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Venue: TBA clear filter
Wednesday, July 23
 

12:00pm EDT

Master Class A: Viva La Puppet: The Art & Science of Puppetry!
Wednesday July 23, 2025 12:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - $60 per ticket

Join renowned puppet master Michelle Zamora and discuss the art of puppetry, storytelling, and her project The Throwaways a community-based play focused on the impact of parental incarceration currently being workshopped at Clevland Play House as part of their Family Theatre series. Learn to conceptualize your own story and create puppets that can bring it to life! The Cleveland Play House Family Theatre program focuses on bringing adverse childhood events (ACES) to light is a gentle way that begins a dialogue on resiliency and healing.
Wednesday July 23, 2025 12:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
TBA

5:00pm EDT

Registration Open
Wednesday July 23, 2025 5:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
Wednesday July 23, 2025 5:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
TBA

7:00pm EDT

New Guard Gathering
Wednesday July 23, 2025 7:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Come welcome new members and first-time conference attendees at the New Guard gathering. Meet your mentors, connect with AATE board members, and kick off the conference. New and veteran members are welcome and encouraged to attend!
Wednesday July 23, 2025 7:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
TBA

8:30pm EDT

Welcome to Cleveland!
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30pm - 10:00pm EDT
Welcome to AATE's 2025 Annual National Conference! Please join us for some food, and drink!

Cash bar
Wednesday July 23, 2025 8:30pm - 10:00pm EDT
TBA
 
Thursday, July 24
 

8:00am EDT

Registration Open
Thursday July 24, 2025 8:00am - 5:00pm EDT
Thursday July 24, 2025 8:00am - 5:00pm EDT
TBA

8:30am EDT

Conference Orientation (First Timers & Returning Attendees)
Thursday July 24, 2025 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
New to the conference? Get tips, highlights, and must-knows.
Returning? Share your insights and memories. Let’s kick things off together!
Thursday July 24, 2025 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Beyond the Blueprint: Conceptual Set Design with/for Neurodivergent Minds
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This workshop encourages theatre professionals to think beyond technical specifications and dimensions to create more meaningful and interesting spaces that encourage creativity and accommodate the performers within it. This approach is especially impactful for neurodivergent students, providing them with a creative and flexible platform to explore, express, and connect with the production in ways that feel authentic and inclusive.
Speakers
BL

Bekah LaCoste

Bekah LaCoste is a high school executive function teacher and Theatre Program Director at Chapel Hill- Chauncy Hall School in Waltham, MA.  She has been a theatremaker, both on stage and off, since she was a young girl and currently directs 3 productions a year for a wide range of... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Building a Thriving Theater Program from the Ground Up
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
Launching and sustaining a theater program in an under-resourced public school presents unique challenges—especially when funding, space, and administrative buy-in are limited. This hands-on workshop equips educators with practical strategies, a take-home toolkit, and templates to develop a thriving program that serves their students and communities. With a strong emphasis on culturally responsive pedagogy and trauma-informed practices, this session explores how to create an inclusive, student-centered program that fosters creativity, engagement, and belonging. Participants will gain actionable insights on: Maximizing Limited Resources: Finding creative solutions for space, materials, and production needs. Sustaining Funding & Partnerships: Budgeting strategies, grant-writing tips, and building partnerships with local organizations, including universities. Using Data for Advocacy & Growth: Collecting qualitative and quantitative data to secure administrative buy-in, attract grants, and expand resources. Student Engagement & Program Culture: Trauma-informed strategies to build a program that students invest in and take ownership of. Marketing & Branding Your Program: Creating an identity and leveraging community outreach to boost participation and support. This highly interactive, solution-oriented session ensures that participants leave with concrete tools, strategies, and next steps to develop and sustain theater programs in any environment.
Speakers
EG

Emily Garven

Boston Public Schools
Emily is a Boston-based performing arts specialist and licensed Massachusetts theater educator, teaching dance and theater in Boston Public Schools. She develops and implements theater and dance opportunities for at-risk youth, believing in the power of the arts to inspire confidence... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Creating Theatre across Generations: Undergraduates and Older Adults with Dementia
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
Applied theatre seeks to promote dialogue and connection among people groups. One underserved population is older adults, including those living with physical and cognitive decline, and those living in long term care facilities. This workshop asks us to consider, what if older adults experiencing dementia and age-related disabilities reconnected with their creative abilities? What can we discover when undergraduate theatre students create collaborative theatre pieces with them? How can theatre create connections between residents in a long term care facility and young people? What might cross-generational original theatre contribute to our communities? In recent years various applied theatre models have emerged to serve older adults. This workshop will explore the Timeslips method, a collaborative creative storytelling method developed by MacArthur fellow and former theatre professor Anne Basting. Professor Norah Swiney discovered Timeslips during her training to become a drama therapist. She developed a program to bring undergraduate students together with older adults to devise theatre pieces through a series of collaborative storytelling workshops. The workshop series culminated in performances for the community in which the students enacted the original works they created together. In this experiential workshop, participants will receive a brief introduction to applied theatre and drama therapy interventions for older adult populations. Next, the presenter will lead a brief exploration of the current research in this area. Then the presenter will share experiences of implementing cross-generational theatre programming and offer lessons learned. Then participants will learn the Timeslips method of collaborative creative storytelling, and how to use it to devise original theatre pieces with artists living with memory loss and cognitive decline. The workshop will culminate with a devised piece from stories created by the group.
Speakers
NS

Norah Swiney

Oral Roberts University
Norah Swiney (MA, MFA) is a Registered Drama Therapist, a Licensed Professional Counselor Candidate, a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist Candidate, and Associate Professor of Theatre at Oral Roberts University. At ORU, Norah designed and advises the Theatre for Healing, Classroom... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Creating Theatre Curriculum that Opens Dialogue and Facilitates Change
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
The Teaching Artists at the Cleveland Play House (CPH) use the principles of trauma-informed care and culturally relevant teaching as the cornerstone of their four-pillar theatre education model. This approach deepens artistic understanding and social and emotional competencies in safe and constructive environments. They have found that by creating community-friendly theatrical events and programs that gently start dialogues between children and their family members, you can open multi-generational conversations and begin to shift the burden of change from individual solutions to community solutions. Using examples from CPH Family Theatre Productions and the CARE Theatre Education Program, you will walk through the steps of creating an engaging and impactful curriculum for your performances and programs that can be shared with schools, families, and community members as a catalyst for community development and social change.
Speakers
avatar for Jenna Messina

Jenna Messina

Associate Director, CARE Cleveland, Cleveland Play House
Jenna Messina is a theatre artist and educator from Cleveland, Ohio. She graduated from Baldwin Wallace University with a Bachelor's Degree in Theatre Acting and Directing and is currently pursuing a Master’s Degree in Applied Arts in Health at Ohio University. Jenna serves as the... Read More →
TK

Thomas Kazmierczak

Cleveland Play House
Thomas T. Kazmierczak III oversees the highly acclaimed National CARE Project that serves thousands of youth in North East Ohio, WNY and Las Vegas. He earned his MA in Theatre Education from Emerson College of Boston and holds BA’s in Theatre and Psychology from SUNY Buffalo. Additionally... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Encouraging Dialogue through Interview-based Theatre and Storytelling Projects
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
Personal stories provide a window into the unique ways people make meaning of their lives, their traditions, and the world around them. Listening to others tell their stories can help develop listening and interviewing skills, emotional and cultural intelligence, and empathy through understanding the different ways people live and think about their lives. Add to this the element of turning interviews into a performance, and questions as how to represent these voices authentically and ethically, yet shaped to share with an audience, also emerge. This workshop explores how oral history storytelling and verbatim/documentary theatre projects based on interviews can be conducted around themes that impact the students and their communities. How does one guide the selection of a theme for a student or class project? What does preparation and ethics look like for conducting interviews, shaped to the age and abilities of the students? How does one guide the process of working with the material or devising to produce a storytelling or theatre performance? What does an economy of care look like in this process, and when is it important (and how) to give back the performance to those whose stories are being shared? The workshop provides a hands-on opportunity to try out methods, reflect on these questions in a collaborative space, and share any personal experiences with interview-based art or performance projects. Dialogue is what happens along the way in project-based learning.
Speakers
JR

Julia Reimer

LCC International University
Julia Reimer (she/her) has 30 years' experience in educational and community/community-based theatre, including devising and documentary projects in youth theatre programs, university contexts, and community-based theatre. She has worked in the US and internationally, and currently... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Making Connections Through Story Drama
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This story drama workshop centers around the picture book, "Encounter" by Brittany Luby, and illustrated by Mikaela Goade. Participants will be introduced to drama and movement exercises encouraging active engagement in an anchor text, rather than being objective observers or audience members. They will participate as their students would, while still having an opportunity to ask questions and engage in professional discourse as educators. They will learn how to conduct a story drama class by guiding their students through text exploration using character, relationship, and environment-building, writing in role, improvisation, soundscapes, dialogue, creatively and deliberately moving through space, and more. Teachers will discover that drama does not require a culminating, rehearsed performance piece that is scripted and needs an audience. Instead, drama often resonates deeper when students are invited to use their imaginations to bring a story to life. Story drama helps students understand differing perspectives, build empathy, and gain a deeper understanding of themes in a book, poem, or other text. Story drama encourages problem-solving, teamwork, creativity, risk-taking, openness, and imagination. This presentation will show participants how drama can be embedded across the curriculum to help students understand a wide variety of academic and interpersonal topics, rather than just in its own “drama silo.”
Speakers
avatar for Michelle Gram Giesen

Michelle Gram Giesen

Owner, Arts Educator, Story Drama Suite
Michelle Gram Giesen has worked at the Toronto District School Board in Canada for 16 years, as an elementary teacher, drama specialist, integrated arts teacher, librarian, and presently as an Arts Teacher Mentor with the board. She is an actor, puppeteer, voice actor, and the founder... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

New Guard Panel: Competitive Educational Theater: Helpful or Harmful?
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This session examines the effects of competition in educational theater and its potential harms to students' community-building and emotional safety. Through a mini-workshop, participants will explore how competition may influence student performance and group dynamics by comparing two performance groups—one with competition and the other without—followed by a discussion on the effects of competitive environments in theater education.
Speakers
SB

Sam Briggs

University of Utah
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

New Guard Panel: Feelings Forecast: Social and Emotional Learning In-Practice for the K-8 Drama Classroom
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This session focuses on integrating social and emotional learning (SEL) practices in K-8 drama classrooms. Participants will explore how theater educators can foster emotional intelligence, empathy, and self-awareness through drama activities, supporting students’ social and emotional development alongside their artistic growth.
Speakers
SB

Sam Briggs

University of Utah
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

New Guard Panel: The 2025 Courageous Cadence: Performing Justice Through Spoken Word Poetry
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This session explores the Courageous Cadence project, which uses spoken word poetry, devised theater, and personal storytelling to empower youth to address social injustices, including racial, gender, and climate justice. Attendees will learn how youth-led arts-based research can promote justice-centered dialogue, activism, and leadership through performance. The session will include best practices for integrating justice-oriented performance into educational and community settings, and strategies for empowering young people as leaders in advocacy and social change.
Speakers
SB

Sam Briggs

University of Utah
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

New Guard Panel: The Pandemic, Precarity, and a Pedagogy of Hope: Learning from Public High School Theatre Teachers’ Experiences of the COVID-19 Pandemic
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This research-based session presents findings from interviews with public high school theater teachers about their experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. The discussion focuses on how teachers adapted their practices, curriculum, and performances to continue providing theater education in virtual, hybrid, and socially-distanced formats. Attendees will reflect on the resilience of teachers and discuss how these adaptations can inspire future theater education practices in an ever-changing educational landscape.
Speakers
SB

Sam Briggs

University of Utah
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Playwriting Workshop: Adapting Classic Literature to Script for Theater
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This interactive workshop will guide participants through the process of adapting classic literature for the stage, focusing on the transformation of classic texts into engaging, dynamic scripts for modern audiences. By analyzing source material, exploring scriptwriting techniques, and collaborating on adaptation exercises, participants will walk away with practical skills for adapting classic works while honoring both their historical significance and theatrical possibilities.
Speakers
MK

Marie Kohler

MHK Productions LLC
Marie Kohler is an American playwright, director, writer, and producer renowned for her impactful contributions to the stage. Her work has garnered multiple nominations, including for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize (three times), the Harold & Mimi Steinberg / American Theatre Critics... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

