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Using dramatic role-play to develop emotional aptitude | Dinapoli | International Journal of English Studies

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Vol 9, No 2 (2009): Approaches to English as a Foreign Language Reading Comprehension: Research and Pedagogy

Using dramatic role-play to develop emotional aptitude

Russell Dinapoli

Abstract

As university educators, we need to prepare students for the transition from the information age to what Daniel H. Pink (2005) calls the conceptual age, which is governed by artistry, empathy and emotion, by including in the curricula activities that stimulate both hemispheres of the brain. This can be done by promoting activities that energize what Daniel Goleman (1995) refers to as emotional intelligence, and it further maintains that, as Paul Ekman (2003) suggests, the ability to detect feelings improves communication. Recognizing the need to include in the curricula procedures that help develop students’ right brain aptitudes and enhance their communication skills, I have endeavoured to introduce dramatic scene study as a sustained activity in my English for Specific Purposes courses at the Universidad de Valencia. My aim was to energize the students’ creative and emotional aptitudes, as well as to dynamize effective teamwork. This article sustains that dramatic role-play, based on scripted scene study and related improvisational activities, is one way of achieving this.

Keywords

ESL; EFL drama; scene study; affective; role-play; emotion; creativity; emotional aptitude; reading

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Online ISSN: 1989-6131

Print ISSN: 1578-7044

Licencia Creative Commons
2012 Quality of Excellence Certificate
awarded by the FECYT
(Fundación Española de Ciencia y Tecnología /
Spanish Foundation of Science and Technology)
Open Access Sello de Calidad FECyT