes will support their wider academic progression and contribute to their development as confident and reflective young people.
The qualification comprises three components: Devising Drama, Presenting and Performing Texts and Drama: Performance and Response.
Centre Text
Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller is studied as the principal performance text and for analytical preparation aligned to Component 03 requirements.
Coordinator and Teacher of Drama: Marcel Corson mxc@bishopwordsworths.org.uk