So You Wannabe a Scholar: How to turn your conference presentation into a journal article
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
How can theatre artists, educators, and administrators contribute to research and scholarship in theatre education? In this panel discussion and workshop, journal editors, editorial board members, and/or scholars will share insights about how they have turned a conference session into an article for publication—and will engage participants by facilitating writing strategies in order to begin drafting the outline for an article. As this conference is meant to embrace progress and tradition, this session will be facilitated by members of the research and scholarship network and we encourage participants from all other networks who are curious about how to document and share their work—whether from this conference or beyond—to attend this writing workshop in order to amplify and ignite new voices in research and scholarship.
Speakers
avatar for Jonathan P Jones

Jonathan P Jones

NYU
Jonathan P. Jones, PhD, is a Program Administrator at NYU Steinhardt for the Program in Educational Theatre and the Program in Music Education. At CUNY, he teaches courses in public speaking and theatre history and he has taught courses in pedagogy and theatre history at NYU. Jonathan... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Stages of Freedom: Jewish Narratives in American Theatre
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
This panel explores the evolving representation of Jewish identity and liberation in American theatre, examining how playwrights balance cultural tradition with progressive storytelling. Through dramaturgical analysis, we will discuss key plays such as Awake and Sing! by Clifford Odets and Angels in America by Tony Kushner, assessing how these works reflect and challenge Jewish assimilation, resilience, and activism. The session will consider how theatre serves as a space for negotiating cultural identity, showcasing both historical perspectives and contemporary shifts. Presenters will analyze the impact of staging choices, audience reception, and evolving dramaturgical frameworks that shape Jewish storytelling today. By addressing the duality of progress and tradition, this discussion aligns with AATE’s 2025 theme, “Stages of Change,” illustrating how Jewish narratives navigate continuity and transformation. Attendees will gain insights into how theatre can both honor heritage and embrace innovation, creating meaningful spaces for cultural expression.
Speakers
AR

Alevia R-Plyam

University of Florida
Alevia R-Plyam is a theatre scholar and educator whose work focuses on the intersection of theatre, cultural identity, and social change. Their research explores Jewish representation in American theatre and the ways playwrights use performance as a tool for liberation. With experience... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Using Drama as a way of Processing Grief
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
grief
noun
/ˈgrēf/
1: deep and poignant distress caused by or as if by bereavement

Grief shows up in a number of ways besides death: moving, friendships, relationships, change, etc. Especially in young people, it can be difficult to understand the full breadth of when they are experiencing grief because we cannot seem to understand how often it can happen. Through creative drama, theatre, playwriting, etc., we can help others process grief through the creative arts. Together we can discuss how to make this morbid topic more prominent in our discussions so that everyone feels comfortable grieving when they need to—and using theatre as a way to process.
Speakers
LB

Lexi Bresnan

Homewood Theatre
Lexi is an educator, actor, director, and theatre advocate from Homewood Alabama. She has her BFA in Theatre Performance from Belmont University. She spent 4 years as an intern and teaching artist at Nashville Children's Theatre, and one year as an actor and teaching artist in Austin... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

11:00am EDT

Exhibitor Hall Open
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 7:00pm EDT
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:00am - 7:00pm EDT
TBA

11:15am EDT

Affinity Groups/Group Check-Ins
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
Continuing conversations and connections from past years' affinity group formations, this space will help individuals, both new to AATE and those returning, discover intersections with others. Affinity groups will meet twice during the conference to create space for attendees to connect with peers on their experience. This practice will foster relationships that may be continued beyond the conference and help all maintain a focused awareness of anti-racism, anti-oppression, equity, and justice.
Thursday July 24, 2025 11:15am - 12:15pm EDT
TBA

12:30pm EDT

Lunch Dine Arounds
Thursday July 24, 2025 12:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
These dine-arounds are casual group lunches in restaurants and parks around the beautiful city of Cleveland (all within walking distance of hotel). In groups of 8-12 we will discuss topics that are sometimes serious and sometimes irreverent. You don't need to be an expert on any of these subjects - just sign up and join the fun! (Lunch bills at restaurants will be on individual checks. Park groups will be "bring your own lunch.")
Thursday July 24, 2025 12:30pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:00pm EDT

Master Class B: Theatre and Community Voices; Tackling ACES and Strengthening Communities Through Their Own Stories
Thursday July 24, 2025 1:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - $60 per ticket
Join internationally renowned playwright José Cruz Gonzales & award-winning playwright Eric Schmiedl discuss their latest collaboration The Throwaways a community-based project focused on the impact of parental incarceration currently being workshopped at Clevland Play House as part of their Family Theatre pillar of education. The Cleveland Play House Family Theatre program focuses on bringing adverse childhood events (ACES) to light is a gentle way that begins a dialogue on resiliency and healing.
Thursday July 24, 2025 1:00pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Applied Theatre Network Meeting
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join! Applied Theatre is an umbrella term that is both evolving and inclusive.

The Network includes individuals who use alternative theatre and/or drama practices with a wide variety of populations. Two major commonalities are that our members often work in non-traditional settings (such as schools, community centers and museums) and that they seek to help people, often through active participation in the drama or the debates that ensue.
Speakers
avatar for Quenna Barrett

Quenna Barrett

Governors State University
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

College/University Network Meeting
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

This Network is dedicated to providing its members with discussions on current creative and scholarly trends in the drama and theatre education, access to support materials, and dialogue with colleagues in university and college settings around the globe.
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

High School Network Meeting
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

This Network serves the needs of secondary school teachers and those professional theatres committed to providing for adolescent audiences. The Network provides resources for the secondary school teacher, including lesson plans, support for innovative classroom ideas, and communication among its members.
Speakers
avatar for Dakota Demato

Dakota Demato

AATE Conference Manager & Director of Theatre at SPHS, South Pointe High School & AATE
Dakota Demato is the Director of Theatre at South Pointe High School in Rock Hill, SC! She holds a B.F.A. in Musical Theatre from The University of the Arts (Philadelphia, PA) and an M.A.T. in Theatre Education from the University of South Carolina.Since joining the staff at South... Read More →
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

K-8 Network Meeting
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

This Network represents the interests of AATE members who teach drama to preschool, primary, intermediate, and middle school (junior high) students. Constituents include drama specialists, elementary teachers, elementary or middle school theatre directors, or college professors training elementary drama teachers.
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Professional Theatre Network Meeting
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

This Network includes individuals working with organizations that produce theatrical events. It is comprised of artistic, management, and educational staff members from a wide variety of theatres and organizations, as well as freelance artists and artist-educators.
Thursday July 24, 2025 2:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

3:50pm EDT

Check Out Vendors
Thursday July 24, 2025 3:50pm - 4:10pm EDT
Make sure to get your Exhibitor Passport completed for a chance to win at the Raffle!
Thursday July 24, 2025 3:50pm - 4:10pm EDT
TBA

4:15pm EDT

Welcome/Opening Keynote: Nina Domingue
Thursday July 24, 2025 4:15pm - 5:45pm EDT
Nina Domingue is a Black Creole Queer Woman, Griot, Actor, Playwright, Director, Cultural Memory Worker, #NOLAGirl4Life, Teaching Artist, Hard of Hearing, and Intimacy Advocate pursuing Choreographic certification, ever-becoming. She writes in the tradition of those women who explore the interior lives of Black women with love, curiosity, and wonder. Kilroy’s List 2020 “The Lost Plays”, Cleveland Public Theater, Premier Fellow 2021, CPT Catapult Fellow 2019, Nord Family Foundation Playwriting Fellow 2019, Twelve Literary Arts Barabara Smith Fellow, 2019. She last performed in POTUS at Dobama, and had her Intimacy Choreography featured in Fat Ham at the Cleveland Play House, Choir Boy at Karamu House, RENT at Cain Park and Cabaret at Case Western Reserve University. Nina is also most proud of being a mother of 5 amazing humans, the five heartbeats. 

Thursday July 24, 2025 4:15pm - 5:45pm EDT
TBA

6:00pm EDT

Exhibitor Meet & Greet/Meet the Leadership
Thursday July 24, 2025 6:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
Discover resources that advance theatre and education at the AATE Exhibit Hall. Engage with exhibitors, participate in networking opportunities, and complete your Exhibitor Passport for a chance to win exciting prizes in the raffle!
Thursday July 24, 2025 6:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
TBA

6:00pm EDT

Theatre Excursion: Ista and Her Garden
Thursday July 24, 2025 6:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - Price $80
Roundtrip Transportation Provided
(from the Westin to the theater.)

A wise, thoughtful gardener Ista, will lead audiences through an immersive exploration of her larger-than-life garden, full of plants native to Northeast Ohio. This sensory performance will feature ways to smell, touch, taste, hear, and see all of the wonders of our local ecosystem, as plants, bugs, and animals are brought to life. This show is also written to incorporate audio description directly into the text itself, toward a more inclusive experience for patrons who are blind or have low vision.

The price includes a show ticket, transportation, food, pre/post show discussion.
Thursday July 24, 2025 6:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
TBA

8:00pm EDT

Playwriting Slam
Thursday July 24, 2025 8:00pm - 10:00pm EDT
Join us for the Playwriting Network’s annual Playwright Slam, featuring AATE member playwrights presenting five-minute solo readings from their latest works-in-progress. Experience fresh voices and new stories in the making!
Thursday July 24, 2025 8:00pm - 10:00pm EDT
TBA
 
Friday, July 25
 

8:00am EDT

Past President/Chair Breakfast
Friday July 25, 2025 8:00am - 8:45am EDT
Friday July 25, 2025 8:00am - 8:45am EDT
TBA

8:30am EDT

Registration Open
Friday July 25, 2025 8:30am - 5:00pm EDT
Friday July 25, 2025 8:30am - 5:00pm EDT
TBA

9:00am EDT

Early Childhood Network Meeting
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

This Network encompasses artistic work with and for young people from infancy to 6 years old.  It is comprised of individuals who teach and facilitate drama in early childhood classrooms; artists who create, write, direct, and perform for very young audiences; and artistic, management, and educational staff members of performing arts companies focused on work for very young audiences.
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
TBA

9:00am EDT

New Guard Network Meeting
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join! Applied Theatre is an umbrella term that is both evolving and inclusive.

If you're new to the world of AATE, the NewGuard Network is for you! This group brings together university students and early-career professionals to form lasting connections before the AATE conference. By joining, you'll have the chance to network, meet potential collaborators, and even explore opportunities to present your research or host a workshop at the conference. It's a great way to grow professionally, share your passion for theater, and find your community within AATE.
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
TBA

9:00am EDT

Playwriting Network Meeting
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

This Network supports playwrights and advocates of quality new plays for youth. Activities include publishing the Award Winning Plays list, as well as the Unpublished Play Project and the Playwrights in Our Schools Residency Project.
Speakers
JN

John Newman

TYE Center, Utah Valley University
John Newman is a Professor and a previous Chair of the Utah Valley University Department of Theatrical Arts. He currently serves as Director of UVU’s Theatre for Youth and Education (TYE) Center and coordinates the UVU Theatre Education program. Dr. Newman earned his BFA and M.Ed... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
TBA

9:00am EDT

Research/Scholarship Network Meeting
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

This Network was created to explore what research and scholarship looks like through all the various avenues of arts and education.
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
TBA

9:00am EDT

Youth Theatre Network Meeting
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
AATE Networks foster the exchange, development, and implementation of ideas throughout the year, providing professional development, advocacy, and other tools within and across the field of theatre and education. All AATE Members and Conference attendees are encouraged to join!

