The Pollution Revolution

Performed by: Well Worn Theatre Company

No director listed

No playwright listed

The Pollution Revolution is an original edutainment play that formed part of Well Worn’s pioneering Climate Change Action Programme, funded by the NLDTF and in partnership with Earthlife Africa JHB’s Sustainable Energy and Climate Change Project.

The play toured to 150 primary schools in Gauteng in 2010/2011 and performed to audiences of over 30 000 school learners and teachers. The play was also performed at the Family Festival of both the National Arts Festival and the Out of the Box Festival in 2011.

The 45 minute high energy, physical theatre play aligned to the Grade 4-9 Social Science, Life Orientation and Physical Science curriculums and covered themes of climate change, global warming, energy, water, waste, biodiversity and personal/social/ecological responsibility. Each school performance was accompanied by a ‘Climate Action Toolkit’: a learning resource researched, designed and compiled by the Well Worn Theatre Team. The resource included activities and learning materials to support teachers in carrying the learning over from Stage to Classroom.

The Pollution Revolution was written and directed by Kyla Davis and co-devised and performed by Craig Morris, Jaques De Silva, Joni Barnard, Jerry Mntonga, Taryn Bennett and Lerato Moloi.

Details

Duration:
45 minutes
Recommended Age:
No min or max grade set
Recommended Grade:
Grade 4 – Grade 9
Language(s):
English (first language) No second language listed.
Curriculum Connection:
Consumer Studies, Creative Arts, Dramatic Arts, Economic and Management Sciences, Geography, Life Orientation/Life Skills, Life Sciences, Natural Sciences, Physical Sciences, Social Sciences
Themes Covered:
Change, Choices, Climate Change, Creativity, Environmental awareness, Fate/Free Will, Imagination, Intra/interpersonal conflicts, National/global conflicts, Survival

Photo Gallery

Highlights

Festivals attended: National Arts Festival (2011), Out of the Box Festival (2011)
Schools that have seen this: 150 primary schools in Gauteng in 2010/2011