Drama Tuesday - A Code of Ethics for Drama Teachers

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All day long as I have been driving through the South-West heading to marking Year 12 Drama Practical Exams, the car radio blasts: Drama teacher on trial for sex offences with her fifteen year old student. Scandal cries the tabloid headlines.

A fuming parent knocks at the door of the drama office, complaining that his daughter has been at rehearsal from 10.00 AM to 10.00 PM on Sunday, even though she is in Year 12. The word passed around the carpark before morning school is outrage.

Restlessly, the cast of seventy in the school musical, wait as the Director rehearses the “star” of the show. Frustrated, the Director turns and blasts the waiting students for chattering: just wait your turn. Whose time is more valuable?

A Principal in a school taps his fingers on his desk waiting for an explanation from the male drama teacher about rehearsing late at night with an all girls class production. 

Another parent rings because she’s heard that in drama class, students are expected to lie on the floor in darkened rooms, being told to clench buttocks in a breathing and relaxation routine. She complains about this “meditation stuff” and calls it a cult.

There are questions raised about the local Saturday morning drama classes seemingly repeating each term the same tired exercises and not progressing kids learning. 

A Youth Theatre Director is using psychodrama techniques and is stunned when one participant discloses an episode of sexual abuse within her family. The Director is not a trained therapist. 

In a Shopping centre Mall, a cutie pie performance by a local drama talent school is taking place with associated stereotypes, over-acting, stage door parents and ego-centric “look at me” teacher.

These are some stories gathered from the field of drama teaching. 

There are many more.

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The purpose of this post is to ask these questions rather than answer them. 

I know that it would help me as a drama teacher educator if there was a well-developed and widely known code of ethics for Drama Teachers and Drama teaching. 

It should be:

  • Voluntarily accepted by us as a profession (always keeping in mind that there are now legal requirements to be observed)

  • Transparent

  • Published

  • Owned by practitioners

  • Endorsed by government agencies, parents, schools, community.


It is also important to acknowledge that there are many drama teachers who establish special but healthy relationships with their students. Drama teaching is relational. It thrives, when well managed, on co-construction of learning, friendships and relationships of trust. The learning in drama builds on participation, negotiation, student-centred learning and collaborative working relationships. With this learning is a need for a moral and practical compass based on clearly stated standards of practice. 

What is in your Drama Teacher code of ethics?