Youth Theatre is defined as quality theatrical experiences and/or performances by students (typically ages 8-18) for an audience. This Network is comprised of artistic, management, and educational staff from a diverse array of youth theatres and organizations, as well as freelance artists and artist-educators.
Friday July 25, 2025 9:00am - 10:00am EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Exhibitor Hall Open
Friday July 25, 2025 9:45am - 3:45pm EDT
Friday July 25, 2025 9:45am - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Becoming Change Agents and Community Builders
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
New York City Center, home of the Tony-honored Encores! series and the Fall for Dance Festival, has played a defining role in the cultural life of the city since 1943. For the past three years, City Center has purposefully expanded its programming in Education & Community Engagement, more than doubling its reach to over 500 classrooms, 50 community sites, and 25,000 learners of all ages. During this session we will shine a light on City Center’s approach to serving historically underrepresented communities, building deep and sustainable partnerships, and how leading as internal change agents propelled our successful growth. City Center’s guiding values of curiosity, accessibility, inclusivity, and collaboration will serve as a backdrop for how we might all better serve our communities and create broader impact in learning and engagement work. And the excavated best practices, surprising discoveries, and unexpected setbacks we encountered will set the stage for an in-depth, hands-on experience focused on the journey of your performing arts center, classrooms and community spaces as you chart your own path toward successful expansion of the good work you do.
Speakers
avatar for Seth Laidlaw

Seth Laidlaw

New York City Center
Seth Laidlaw is a theater maker, connector, mover and shaker who currently serves as the Director of Planning & Operations for Education & Community Engagement at New York City Center, bridging the creativity on stage with communities throughout NYC. His career in arts administration... Read More →
TP

Tia Powell Harris

Vice President of Education & Community Engagement, New York City Center
Tia Powell Harris holds an unwavering belief in the power of the arts to transform lives that has lasted throughout her 30-year career, now serving as the Vice President of Education & Community Engagement at New York City Center. Harris began work at the Duke Ellington School of... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Change Your Practice, Change Your World: Artivism in Action
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
This 75-minute will explore how to embed social justice practices meaningfully into arts organizations whose mission doesn’t specifically include social justice. Centering care, agency, and identity, this interactive session invites participants to consider how theater and performing arts can serve as pathways for community change-making. New Victory Education has been working to embed equity practices more deeply in its core values. Inspired by drafted language: “We are dedicated to honoring and uplifting identity, fostering joyful resistance, and empowering kids, families, and teachers to take positive action through the arts”—as a foundation, this session will examine how to move beyond reactive approaches to create proactive, sustainable frameworks for addressing societal challenges. Participants will explore how to share power in learning and art-making spaces, diminish hierarchical structures, and center collaboration, collective care, and joy. The session will highlight New Victory’s “Speak Up, Act Out” program, which empowers young people to examine activism and artivism, identify hyperlocal issues, and create advocacy works through performing arts. Drawing from this model, the facilitators will showcase strategies for co-creating messaging around timely social issues and fostering impactful action plans that can directly benefit the local community. Participants will engage in meaningful dialogue and reflection while considering theater-based techniques to facilitate social justice-based conversations in their own communities. Whether you’re an educator, administrator, or artist, you’ll leave with actionable tools to embed equity and justice into your practice. Now is the time to meet the moment, transforming arts organizations into catalysts for change. This session offers vital insights for advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion while ensuring the arts remain a powerful force for social transformation.
Speakers
CT

Christopher Totten

New Victory Theater
Christopher Totten, Assistant Director of Education/School Engagement at New Victory, is a highly trained professional with education and work experience in theater arts, pedagogical theory and early childhood through high school populations. Christopher oversees and manages the content... Read More →
JC

Jake Chen

Senior Education Programs Manager/School Engagement, New Victory Theater
Jake Chen, Senior Education Programs Associate/School Engagement, has a background in theater arts and administration. Jake supports New Victory Professional Learning, championing teachers as artists through the Create Professional Learning Series run in partnership with the NYCPS... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Eating Disorder Prevention in Theatre Education
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
It is estimated that 22% of children and adolescents struggle with disordered eating. Theatre education environments can inadvertently promote risk factors through our casting, costuming, and classroom practices, and few educators receive training on how to recognize and ameliorate these risks. This evidence-based, solutions-focused session will encourage self-reflection and provide participants with strategies to begin incorporating primary prevention practices into their pedagogy. Topics include addressing implicit and explicit anti-fat bias, supporting positive identity development, and modeling healthy habits and language.
Speakers
avatar for Sara Berliner

Sara Berliner

Sara Berliner holds an MA in Theatre Education & Applied Theatre from Emerson College and a BA in Theatre Education and Nonprofit Arts Administration from Hampshire College. In addition to being a licensed K-12 theatre teacher in Massachusetts, she is a director, stage manager, and... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Educational Strategies for Teaching Artists: Keeping Teaching Artistry Sustainable
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
Build and/or expand your teaching toolbox! With degrees in both performance and special education and over 12,000 learners taught, Burcher will help teaching artists unpack over a dozen educational teaching strategies for a variety of classroom environments. Explore classroom management strategies, behavior management strategies, educational models, learning models, assessment types, and more through theoretical and practical lenses. As a group we will briefly examine our practices for burnout triggers and learn strategies to avoid flaming out of the industry. Participants can expect to leave the session with applicable tools for their students, for their teaching, and for themselves.
Speakers
WP

Will Potts

Education manager, Talespinner Children's Theatre
Originally from Chattanooga, TN, Will Potts graduated in 2021 with a BFA in acting from Baldwin Wallace. Potts has taught at the Beck Center, Cleveland Play House, Cleveland Public Theatre, Dobama, and others, and is now the Education Manager at Talespinner Children's Theatre.
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Fostering the Wisdom & Guidance of Emerging Writers of Color: A Workshop and Discussion
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
The field of theatre education is growing in rich soil, thanks to the expanding influence of voices traditionally marginalized or silenced. Scholar/practitioners such as David Valdez (Beyond “Decolonizing the Syllabus”) and Sherrell D. Luckett et. al. (Training theatre students of colour in the United States), among others, are adept at transforming personal experiences into reflections that illuminate links between theory and practice, links that make us think. AATE’s Youth Theatre Journal and a new book comprised of chapters written solely by K - 12 classroom theatre educators and teaching artists (tentatively titled The Teachers of Color Writers’ Collective and co-edited Jo Beth Gonzalez and Martin Rodriguez) seek more new voices. This writing workshop engages representatives of the global majority who want support and guidance in crafting narratives into writing that profiles aspects of theatre education from their unique, and too often excluded, vantage points. This session is devoted to generating ideas for the Teachers of Color Writers’ Collective book chapter topics and YTJ submissions, and building connections between new writing partners. Examples of writing partnerships (among other possibilities) include pairings such as: a classroom practitioner with scholar, an experienced practitioner/scholar with a classroom practitioner, two classroom practitioners with a scholar/advisor.
Speakers
avatar for Dana Edell

Dana Edell

Emerson College
Dana Edell is Faculty Director of EmersonTHEATER and Assistant Professor of Performing Arts at Emerson College. As an activist-scholar-artist-educator she has produced and co-directed 80+ original plays and 7 albums of music written and performed by teenage girls and nonbinary youth... Read More →
avatar for Jo Beth Gonzalez

Jo Beth Gonzalez

Bowling Green High School
Jo Beth Gonzalez, MFA, Ph.D., is a scholar and veteran theatre teacher at Bowling Green High School in Bowling Green, Ohio. Author of many publications, her forthcoming book Temporary Stages III: How High School Theatre Experience Fosters the Mutual Development of Spirituality and... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

From Spiderman to Spotify: Connecting Teens Across the World Through Theatre and Twinning
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
The practice of Twinning engages two groups in a theatrical collaboration. Through the magic of modern technology, twin teen groups in Brooklyn and Turkey created cross-cultural connections from across the world. Their exploration of topics from Spiderman and Spotify to dating and family culminated in shared theatre pieces—and even a shared meal! In this session, you’ll have the chance to try out twinning, hear from project participants, and plan your own twinning experience.
Speakers
YE

Yasemin Eti

Bestepe College Artletics
MR

Megan Raab

Mae Raab (she/they) is a Brooklyn based artist and educator. During the day, they work as the CAPP Coordinator of Project SAFE, a sexual health program serving high school students in central Brooklyn. Here, she facilitates sex positive, centered sex education classes and a sex-ed... Read More →
EO

Elyse Orecchio

New York City Children's Theatre
Elyse Orecchio (she/her) is born and raised in Queens with an intense, chest-pumping pride for her borough. As a teaching artist committed to building community and exploring language through theatre, she incorporates applied theatre techniques (playbuilding, Theatre-in-Education... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Implementing Holistic and Effective DEI&A Strategies in Theatre Leadership and Higher Education Theatre Classrooms
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
As theatre institutions continue to grapple with racial and social justice movements educators of higher learning and administrators on college campuses are tasked with integrating Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Accessibility (DEI&A) into their organizational culture in a way that is sustainable, effective, and trauma-informed. This interactive workshop introduces The Artists Heal® Method —a groundbreaking framework that supports DEI&A implementation through a holistic, trauma-informed, and anti-racist approach. Using a four-pillar structure—Self & Selfhood, Trauma-Informed Practices, Creativity, Collaboration & Communion, and Practical Tools & Pathways—this session offers a path for theatre educators, college administrators, and students to foster healing-centered classrooms strategically dismantling harmful institutional systems. Participants will explore the concepts of DIS-functionality (disorganized systems) vs. DYS-functionality (dysregulated systems) to identify patterns within their own organizations that perpetuate inequity and harm. Through guided exercises and facilitated discussion, attendees will gain practical tools for navigating classroom management, setting boundaries, and leading DEI&A work in higher education spaces. This workshop is designed for theatre educators, administrators, and those committed to DEI&A work looking to create lasting change in their organizations. Attendees will leave with tangible strategies for implementing DEI&A efforts with integrity, fostering classroom cultures that center psychological safety, and addressing institutional resistance with confidence.
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Kindergarten Playwrights: Monologue Writing with Kinders (and Older Students, too)
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
Early childhood drama rightly includes many games, open dramatic play, and creative dramatics, among other activities; however, engaging very young children in actual script writing is often overlooked. After all, at this age, children are learning the basics of language and still building the fine motor skills to physically put words on paper. This session will give drama educators/directors a manageable process to transform very young actors into script writers capable of composing their own monologues. Using a modified sentence frame format, young actors combine growing skills in ELA, academic language, performance sensibilities, and imagination to create a written monologue that they can perform or that can be performed by others. In addition, the session will include extensions of this project that help children build on their vocal and movement skills, as well as a number of ways for teachers and directors to differentiate the process for all actors' talents and abilities.
Speakers
avatar for Suzanne Katz

Suzanne Katz

Drama Educator, Two Rivers PCS
Dr. Suzanne Katz is a veteran educator with over 30 years experience in pre-school though university level classrooms. Currently serving as a drama educator at Two Rivers PCS in Washington D.C., Suzanne wears many hats: director, curriculum writer, PD facilitator, new-teacher mentor... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Learning, Leading, Thriving: Teaching the Next Generation of Theatre Makers
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
Just because it’s how it’s always been done, doesn’t mean it’s how it should be done! This workshop explores student-centered teaching strategies that can help us do better by the next generation of theatre makers. Attendees will leave with proven methods and corresponding projects that can immediately be applied to a variety of different learning environments and classroom types.
Speakers
avatar for Jessica Shaw

Jessica Shaw

Mount Vernon High School, Fairfax County Public Schools
Jessica Joy Satryan Shaw has been teaching and directing Theatre at Mount Vernon High School since August 2016 and one of the Performing Arts Department Chairs since August 2020. She began her full-time teaching career in 2009 at Springside Chestnut Hill Academy in Philadelphia, where... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Making Theatre for Six Senses: Seesaw Theatre's Sensory Theatre Workshop
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
Seesaw Theatre Company creates original, sensory theatre for neurodivergent and disabled audiences. During this session we will introduce what sensory theatre is and why it is so vital to the theatre community. We will discuss how we devise and create sensory theatre and then gear it towards our intended audience. At Seesaw we create theatre that is accessible to all audiences from the very beginning instead of tacking accessibility on at the end. Theatre is a tool for creating connections and this can only be done when all audiences are included. Our shows subvert the notion that theatre is something to watch from afar, bringing the show to the participants and allowing them to interact with our cast on a personal level. The kids who come in as audience members create the shows as much as the cast does. We incorporate improvisational techniques, props, music and personalized interactions to engage our audience and help accommodate them on an individual level, providing an equitable theatre experience. After presenting about what it is we do we will take session participants through typical seesaw training, exploring the type of theatre we create. As we create sensory theatre a hands-on experience is much more effective and we encourage participants to explore what sensory theatre might mean to them. We will provide Seesaw sensory props and tools to help create sensory theatre as well as have participants explore what it is like to be a kid interacting with these props. We will end the session by talking about how our inclusive theatre can be incorporated into all types of theatre work.
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

10:15am EDT

Mapping Environmental (In)justice with Youth Through Applied Theatre
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
As the climate crisis intensifies, impacting Global Majority and other marginalized communities "first and worst," how might we initiate critical conversations about Environmental (In)justice with the young people we teach and create with and for? How might our tools as theatre artists be uniquely equipped to help us make sense of our current reality, trace the histories and systems of power that brought us to this point, and envision radically just and thriving futures? This 75-minute workshop, based on an arts-integrated lesson originally developed for a 7th Grade Social Studies classroom in Austin, TX grapples with these very questions. You’ll be invited to experience the workshop as well as brainstorm how you might adapt it for the communities and contexts in which you work. Through Theatre of the Oppressed activities, collaborative analysis of maps and other artifacts, and visual arts expression, we’ll explore one potential creative entry point into these conversations about Environmental (In)justice and the climate crisis with the young people in our lives.
Speakers
avatar for Walker Zupan

Walker Zupan

Drama and Theatre for Youth and Communities, University of Texas at Austin
Walker Zupan (he/they) is an applied theatre-maker, educator, and scholar pursuing a M.F.A. in Theatre with a specialization in drama and theatre for youth and communities at The University of Texas at Austin. He spent the years before grad school working as a teaching artist in New... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Beyond the Stage: Devised Theater, Visual Art, and Multidisciplinary Storytelling with Precipice Theater Team
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
Engage in a hands-on workshop exploring how devised theater combined with movement, writing, and visual art can expand storytelling, deepen ensemble-building, and connect communities—both onstage and through creative artifacts like zines and illustrated books.
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Bridging Old and New: Rebuilding Relationships in the Drama Classroom
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
The connection between teacher and student was severed during the pandemic, and has not been fully restored in the years that followed. This damage is even more profound in the drama classroom, because the work done in Theatre classes requires a relationship between teacher and students that is based on mutual respect and trust. Those relationships need to be rebuilt in order to bring stability and enjoyment back to the classroom. This workshop will examine the importance of relationships in educational settings and explore ways to restore the relationship between teacher and student, as well as between students, in the drama classroom.
Speakers
avatar for Matt Webster

Matt Webster

Curriculum Consultant, The Drama Teacher Academy
Matt Webster is a Theatre Educator who has been teaching theatre students AND theatre teachers for almost 30 years. A former tenured professor of Theatre Education, Matt holds both an MA in Theatre Education and an MFA in Theatre for Youth and was the head of the Theatre Licensure... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Cultivating Healthy Practices in 2025 - The Early Stages of Community Building (Artist-Educators working with K-12 and Undergraduates)
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
Objective: To offer educators and practitioners the opportunity to concentrate on how we craft the first session(s) of working with young people (K-12 and Undergraduates) in the classroom and rehearsal room. This workshop will focus on healthy communication, guidelines, and practice toward through community building on the front end of ensemble practices. Tailored community building has the lasting effect of creating a safe environment where best practices are honored, met, and sustained. Through experiential learning methods, attendees embrace these inclusive concepts and generate workable solution-based ideas through a 75 minute workshop of engagement, play, small group laboratory-style collaborations, and a shared collective closure process. Abstract: Artmaking with others impacts our lives, purpose, and a sense of community. Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Access remain at the forefront of the spaces we want to maintain, encourage, and expand. Artmaking, ensembleship, and community building are intertwined. What we do with and for the students has the potential to impact their social-emotional growth and perspectives on the human condition through modes of expression, agency, and guided peer interactions.
Speakers
RH

Rachel Hoey

Allegheny College
Rachel Hoey holds a B.A. and M.A. in Theatre performance from San Diego State University, where she continued on, as a lecturer, teaching: Creative Drama and Theatre for Young Audiences. Rachel earned her MFA in Directing from Indiana University (2020). Rachel possesses over a decade... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Dragon's Breath: Igniting SEL Through a Magical Children's Theater Piece
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
Dr. Morgan Soja and Dr. Evan Mack present a dynamic session on Dragon’s Breath, an award-winning children’s opera by composer Evan Mack and librettist Joshua McGuire. Winner of the American Prize, this charming and impactful show explores themes of coping with anger and the emotional challenges young people face. The story follows Alan, a young boy who learns to navigate his emotions and discover healthy ways to respond to life’s difficulties. Rooted in Social Emotional Learning (SEL), Dragon’s Breath is designed to not only entertain but also to serve as a catalyst for meaningful discussions about emotions. The presentation will delve into how the opera fosters emotional intelligence through interactive audience engagement. Participants will experience exercises used in the performance, such as acting out emotions and guided meditative breathing, which allow young audiences to explore emotional self-regulation in an accessible and creative way. Additionally, attendees will get a behind-the-scenes look at the world premiere of Dragon’s Breath through clips from the production, showcasing the opera’s engaging storytelling, music, and interactive elements in action. Dr. Soja and Dr. Mack will also discuss the power of art as a conversation piece, emphasizing how Dragon’s Breath bridges performance and education to spark important discussions about emotional growth. They will outline plans to bring this production to wider audiences through touring, aiming to reach schools, community centers, and theaters nationwide. This session invites educators, theater practitioners, and advocates for SEL to discover how Dragon’s Breath can inspire creativity, foster emotional awareness, and build connections with young audiences and their families. Join us to explore how this work transforms art into an interactive tool for growth and understanding.
Speakers
avatar for Evan Mack

Evan Mack

Resident Composer, Skidmore College/EvanMackMusic
Evan Mack, winner of the 2024 American Prize in composition, has devoted much of his compositional life to opera and song. His first major operatic composition, Angel of the Amazon premiered in 2011 by Encompass New Opera Theatre at the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York City. Two... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Generating The Matrix: Creating a Publishing Guide for AATE
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
An important part of AATE’s mission and core values is to foster scholarship. In order to do that effectively, the Research & Scholarship Network have committed to create a publishing guide for AATE that will serve members and the wider field of theatre education. In this working session, members of the Research & Scholarship Network and anyone else who is interested will collaborate on generating an initial draft of the publishing guide. Participants will contribute to one of the following groups: [1] Steps to Publish, [2] Database of Journals or other outlets & style guides for each, [3] Database of extant work - categorized with abstracts, or [4] Other contributions yet to be imagined. When the publishing guide is up and running, members will be able to update, expand, and comment or interact with material. All participants will be asked to contribute their CV to a database to be included in the guide.
Speakers
avatar for Jonathan P Jones

Jonathan P Jones

NYU
Jonathan P. Jones, PhD, is a Program Administrator at NYU Steinhardt for the Program in Educational Theatre and the Program in Music Education. At CUNY, he teaches courses in public speaking and theatre history and he has taught courses in pedagogy and theatre history at NYU. Jonathan... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

If all the World's a Stage...Let's Go Global!
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
All the World's a stage, and all the men and women global players! We come from different cultures that can sometimes clash, but misunderstandings open up opportunities to learn from each other and understand our different perspectives. In this praxis-based workshop, you will explore the uses of theatre in the classroom to negotiate cultural differences, build bridges of intercultural understanding and promote cross-cultural communication. Participants will be exposed to a variety of drama exercises (improv., masks, clown and puppetry) aimed at developing cultural awareness, intercultural understanding and cross-cultural communication. Participants will be immersed in the experience of acting and role-playing in the theatre of everyday life: The Global Stage. You will leave the workshop with a solid new way of integrating mistakes and misunderstanding as opportunities to learn and grow, using cultural conflict as a catalyst for transformational understanding, acceptance and belonging. We all want our students to become genuine citizens of the world, so… Let’s Go Global! This session explores cultural differences as a lens to explore each other’s culture and play “cross-culturing” roles to promote intercultural understanding. The theatre provides us with a privileged space to champion diversity, to promote inclusion and to create a sense of belonging. Understanding each other is essential: putting ourselves in someone else’s skin opens up the possibility of deep connection and understanding. It might seem that cultural barriers divide us, but the stage gives us the opportunity to bring them down, experiencing community and belongingness through the recognition of our shared humanity.
Speakers
VR

Veronica Rodriguez Ballesteros

Boston University
For this native of Madrid, Spain, Theatre and Education are the two passions of her life. Verónica has taught theatre, languages and literatures at Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Harvard University, and Boston University, where she is currently a Senior Lecturer. She is also... Read More →
AI

Alberto Iozzia

Boston University
Alberto Iozzia entered American academia almost by chance in 2010, as a Teaching Assistant of Italian at Oberlin College, in Ohio. Since then, he has been teaching all levels of Italian language, from elementary courses to advanced content classes. He earned his PhD from Rutgers University... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Serious Play: Promoting joy and healing through bedside pediatric theatre
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
What do you associate with a hospital? Perhaps the words institutional, sterile, or isolated come to mind. The Jeanette M Gould Traveling Theater, a partnership between University of Central Florida’s School of Performing Arts and College of Nursing, aims to reimagine a child’s hospital stay, bringing joy and healing through the art form of live theatre. Join us for a participatory workshop exploring how we create bedside performances for pediatric patients ages 2 and up, using purposeful play to inspire imagination and honor the whole child. Participants will learn about the creative process of “Let’s Go Camping!,” our first bedside play, and will engage in the development of our next show, “Sketch Out!”
Speakers
avatar for Elizabeth Brendel Horn

Elizabeth Brendel Horn

Associate Professor, University of Central Florida
Elizabeth Brendel Horn (she/her) is an Associate Professor in TYA at the University of Central Florida in partnership with Orlando Family Stage, and program director of the Jeanette M Gould Traveling Theater. Recent projects include “Mind Matters,” a theatre-based mental health... Read More →
avatar for Nicole B. Adkins

Nicole B. Adkins

Director of Education, Kennesaw State University
Nicole B. Adkins (she/her), award-winning playwright and teaching artist, teaches at Kennesaw State University, the Playwright’s Lab MFA program at Hollins University, Alliance Theatre, and other organizations. Her plays have been performed at venues nationally and abroad, including... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Sustaining Funding for School Programs and Retaining Teaching Artists
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
The Alliance Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia serves 450 schools annually through its in-school programs: teaching artist residencies, one-time student workshops, and professional learning events for teachers. These research-based programs have improved students’ literacy skills, transformed educators’ teaching practices, and established the Alliance Theatre as a leader in arts integrated and theater-based instruction. Despite its successes, the Alliance Theatre’s in-school programs face two major challenges: 1) a lack of funding for arts education programs and 2) teaching artist retention. In this session, learn how the Alliance Theatre has navigated these challenges while honoring established best practices and adapting to a changing landscape. Georgia ranks 50th in the nation in state arts funding, leaving schools and professional theaters with limited resources to support arts-based programming. In this session, the Alliance Theatre will share how it has diversified its funding streams through government support, corporate revenue, earned revenue, additional grants, and more, allowing our programs to evolve and meet schools’ needs. As the Alliance Theatre expands its reach, the need for qualified teaching artists grows. Learn about the Alliance’s teaching artist retention efforts, including pay increases, complimentary childcare, ongoing training, and health benefits. Participants will leave with strategies and ideas to replicate at their own professional theaters.
Speakers
avatar for Rebecca Pogue Fields

Rebecca Pogue Fields

Head of Elementary School Programs, Alliance Theatre
Rebecca Pogue Fields serves as Head of Elementary School Programs at the Alliance Theatre, Woodruff Arts Center in Atlanta, Georgia. She facilitates the design, administration, and efficient delivery of arts integrated in-school residency programs in over 300 classrooms each year... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

The Past Empowers the Present: Democracy and the Performing Arts
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
This session involves the synergistic collision between our field’s history and the full potential of what we can become as a multigenerational panel examines an untold story from our past and considers its compelling applications for our future. Community activist and historical scholar Joan Lancourt (Ph.D.) has done extensive primary-source research on the remarkable Junior Programs, Inc. (1936-1943), one of the most successful pioneering performing arts companies devoted exclusively to touring professional theatre for young audiences. Her research has uncovered dynamic responses to a world not so different from our own in which rising fascism, a climate of fearing the “other,” and the shadow of armed conflict threatened the very foundations of democracy. Junior Programs harnessed the power of the arts in defense of Democratic ideals, recognizing that their work was infinitely more than entertainment. The intentional presentation of restorative narratives, their partnerships with K-12 schools and teachers, their ability to harness an army of local volunteers as their productions of theatre, opera, and ballet crisscrossed the country –– these are but a few of the multifaceted strategies employed by the company that introduced four million children to quality arts experiences that celebrated America’s rich diversity. Following a presentation, our diverse group of multi-generational respondents will share implications for the future. While some elements of Junior Programs may seem dated after almost a century, we will engage in a dynamic conversation about the underlying principles and practices that contributed to their success, and discuss how they may be used to inform our current and future struggles as we prepare children for full participation in a vibrant democracy.
Speakers
avatar for Alexandra López

Alexandra López

Associate Director of Education, Lincoln Center Theater
Alexandra López is the Associate Director of Education at Lincoln Center Theater, devising performance-based curriculum for NYC students and implementing professional development for teachers and teaching artists. She currently serves on the Board of the NYC Arts in Education Roundtable... Read More →
avatar for Gloria Bond Clunie

Gloria Bond Clunie

Playwright, Director, Educator, Playwright, Director, Educator
Gloria Bond Clunie is an award-winning playwright, director, and educator, a founding member of the Playwriting Ensemble at Chicago’s Tony Award-winning Victory Gardens Theater and founding Artistic Director of Fleetwood-Jourdain Theatre.
DJ

Dr. Joan Lancourt

Historian and Community Activist, retired
Dr. Joan Lancourt has had a forty-year management career focused on leadership, strategic thinking, and managing change. With an MSW and PhD in community organizing, she has authored three books and numerous articles on community organizing, organizational change, theater for young... Read More →
RC

Rives Collins

Northwestern University
Professor Emeritus, Northwestern University. Past President AATE. Vice President of Governance, CTFA. Lifetime Fellow, College of Fellows of the American Theatre. Director, Storyteller, Prison Educator, Arts Advocate, Leadership Consultant, and new Grandpa.
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

You're Not the Boss of Me!: Collaboration in the Classroom
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
No Script? No Problem! Discover the magic of devised theatre in this fast-paced, interactive workshop designed to spark collaboration and creativity. Participants will learn and apply our Six Principles of Collaboration, practicing skills like sharing power and rotating leadership to develop original scripts from unexpected source material. Whether you're new to devised theatre or an experienced creator, this session offers a fresh approach to collective storytelling. We’re all here to learn—what can you contribute? This workshop kicks off by exploring devised theatre in its various forms and unique processes. Participants will engage with scenarios to identify and explore the Six Principles of Collaboration, gaining a deeper understanding of effective teamwork in a devised theatre setting. Participants will engage with scenarios to identify and explore the Six Principles of Collaboration, gaining a deeper understanding of effective teamwork. In the second half, the focus shifts to hands-on application. Working in groups, participants will use their newfound skills to stage an original story from an unconventional source, overcoming challenges such as collaborating with new people, managing time constraints, working with limited resources, and staying true to the story author’s intent. The session concludes with a live performance of their collaboratively created stories, celebrating the shared creativity and commitment of the group. Join us for an unforgettable experience where teamwork and storytelling take center stage!
Speakers
CA

Cecilia Abarca

Literacy Connects
Cecy Abarca earned her Associate of Arts in Theatre from Eastern Arizona College (2017) and her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theatre Education and Acting from the University of Northern Colorado (2019). She has worked with Literacy Connects as a performer, teaching artist, and is currently... Read More →
DT

Dallas Thomas

Director of Arts Integration Programs, Literacy Connects
Dallas Thomas, Director of Arts Integration Programs at Literacy Connects, an Arizona-based nonprofit, is proud to guide a talented, mission-driven team of artists and educators who empower youth through the arts. She holds a BFA in acting from Oklahoma State University and has been... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 2:00pm EDT
TBA

12:45pm EDT

Master Class C: Breaking, Bridging, and Building: Uncovering Histories to Progress the Field
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - $60 per ticket

This masterclass will explore the transformative power of reclaiming hidden histories in Theatre for Young Audiences, amplifying structurally marginalized identities, and challenging systemic inequities. Participants will learn about and engage with theatre practices inspired by the artists and practitioners highlighted in the Hidden and Erased BIPOC History Project, delving into Theatre for Young Audiences' past, present, and potential futures. We will share our journey of restoring erased narratives and bridging the past with the present to envision a more inclusive and equitable citational future. Through interactive activities, dialogue, and storytelling, participants will reflect on their personal roles as artists and educators in reshaping the field, centering community, equity, and collective action. This space is designed to activate our hopes, plans, and inspirations—not only to use theatre as a tool for healing and connection but also to transform how we engage with and document history. This session invites anyone interested in the intersections of theatre, history, and social justice—whether you’re exploring the field, teaching our history, refining your practice, or seeking new ways to create meaningful change.
Speakers
avatar for Shavonne Coleman

Shavonne Coleman

Assistant Professor of Applied Theatre, University of Michigan
Shavonne Coleman (she/they) is an Assistant Professor of Applied Theatre in the Theatre and Drama Department at the University of Michigan. She is a fabulist, facilitator, teaching artist, actor, playwright, and cultivator of community from Detroit, MI. Shavonne is a Board Member... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 12:45pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

"I wasn't taught that!": Professional Development and Learning Alongside Your Students
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
As theatre educators preparing the next generation of theatre teachers, we often find ourselves learning right alongside our students. The field of theatre education has evolved dramatically over the past 15, 20, 25+ years—embracing new pedagogical approaches, technologies, and a more inclusive and responsive curriculum. What happens when we encounter ideas, practices, and methodologies that weren’t part of our own training? How do we continue to grow as educators while guiding our students through an ever-changing landscape? This panel will explore the ongoing professional development necessary for theatre educators, addressing challenges and opportunities in adapting to new best practices, diversifying curricula, and integrating contemporary techniques. Join us for a candid discussion on what it means to be both teacher and learner in today’s theatre education landscape, and how embracing this dual role can strengthen our teaching and our students’ experiences. We will offer our experiences, but we also hope to learn from you! What have you learned alongside your students? Where are your gaps in knowledge which you hope to fill? Let’s grow together.
Speakers
avatar for Jimmy Chrismon

Jimmy Chrismon

Professor of Theatre Teacher Education, Illinois State University
Dr. James Chrismon is the program coordinator for the Theatre Teacher Education Program at Illinois State University. He taught high school theatre for 17 years in public schools in Charlotte, NC, and Rock Hill, SC before moving to higher education 6 years ago. He received the 2022... Read More →
avatar for Amanda Dawson

Amanda Dawson

Assistant Professor and Head of BFA Theatre Education, Utah State University
Amanda Dawson, Ph.D. (she/her), is an Assistant Professor of Theatre and Head of the BFA Theatre Education Program in the Caine College of the Arts at Utah State University. Amanda holds a Ph.D. from the University of Kansas, a MA from the University of Missouri-Kansas City, and a... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

"Tradition-Change-Progress": Emerging Partner Collaborations Preparing Teaching Artists
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
Share and embody meanings related to your own teaching artistry, theatre for youth, applied theatre, or partner organization collaborator praxis connected to the conference’s thematic inquiries. Explore the “individual” and “collaborative” narratives of tradition, change, and progress from two emerging partners (Indiana University-Indianapolis, represented by Assistant Professor Emilio G Robles and REACT Theatre, represented by Executive Director Justin Wade) who come from divergent contexts and perspectives, yet are united by shared goals. Learn about the serendipitous juncture where both individuals and “partner entities” find themselves related to these key ideas amplified in their stories and yours. Make connections to your own dualities as artist-educators, artist-administrators, or artist-activists and your own unique contexts. Reflect on takeaways, share curiosities, and feedback to foster the creation of informed networks of supportive and reflective praxis around presentation content, led by shared interests in partner collaboration, the development of teaching artists, and youth-centered devised work.
Speakers
avatar for Emilio G. Robles

Emilio G. Robles

Applied Theatre Concentration, Indiana University Indianapolis
Emilio G. Robles (MFA) is an Assistant Professor and Teaching Artist in Applied Theatre at Indiana University-Indianapolis. Emilio is an actor, coach, director, teaching artist and voiceover professional, and SAG-AFTRA member. A veteran artist educator , prior administrative and teaching... Read More →
JW

Justin Wade

Executive Director, REACT Theatre of Indianapolis
Justin Wade has been the Executive Director of React, an Indianapolis theatre company focusing on youth-centered adaptation and devising processes in theatre since 2005, after years of creating alongside REACT's founder, Charlotte Kaufman. Into early adulthood, Justin was an active... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Adapting the Rehearsal Process for Students with Sensory Processing and Autism Spectrum Disorders in a Full Inclusion School Production Program
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
This presentation will provide detailed techniques for modifying and differentiating the rehearsal process for students with Sensory Processing Disorders as well as Autism Spectrum Disorder in a full inclusion-based secondary school production program. The session will begin with a PowerPoint that provides an overview of Sensory Processing Disorders and Autism Spectrum Disorder, as well as both strengths and challenges encountered in the rehearsal process. This will be followed by an examination of specific techniques used to differentiate the rehearsal process for students with Autism Spectrum Disorder, including Meisner-based repetition exercises and improvisation activities, as well as specifically creating a space and process that accommodates the needs of all students. Participants will break into groups and take part in a demonstration of these exercises and then reflect on their use and effectiveness in the rehearsal process.
Speakers
MB

Maria Beery

Teacher/Drama Club Adviser, Ohio Virtual Academy/Richland Academy of the Arts
Maria Getz Beery currently serves as the middle and high school drama club advisor Ohio Virtual Academy where she also teaches high school English. She is also a drama teacher and director at Richland Academy of the Arts in Mansfield, Ohio. Previously, she served as the chair of the... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Breaking Down Decision-Making
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
Whether we are trying to figure out what to have for dinner or our strategic vision for the next 5-years, decision making can be a major source of conflict and discomfort. We all hold internalized values on how decisions should be made, but rarely do we take the time to clarify who will be part of making decisions, what their role will be, how they will make the decisions, and why any of that is the case. When we don't take the time to articulate our process, oppressive cultural norms make their way in, and resentments often build over time. Things work until they don't. But it doesn't have to be this way. In this participatory workshop, participants will gain tools and frameworks to help break down the elements of decision making for more strategic, more equitable, and more transparent processes where everyone's needs can be met. Skills learned will be applicable to educational, administrative, and artistic workspaces, and with both adults and young people. We will discuss what is gained and what is lost when making decisions horizontally and hierarchically, and how even hierarchical decision-making processes can include elements of democratic process.
Speakers
DP

Daniel Park

Obvious Agency
Daniel Park is a queer, bi-racial, theatre and performance artist, movement facilitator, and organizer for racial and labor justice in the cultural sector. His work brings people together to understand and experiment with their individual and mutual roles in bringing about the liberation... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Establishing Communities of Practice among Drama Educators: Revisiting Learning to Teach Drama - A Case Narrative Approach
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
Communities of practice in drama education have been explored by Anderson & Freebody as sites that emphasize “the importance of integrating theory and practice to support the development of beginning teachers” (2012, p. 359). Professional organizations like the American Alliance for Theatre and Education (AATE), the NYC Arts in Education Roundtable, and the Educational Theatre Association (EDTA) consider their annual gatherings as a locus of professional development and networking, but in their relative infrequency, they provide only limited access to the potentiality of a true community of practice. So, drama educators often find themselves a department of one, set adrift to do whatever it is they do in the classroom without the benefit of a community of peers who can understand and support them in their work. They lack a true community of practice (Lave & Wenger, 1991; Wenger, McDermott, & Snyder, 2002; Wenger-Trayner, Fenton-O'Creevy, Hutchinson, Kubiak, & Wenger-Trayner, 2014; Wenger-Trayner & Wenger-Trayner, 2015; Wenger, 2020; and Tummons, 2022). [paragraph break] Through this workshop experience, drama educators will develop a community of practice through the implementation of a case narrative project, based on a format outlined by Norris, McCammon, & Miller in their text, Learning to Teach Drama: A Case Narrative Approach (2000). The main intent of the case narrative is to serve as a tool to assist the educator in better understanding their teaching practice and should be drawn from their own experience, offering the educator an opportunity to reflect on and examine a problem, dilemma, or crisis, or frame a new perspective that has occurred in their practice. [paragraph break] This workshop will move us through phases one and two of a three-phase process. In the session, participants will outline their own case narrative, share the outline with two peers, and then get formal feedback from each peer using a response protocol outlined in Norris, McCammon, & Miller’s text in which they describe, analyze, and apply (2000, pp. 111-112). [paragraph break]1 - Describe: Read the assigned case narrative. Set a timer for five minutes and write a continuous response without censoring yourself to what you have read.2 -Analyze: Review what you wrote. Respond by uncovering the issues in the original narrative and make connections to educational theory and the teaching of drama.3 -Apply: Review both the initial writing (describe) and your initial analysis. Write concretely what the teacher might do to extend these ideas into practice. This writing could be in the form of a lesson plan, a list of teacher activities, or a general set of statements on the teacher’s stance. Application is the goal, so you need to provide the teacher with actionable recommendations grounded in your teaching experience and what you know from research or literature. [paragraph break] In this way, each participant will receive actionable recommendations (interventions) from two peers. This initial workshop will be followed in two month’s time with a Zoom check-in where each participant can report back about the intervention(s) they implemented and consider next steps.
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Role Play for Change: Exploring Censorship in Education
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
In a time of increasing educational censorship and heightened socio-political tension, educators face significant barriers to addressing critical topics such as identity, power, and privilege in their classrooms and on their stages. This tension highlights the duality of progress and tradition—how do we honor the foundational principles of democratic education while challenging restrictive practices that limit its potential? With a focus on personal and professional growth, this playful, interactive session fosters inclusive dialogue and critical reflection on educational censorship and book banning within our school and larger communities. In it, we will discuss the value of developing an improvisational ethos in contributing to democratic education, and will engage in a series of Role Work and Process Drama activities to consider diverse voices and perspectives on educational censorship. Each activity serves the dual purpose of offering teachers adaptable methods for classroom application while also inviting them to reflect on their own beliefs, biases, and approaches to addressing challenging topics. Through these exercises, participants will explore the complex interplay between partisan politics, community stakeholders, and local educational institutions, gaining a deeper understanding of the nuance and varied perspectives that shape educational policy decisions and classroom practices. By inviting participants to step into new roles and viewpoints, the session encourages curiosity, reflection, and dialogue, ultimately equipping teachers with strategies to engage meaningfully with their students and communities, with the goal of fostering a more just and dynamic educational environment.
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Scenes from the Revolution
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
In anticipation of the 2026 Semiquincentennial, this session features a student-led reading and sing-through of Scenes from the Revolution, a musical by Aline Shader originally created for the Bicentennial. Geared toward middle school performers, the show explores key events of the American Revolution through ten scenes and songs, aligning with educational standards in arts and history. Participants will learn how this versatile, curriculum-based piece can be used to foster interdisciplinary collaboration and spark deeper conversations about both historical and current struggles for freedom. A sing-along finale invites everyone to raise their voices in celebration.
Speakers
JH

Jennifer Hersch

Songs Children Sing
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Stories that Soar!: Creating Collaborative Partnerships to Transform Educational Communities
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
Using a unique case study of the national expansion of Stories that Soar! through its recent collaboration with Coastal Carolina University (CCU) as a reference, this panel will discuss and consider ways for university theatre programs to partner with community-centered arts organizations to transform their service area and make a regional impact in building artistic and educational infrastructure in sequential tiers of academia simultaneously. In all, this panel will discuss how a community-focused university theatre program can effectively and positively serve as a connector and agent to ensure that elementary schools, high schools, universities, and professional theatre companies can come together in collaboration to amplify the impact of the arts in their region. Focus will be placed on best practices and effective methods of connecting with local elementary schools to inspire creativity, promote active literacy, and build engaged artistic communities through the creation of devised theatre performances based on original stories written by students at the school – a process perfected by Literacy Connects of Southern Arizona and their Stories that Soar! program. Additional discussions will center on attracting local high schools to participate in the same transformative process with their feeder elementary schools in subsequent academic years to continue to inspire the writing of new stories, the crafting of new performances, and the promotion of literacy through arts-based curricula. Panelists are teaching artists in the theatre discipline who seek to use applied and devised theatre methods to ensure that collaborative creation can inspire the growth of the arts and storytelling in local educational communities. We hope this is more than a case study and panel discussion; we see it as a movement towards a more equitable and creative future as a community through the empowerment of young writers and the celebration of their stories and imaginations.
Speakers
CA

Cecilia Abarca

Literacy Connects
Cecy Abarca earned her Associate of Arts in Theatre from Eastern Arizona College (2017) and her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theatre Education and Acting from the University of Northern Colorado (2019). She has worked with Literacy Connects as a performer, teaching artist, and is currently... Read More →
DT

Dallas Thomas

Director of Arts Integration Programs, Literacy Connects
Dallas Thomas, Director of Arts Integration Programs at Literacy Connects, an Arizona-based nonprofit, is proud to guide a talented, mission-driven team of artists and educators who empower youth through the arts. She holds a BFA in acting from Oklahoma State University and has been... Read More →
SJ

Steven James Higginbotham

Professor and Chair of the Department of Theatre, Coastal Carolina University
Steven James Higginbotham hails from Cleveland, Ohio, and has worked as a director, choreographer, educator, performer, and leader in collegiate, community, and professional arts organizations for over 25 years. Steven holds a BFA in Theatre Education (University of Arizona) and MFA... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Values and Legacy: The Story of You
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
Explore the value of learning from the past to create a better future. The Skirball Cultural Center is a nonprofit Jewish cultural institution and museum in Los Angeles, CA that uses storytelling as a vehicle to bring people together. Participants will explore the topics of immigration, identity, and values through hands-on activities and build critical thinking, empathy, and collaboration skills by examining real stories of people who immigrated to the United States and connecting them to the present. Participants will be encouraged to reflect on their own stories and core values and how we, too, can leave a legacy in our communities.
Speakers
AL

Anna Lund

Skirball Cultural Center
Anna Lund (she/her) lives in Los Angeles and works as an Education Program Specialist for grades 5 - 12 at the Skirball Cultural Center. She supports the creation and implementation of all programs for these grades, including school tours to the Skirball, in-school Residency programs... Read More →
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

2:30pm EDT

Whose Play Is It?: Culturally Specific Theatre in White Institutions
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
In TYA/USA’s 2020 report from participating theatres, “Exploring the Landscape of Live Theatre for Young Audiences in the U.S.” it was found that 19% of total productions in the 2018/2019 season were culturally specific “in which POC characters/communities/cultures were essential to the story’s narrative.” While this percentage is exciting given the history of the predominance of white, Euro-centric stories on TYA stages in the U.S., it also begs the question, who is producing said culturally specific productions? When making work that is culturally specific, the production can become an affinity space for those inside the culture. But when the producing entity is a predominantly white institution (PWI), what happens to the specificities and care of the affinity space of that production? Whose play does it become? What conversations of translation must be had? Using the experience of directing the Latinx-specific play “Luna” at ZACH Theatre in Austin, TX, TYA practitioner Mateo Hernandez invites participants into a dialogue on what the work of culturally specific theatre-making looks like in PWIs and how we might push for change towards more sustaining practices.
Friday July 25, 2025 2:30pm - 3:45pm EDT
TBA

4:00pm EDT

Games Exchange
Friday July 25, 2025 4:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
Join us for an engaging, hands-on exchange designed for theatre educators and artists. This interactive session focuses on sharing dynamic and purposeful games and exercises that build essential theatre skills such as ensemble-building, trust, risk-taking, and active listening. Participants will also explore activities that support a deeper understanding of theatre-making processes, including character creation, sequencing, vocal technique, and navigating objectives and obstacles. Attendees will receive tools for their tool kits that are both suitable for both classroom and rehearsal settings. This collaborative exchange serves as a lively lab space to share our most effective tools, reimagine foundational games, and adapt strategies to meet the unique needs of the diverse communities we serve.
Friday July 25, 2025 4:00pm - 5:00pm EDT
TBA

4:00pm EDT

Excursion: Playhouse Square Tour
Friday July 25, 2025 4:00pm - 6:00pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - Price $25
Roundtrip Transportation Provided
(from the Westin to the theater.)

With five fully restored historic theaters (opened 1921-22), Playhouse Square is the largest theater restoration project in the world. Join us for a free tour and find out how these gems were saved from the wrecking ball!

Tours do involve stairs and we suggest wearing comfortable shoes. If you or a member of your party is not able to access stairs, please inform the volunteer guides upon arrival and they will adjust the tour accordingly. Please note that not all areas may be available during each tour.
Friday July 25, 2025 4:00pm - 6:00pm EDT
TBA

5:00pm EDT

Excursion: Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Friday July 25, 2025 5:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - Price $35

In 1985, when the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Foundation was deciding where to open its physical museum, Cleveland threw its hat into the ring for consideration. Thanks to a groundswell of public support and a $65 million commitment from city officials, the Foundation chose Cleveland as the winning site, over locales such as New York, San Francisco, Memphis and Chicago. Needless to say, the Rock Hall’s construction was cooler than most. On June 7, 1993, the Who’s Pete Townshend, Chuck Berry, Billy Joel, Sam Phillips, and Ruth Brown (to name a few) attended the Cleveland groundbreaking ceremony, while Jerry Lee Lewis performed a year later when the building was finished off with the placement of one last steel beam.

(The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is a short walk from the hotel.)
Friday July 25, 2025 5:00pm - 7:00pm EDT
TBA

6:45pm EDT

Dinner Dine Arounds
Friday July 25, 2025 6:45pm - 8:00pm EDT
These dine-arounds are casual group dinners in restaurants around the beautiful city of Cleveland (all within walking distance of the hotel). In groups of 8-12, we will discuss topics that are sometimes serious and sometimes irreverent. You don't need to be an expert on any of these subjects - just sign up and join the fun! (Dinner bills at restaurants will be on individual checks.)
Friday July 25, 2025 6:45pm - 8:00pm EDT
TBA
 
Saturday, July 26
 

8:30am EDT

Youth Theatre Journal Meeting
Saturday July 26, 2025 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
Join AATE’s Research & Scholarship team and the co-editors of Youth Theatre Journal for an interactive, community-building, writing-partner-matching workshop to demystify the writing and publishing process in youth theatre, theatre education, theatre for young audiences, and other related fields.
Saturday July 26, 2025 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
TBA

8:30am EDT

Doyle Breakfast
Saturday July 26, 2025 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
Saturday July 26, 2025 8:30am - 9:30am EDT
TBA

9:00am EDT

Exhibitor Hall Open
Saturday July 26, 2025 9:00am - 5:00pm EDT
Saturday July 26, 2025 9:00am - 5:00pm EDT
TBA

9:30am EDT

Registration Open
Saturday July 26, 2025 9:30am - 3:00pm EDT
Saturday July 26, 2025 9:30am - 3:00pm EDT
TBA

9:45am EDT

Performances: TaleSpinner Children’s Theater & Dobama Theatre & Cleveland Play House
Saturday July 26, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
Experience a rich tapestry of theatrical storytelling with performances by TaleSpinner Children's Theater, Dobama Theatre, and the Cleveland Play House. TaleSpinner delights young audiences with imaginative, family-friendly productions that spark creativity and wonder. Dobama Theatre, known for its bold and thought-provoking contemporary plays, offers an intimate setting for audiences seeking dynamic and socially resonant works. Meanwhile, Cleveland Play House, America’s first professional regional theatre, presents world-class productions ranging from classic dramas to innovative new works, showcasing top-tier talent on a national stage. Together, these three institutions reflect the vibrant and diverse theatrical landscape of Northeast Ohio.
Saturday July 26, 2025 9:45am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

11:15am EDT

Check Out Vendors
Saturday July 26, 2025 11:15am - 11:30am EDT
Make sure to get your Exhibitor Passport completed for a chance to win at the Raffle!
Saturday July 26, 2025 11:15am - 11:30am EDT
TBA

11:45am EDT

Annual Meeting
Saturday July 26, 2025 11:45am - 1:00pm EDT
The annual meeting of the AATE membership is held once-a-year during the AATE Conference. It is a chance for the AATE Board and Executive Director to report on the state of the organization and for the membership to hear from AATE Committee Chairs. Attending is a great way to learn more about how AATE programming and operations take place. There are no proposed by-law changes this year. All conference attendees are welcome.
Speakers
avatar for Alexis Truitt

Alexis Truitt

Executive Director, AATE
Alexis Truitt prior to AATE was the Program Coordinator for the Changing Education Through the Arts (CETA) Program at the Kennedy Center. She holds her Masters in Arts Management from George Mason University and her Bachelors of Music in voice from The Boston Conservatory. She has... Read More →
ME

Morganne Evans

Morganne Evans (she/her) is an arts-administrator, intimacy director, and artist-researcher based in New York City. She has taught and performed regionally in Orlando, Atlanta, and New York, and recently completed her certification training in Intimacy Direction for live performance... Read More →
avatar for Jonathan P Jones

Jonathan P Jones

NYU
Jonathan P. Jones, PhD, is a Program Administrator at NYU Steinhardt for the Program in Educational Theatre and the Program in Music Education. At CUNY, he teaches courses in public speaking and theatre history and he has taught courses in pedagogy and theatre history at NYU. Jonathan... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 11:45am - 1:00pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

(Re) Imagining TYA From a BIPOC Perspective: Confronting Eurocentric Academic Scholarship
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
The panel will explore and discuss issues pertaining to the lack of scholarship in the field of Theatre for Young Audiences; emphasizing the importance of scholarship in the field of TYA, in particular, scholarship that explores youth narratives of color and youth communities that have been historically marginalized and underrepresented. Also, included in this dialogue is the examining the lack of scholarship for these same groups which is practically non-existent and what are the ways that we encourage people/future scholars to dedicate themselves to being scholars in the field. As a result, the question will be asked, "how do we, as a collective, change this situation and reimagining possibilities in order to facilitate change in a faster and ethical manner."
Speakers
avatar for Quenna Barrett

Quenna Barrett

Governors State University
avatar for Jose Casas

Jose Casas

Playwright & Associate Professor, Department of Theatre & Drama, University of Michigan
José Casas is a playwright and Assistant Professor in the Department of Theatre and Drama. He is a Board Member of The Children’s Theatre Foundation. He has a Bachelor of Arts in Theatre Arts from the University of California, Santa Barbara, a Master of Arts in Theatre Arts from... Read More →
avatar for Gustave Weltsek

Gustave Weltsek

Associate Professor of Arts Ed, University of Indiana
Gustave Weltsek is an Associate Professor at the University of Indiana whose work focuses on Anti-racist, Anti-Black racist, LGBTQ+ positive, and Anti-ableist, actionings of social justice and equity. Quenna Barrett is doctorate candidate at NYU Steinhardt, pursuing a doctorate of... Read More →
avatar for Shavonne Coleman

Shavonne Coleman

Assistant Professor of Applied Theatre, University of Michigan
Shavonne Coleman (she/they) is an Assistant Professor of Applied Theatre in the Theatre and Drama Department at the University of Michigan. She is a fabulist, facilitator, teaching artist, actor, playwright, and cultivator of community from Detroit, MI. Shavonne is a Board Member... Read More →
TT

Tiffany Trent

University of Michigan
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

Envisioning the Future of Trans Identity on Stage
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
This session invites participants to envision our theatrical future when the voices and bodies of trans characters are represented with full dimension on stage. How do we find, and develop, scripts that: tell honest stories reflective of trans experience provide roles for trans actors and truthful trans characters ask probing questions about the spaces that nurture the wholeness of trans identity thwart the impact of political leanings that threaten trans freedoms. This workshop session is fueled by a facilitated discussion that centers trans experience within the larger LBGTQ community. Led by trans playwright Genevieve Simon and Oberlin College theatre undergrads with a reading of their new play Punch Back, the session will prompt participants to share and listen to stories that can become the substance of strong scripts. Together, participants will brainstorm play development strategies that will lead to initiatives that have the power to change the status quo.
Speakers
avatar for Jo Beth Gonzalez

Jo Beth Gonzalez

Bowling Green High School
Jo Beth Gonzalez, MFA, Ph.D., is a scholar and veteran theatre teacher at Bowling Green High School in Bowling Green, Ohio. Author of many publications, her forthcoming book Temporary Stages III: How High School Theatre Experience Fosters the Mutual Development of Spirituality and... Read More →
GS

Genevieve Simon

Skidmore College
As a playwright, Genevieve centers queer people in magical worlds at the intersection of family, identity, and bodies of water. He is a 2025 NYSCA Commission Winner, a 2023-24 New Georges Audrey Resident, a member of the 2024 Page 73 Writers Group, and was a Semi-Finalist for the... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

From Breaking to Blooming: Unearthing Hope to Enable Rebuilding
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
My personal mantra has evolved into an artistic philosophy: I feel the impact of simultaneous breaking and blooming, both within myself and in the world around me. The systems we’ve built, both societal and internal, slowly erode over time. What begins as small, unnoticed cracks eventually becomes undeniable—pebbles turning into chunks of stone that threaten to crumble everything we as a people have carefully constructed over time. When the breaking becomes apparent, it’s easy to give up, to lie down in the wreckage. But if you sit with it and don’t let it be the end, you might find beauty in the ruins. Like the art of kintsugi, where broken pottery is repaired with golden lacquer, the damage becomes a part of the new whole. The scars remain, but a different, stronger beauty emerges. And before you know it, what was once a desolate place is now blooming, as you notice determined vines and flowers poking through cracks and desperately reaching toward the sun. I propose a digital storytelling workshop that uses photo, creative writing, and personal stories to explore this concept of breaking and blooming, finding or making hope in the seemingly hopeless. This workshop, which I led first with youth in the Rio Grande Valley—a region along the Texas-Mexico border where many are currently feeling justifiably fearful and despaired—helps participants find hope even in the most hopeless of times. I’d love to share this experience working with youth of the Texas borderlands, then guiding the AATE community through a condensed version of the same exercise.
Speakers
MP

Madi Palomo

MFA Candidate, UT Austin
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

From Stage to Change: Reimagining Theater Education with SEL
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
In this interactive session, participants will explore the "Stages of Change" model as it applies to theater education and social-emotional learning (SEL). Using the dual lens of progress and tradition, we will reflect on how integrating innovative practices like the Student Voice and Engagement (SVE) program can sustain student engagement while honoring the core values of theater education. Participants will engage in hands-on activities, collaborative discussions, and reflective exercises to examine how these principles can be applied to their own settings.
Speakers
avatar for Sam Leopold

Sam Leopold

Partnership with Children
Sam Leopold is a Programs Manager with Partnership with Children in the Arts Education department. As a Program Manager he works to facilitate a number of different programs for K-12 students across the New York City area. His primary focus is on a four-year project, Student Voice... Read More →
avatar for Camille Simone Thomas

Camille Simone Thomas

Teaching Artist, Playwright, Partnership with Children
Camille Simone Thomas (she/her) is a Jamaican /African-American multi-hyphenate playwright, actor, solo performer, producer, and arts educator from Detroit, Michigan As a playwright her plays have been featured with The Obie Award-winning Harlem9 and Detroit Public Theatre Company... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

Reimagining Technique: Teaching Theatre Skills in a Changing World
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
As we face an uncertain world marked by divisions and transformations, theatre education holds immense potential to bridge gaps, foster connections, and amplify community wisdom. Yet, we find ourselves at a crossroads: How do we teach foundational acting, movement, and voice techniques in ways that resonate with today’s learners while staying attuned to the urgent social and cultural concerns of our time? This session invites theatre educators, artists, and scholars to collectively imagine new approaches to teaching theatre skills that are experiential, embodied, and rooted in the realities of our students’ lives. How might our classrooms—whether on campus, in community centers, or other shared spaces—serve as places where techniques are not only learned but also practiced as tools for connection, reflection, and change? How do we engage Gen Z learners, who crave immediacy, application, and purpose, while nurturing their artistry and critical awareness? Through facilitated dialogue and collaborative inquiry, we will explore how reimagining the ways we teach and assess technique can better reflect the cultural brilliance found in classrooms, schoolyards, kitchens, and street corners. Together, we will grapple with questions about the role of performing arts education in movements for justice, equity, and community-building. This session is not about presenting answers but about sharing questions, reflecting on challenges, and envisioning possibilities. How can our pedagogical practices foster artistry that both honors tradition and amplifies contemporary concerns? What can we learn from the beautiful failures and inspiring successes in our work as we adapt to meet the needs of this generation and the communities we serve?
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

So, Your Music Director Bailed... Music Directing for Non-Musicians
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Musicals are my favorite, but without a reliable music director they can extremely daunting. In this session we'll explore vocal health concepts, teaching techniques, and music modifications that will help students feel confident, successful, and empowered. We'll discuss tips and tricks for various skills levels, and examine resources available to suit your needs. We'll trouble shoot your worries and think through creative ways to overcome music directing obstacles.
Speakers
avatar for Lauren Neuwirth

Lauren Neuwirth

Farmington Public Schools
Lauren Neuwirth is a musical theatre and teaching artist based in Metro Detroit, Michigan. She just entered her 8th year teaching Drama, Choir, and Musical Theatre in for public schools in South East Michigan. Lauren holds a bachelor's degree in Vocal Music Education from Wayne State... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

Supporting Early Career Theatre Professionals: Enriching Workforce Development with Theatre Practices
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Young people who are entering the professional world of theatre for the first time are part of a generation that was severely impacted by the isolation brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic during key developmental years. Morganne Evans and Saya Jenks have developed participatory workshops that use theatre techniques to help these early-career theatre professionals succeed in the workplace and address the unique circumstances they face.As the Senior Manager of Workforce Development at The Public Theatre, Morganne oversees a program that grants fellowships to recent college graduates, primarily from underrepresented communities, of Brooklyn College and Hunter College. The program is designed for Fellows to gain professional experience at The Public. Saya teaches professional development workshops that draw on the world of improvisational theatre. The workshops they created together are designed to give these young professionals embodied opportunities to practice interpersonal skills that are key to succeeding in professional theatre careers. In this session, Saya and Morganne will discuss their process of identifying challenges facing young theatremakers who are entering the professional world for the first time, and how they created these professional development workshops to address those needs. Saya and Morganne will also demonstrate some of the exercises they have used and discuss participants’ responses to them.
Speakers
avatar for Saya Jenks

Saya Jenks

On Deck Workshops
Saya Jenks (she/her) is a Seattle-based applied theatre facilitator and PhD candidate in Educational Theatre at New York University. Saya loves bringing play and theatre to places that could use more of both: she has taught theatre at law firms and software companies, in Pre-K and... Read More →
ME

Morganne Evans

Morganne Evans (she/her) is an arts-administrator, intimacy director, and artist-researcher based in New York City. She has taught and performed regionally in Orlando, Atlanta, and New York, and recently completed her certification training in Intimacy Direction for live performance... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

Theatre Teacher: Wellness in Warm-ups and Welcoming
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
We will be exploring a staple within the drama community- The Warm-Up. Many of us do them; they have become second nature. But, are we doing them correctly? Are we doing them the same way we’ve done them for years? Have we thought to change or enhance them since the pandemic? Do you warm them down as well? Have you encompassed steps of wellness and thought of your students' well-beings while you prep your class? Have you remembered about your wellness while you teach? These are questions we need to ask ourselves as we navigate through our drama process. As a teacher who is old school shifting into new school thinking, I've learned how I need to change my mindset and want to share what has been beneficial and easy to do.
Speakers
RS

Randy Stewart

Eastern Michigan University
Retired High School Theatre/English teacher/director - 28 yearsB.A. Communication/Theatre Arts from Eastern Michigan UniversityM.A. Theatre Direction from Roosevelt University Meisner Acting Certified,True Acting Institute Currently pursuing M.F.A. in Applied Drama & Theatre for the... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

When "Performing For" Becomes "Performing With": Teatro Vivo's Annual Pastorela
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Teatro Vivo in Austin, Texas has offered the Mexican-American cultural tradition of “La Pastorela” semi-annually for over two decades. This interactive session will illustrate how the bilingual theatre company has deepened its community engagement over those years to now include full audience participation in its newest iteration of the enduring story. Roxanne Schroeder-Arce and Mateo Hernandez share insights into this evolution towards the production now serving as a site to build micro-communities with youth and adults.
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

1:15pm EDT

Yardsticks: Defining Evaluation and Success
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
Join a dynamic exploration of how we define, measure, and evaluate success in youth and community-based arts programs. This session invites participants to grapple with the tensions between funder expectations, artistic goals, participant impact, and community engagement. Through guided discussion, we’ll examine what outcomes we can and should measure, the importance of clarity versus flexibility in project design, and how to assess whether our work is truly effective. Designed for educators, artists, and administrators, this session offers a collaborative space to reflect on the complexities of evaluation and develop more meaningful and equitable approaches to measuring impact.
Speakers
avatar for Sara Berliner

Sara Berliner

Sara Berliner holds an MA in Theatre Education & Applied Theatre from Emerson College and a BA in Theatre Education and Nonprofit Arts Administration from Hampshire College. In addition to being a licensed K-12 theatre teacher in Massachusetts, she is a director, stage manager, and... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 1:15pm - 2:30pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Case Making for the Arts: How to Lead in Tumultuous Times
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
As a leader, do you find yourself stretched thin, wearing many hats in your organization? Are there elements of your leadership work that you would like to enhance? You are not alone and we know that leaders in arts organizations are being asked to justify, defend, and represent the work in new ways during this turbulent post-COVID moment. Learn how your personal and organizational values can support a well-rounded strategy as you move your theatre program through tough times. Participants will gain new strategies and tools for supporting teams of any size. Through this interactive workshop, participants will work together, connect, and learn from one another. The session will also provide opportunities for networking and mentorship. The facilitators will make space for shared ideas and stories, as well as brainstorming on specific case studies.
Speakers
SN

Shelby Newport

University of Michigan-Flint
Shelby Newport is a professor of theatre at the University of Michigan-Flint. She is the chair of the Department of Fine & Performing Arts and the director of the Arts Administration graduate program. She previously served as Vice Provost for Academic Affairs at UM-Flint. Shelby is... Read More →
MT

Matthew Tibbs

University of Cinncinati, College-Conservatory of Music
Matthew Tibbs is an assistant professor of sound design at University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music. He is chair of the Theatre Design and Production department within the conservatory and served for four years on the executive board of the Theatre Sound Designers... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Cultivating Growth: Nurturing Community Roots with Applied Theatre
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
In the quest for progress and tradition, "Cultivating Growth: Nurturing Community Roots with Applied Theatre" emerges as a pivotal session for educators, practitioners, and advocates eager to intertwine the arts with activism within their localities. This session is dedicated to exploring the fertile ground of applied theatre as a means to empower youth, foster inclusivity, and sow the seeds of change in educational and communal landscapes. Participants will be guided through a 3 step process learning how to cultivate meaningful and lasting relationships that are OF, BY, AND FOR their local community. The session will unfold the layers of creating empathetic and caring environments, where voices are not only heard but are instrumental in leading the change. The heart of this session lies in its interactive activities, designed to mirror the growth process from seed to sapling. Attendees will engage in exercises such as "Relational Care Tag," where they'll articulate and share methods of care, and "Human Bingo," fostering connections through shared experiences and aspirations. These activities are complemented by applied theater techniques aimed at enhancing mindful listening and empathetic engagement. Through role-play scenarios, storytelling workshops, and reflective listening exercises, participants will learn to cultivate an environment where every voice is valued, and every participant feels seen and heard. By embracing the metaphor of a garden, "Cultivating Growth" invites participants to consider how applied theater can be the sunlight and water that nurture the seeds of change in our communities. This session is not just about learning techniques but about embodying the principles of growth, care, and community in our practices. Join us to discover how we can collectively tend to our local ecosystems, ensuring they flourish and sustain the vibrant diversity of voices and stories that make our communities whole.
Speakers
AA

Andrew Aaron Valdez

Andrew Aaron Valdez (he/ello) is a trauma-informed care professional, educator, artist, community organizer, Intimacy Director (Level 4 w/IDC) and DEI consultant from Donna, Texas. Valdez, a Drama League Award nominee (American Dreams by Leila Buck, directed by Tamilla Woodard), blends... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Devised Theater Process for and with Youth in Foster Care
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Applied Theater can take many forms and shapes. In this session, learn and interact with some hands on techniques for approaching devised theater for and with youth in foster care and how to involve community engagement initiatives that lead to advocacy. In 2024- 25, Abby Thompson had the opportunity, through the League of Chicago Theatres’ Samuel G. Roberson Jr. Fellowship in Artivism to do just that through a new play development project, Alex in Windyland. As a former foster sibling, Abby is particularly passionate about advocating for the stories and voices of youth in care, holding space for them to be creative, and applying this storytelling to tangible change, advocacy, and awareness for youth in the foster care system. Come play, devise, and create original stories while learning directly from the case study examples developed in Abby’s fellowship program, centering voices of youth in foster care.
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Exploring Theatrical Interpreting - Creating Equivalent Experiences
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Historically, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing community have had limited access to equivalent live theatrical experiences. During this workshop participants will be exposed to foundational theater terminology, dramaturgy, character development, movement, script analysis and other skills necessary to interpret on the stage. The most integrated forms of stage interpreting; Zoned and Shadowed; will be the primary focus of this workshop. These styles create the most inclusive forms of shared audience experience. Shadowed and Zoned interpreting necessitate a special form of collaboration between the director, cast, crew and interpreters.
Speakers
KF

Kristie Farr

Indian River High School
Kristie is an award-winning Theatre teacher from Indian River HS. Several of her productions have received Awards from the Theatre Association of New York State. Kristie has served as NYSTEA’s Curriculum Chair leading Theatre standards revision, curriculum development, assessment... Read More →
MS

Michelle Smiley

Third Eye Interpreting
Michelle is owner of Third Eye Interpreting, LLC, and from the central and northern NY region. She received her BA in Drama from SUNY Potsdam and MS in Deaf Education from Canisius College. Michelle, a veteran teacher, has been involved with the dramatic arts, education and sign language... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Teacher Leader Cohort (TLC): Creating Growth & Change through Deep Examination of Practice
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
In this participatory workshop, Wheelock Family Theatre educators will engage participants in collaborative reflection and dialogue as we examine the dilemmas and discoveries that can be found at the intersection of youth, theatre, and social justice. Over the last year, a group of Wheelock Family Theatre educators met monthly in our Teacher Leader Cohort (TLC) and embarked on a practice of collaborative reflection. Adrienne Maree Brown, in Emergent Strategy, writes that deep, adaptive change happens like a fractal. How we are on the small scale is how we are/will be on the large scale. Though we did not know the outcomes of the work at its onset, we trusted that our work in our small cohort would have ripple effects. The purpose of our TLC was to create a community of practice rooted in accountability as both a quality and a function of the TLC, to gather a group of educators willing to go public with their practice, and to grapple with complex issues of equity, to engage in praxis (an iterative, reflective approach to taking action). Utilizing feedback protocols from the Center for Leadership and Educational Equity (an organization whose mission is to transform systems and empower collaborative leadership to create environments where every child engages in learning that unleashes their unlimited potential and joy), we will model some of the tools we found helpful as together (presenters and participants) we engage around real issues from our collective practice.
Speakers
JH

Jeri Hammond

Wheelock Family Theatre
Jeri Hammond ( she/her) is the Director of Education & Community Engagement at the Wheelock Family Theatre at Boston University. She brings to her work over thirty years of experience as an educator and a lifelong passion for the arts. An alum of Wheelock College, Jeri has degrees... Read More →
AN

Anika Nayak

Wheelock Family Theatre @ Boston University
Anika Nayak (They/She) is a Boston-based theater artist focusing on Stage Management, Lighting Design, and Teaching Artistry. Anika focuses on creating nonhierarchical and collaborative spaces in which theater and art can be created, taught, and experienced as what she believes is... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

The Universal Design for Learning: Individualized Education Strategies Unpacked
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Looking for ways to make your teaching practice more accessible? Looking to serve diverse populations of varying needs? The Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is a research-based framework to optimize learning for all learners, encompassing all the facets of our identities that call for individualized learning. According to CAST, the creators of the UDL, “The guidelines offer a set of concrete suggestions that can be applied to any discipline or domain to ensure that all learners can access and participate in meaningful, challenging learning opportunities.” With the latest version of the UDL released in July of 2024 the UDL is a dynamic framework that continues to reflect a changing society. Unpack this extensive framework, learn about the nine domains of the UDL and how to engage in each to support learners to become purposeful & reflective, resourceful & authentic, and strategic & action oriented. Participants can expect to leave the session with practical strategies to increase the accessibility of their practice for all learners.
Speakers
avatar for Rebecca Burcher

Rebecca Burcher

Director of Education, Talespinner Children's Theatre
Rebecca Burcher was born and raised in northern California and attended Slippery Rock University in Pennsylvania. She graduated summa cum laude with a BA in Dance and a BS in Community Programs for Americans with Disabilities with a specialization in Adapted Physical Activity. She... Read More →
WP

Will Potts

Education manager, Talespinner Children's Theatre
Originally from Chattanooga, TN, Will Potts graduated in 2021 with a BFA in acting from Baldwin Wallace. Potts has taught at the Beck Center, Cleveland Play House, Cleveland Public Theatre, Dobama, and others, and is now the Education Manager at Talespinner Children's Theatre.
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Theatre Games for Technical Theatre
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
Why should acting have all the fun? Come and explore short, interactive and hands on activities and games geared toward technical theatre. Walk away with several activities that can be implemented right away in the classroom.
Speakers
DS

Donna Seage

Ball State University
Donna Seag is an Assistant Professor of Theatre Education at Ball State University and the Chair of the Youth Theatre Network for AATE. She has 25 years experience as a high school theatre teacher and over 20 years experience in professional theatre doing this and that, here and there... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Tradition of Youth Playwriting at Cleveland School of the Arts
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
This panel discussion will illuminate the approaches of the Cleveland School of the Arts’s young playwrights program through which high school students were guided by a variety of voices (teacher, professional playwrights, recent alumni) as they crafted full-length plays for CSA’s New Works Festival. The panel includes Carl Walton and Ananias Dixon, playwrights and graduates of the program, who co-founded D.O.C. Studios in Cleveland to build on the new play approaches of their late mentor, Dr. Scott Miller. The panel includes TYA playwright Eric Coble who serves as a professional mentor for the young writers at CSA, as well as John Newman who depicts the CSA program in his book Playwriting in Schools.
Speakers
JN

John Newman

TYE Center, Utah Valley University
John Newman is a Professor and a previous Chair of the Utah Valley University Department of Theatrical Arts. He currently serves as Director of UVU’s Theatre for Youth and Education (TYE) Center and coordinates the UVU Theatre Education program. Dr. Newman earned his BFA and M.Ed... Read More →
CW

Carl Walton II

D.O.C. Studios
Carl Walton II is an Actor, Director, Writer, Producer, Filmmaker, and teaching artist based in Cleveland Ohio. Carl is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of D.O.C Studios, a non-profit organization that focuses on teaching acting for the camera and producing film, theater, and... Read More →
AD

Ananias Dixon

D.O.C. Studios
EC

Eric Coble

Freelance Playwright
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

2:45pm EDT

Using Verbatim Performance to Disrupt Discrimination in Healthcare Delivery
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
In this session, participants will engage in a workshop inspired by an intervention designed for the NYC Health Equity Project. The project gathered stories of discrimination in health care delivery, focusing on intersections of race, social class, gender, gender identity, ability, and age. Artist-researchers used these stories to create a verbatim performance intervention, a method that uses the exact speech and gestures of the interviewee for investigation. Ethnoactors used a scored transcript, the original interview recording, and field notes to prepare a performance portrait of an interview participant. Intervention participants then use textual data related to the interviews and the resulting verbatim portraits to explore bias and discrimination in healthcare delivery. The artist-researchers piloted the intervention with healthcare workers in New York City in Spring 2025, and the presenter will share preliminary results of the pilot as part of the session. Participants in this session will engage with a version of the intervention and learn how artist-researchers used ethnodrama and verbatim performance techniques to create it. The NYC Health Equity Project is a collaboration between NYU Steinhardt’s Theatre and Health Lab and Verbatim Performance Lab, supported by the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. The project sits within a more extensive international collaboration, including Brock University and the Jameel Arts & Health Lab. The project is funded by the New Frontiers in Research Fund, Special Call for COVID-19 Response Research (Canada), which focuses on high-risk, high-reward, and transdisciplinary projects.
Speakers
avatar for Joe Salvatore

Joe Salvatore

Program in Educational Theatre, New York University
Joe Salvatore is a Clinical Professor of Educational Theatre at NYU Steinhardt, where he teaches courses in ethnodrama, verbatim performance, community-engaged theatre, and new play development. He also serves as the Vice Chair for Academic Affairs for the Department of Music and... Read More →
Saturday July 26, 2025 2:45pm - 4:00pm EDT
TBA

4:15pm EDT

Exhibitor Raffle
Saturday July 26, 2025 4:15pm - 4:45pm EDT
It’s prize time! Join us as we draw winners for the Exhibitor Raffle—featuring great giveaways from our vendors. To be eligible, make sure you’ve completed your Exhibitor Passport by collecting signatures from participating exhibitors. Don’t miss your chance to win!
Saturday July 26, 2025 4:15pm - 4:45pm EDT
TBA

5:00pm EDT

Affinity Groups/Group Check-Ins
Saturday July 26, 2025 5:00pm - 6:00pm EDT
Continuing conversations and connections from past years' affinity group formations, this space will help individuals, both new to AATE and those returning, discover intersections with others. Affinity groups will meet twice during the conference to create space for attendees to connect with peers on their experience. This practice will foster relationships that may be continued beyond the conference and help all maintain a focused awareness of anti-racism, anti-oppression, equity, and justice.
Saturday July 26, 2025 5:00pm - 6:00pm EDT
TBA

6:45pm EDT

AATE Award's Ceremony
Saturday July 26, 2025 6:45pm - 8:15pm EDT
The AATE Awards honor exceptional individuals as well as organizations for the high quality work they perform in the field of theatre with and for young audiences. Recipients represent the best of our field and inspire others with the outstanding work, commitment, and dedication that make us proud to count them among our colleagues and allies. The AATE Awards are presented annually at the National Conference.
Saturday July 26, 2025 6:45pm - 8:15pm EDT
TBA

8:30pm EDT

All Conference Party
Saturday July 26, 2025 8:30pm - 10:30pm EDT
Close out the Conference and your evening wit lite bites, yummy desserts, and a cash bar!
Saturday July 26, 2025 8:30pm - 10:30pm EDT
TBA
 
Sunday, July 27
 

10:00am EDT

Board Meeting
Sunday July 27, 2025 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
Sunday July 27, 2025 10:00am - 11:00am EDT
TBA

12:00pm EDT

Excursion: Join the workshop of The Throwaways and tour the campus of the Cleveland Play House
Sunday July 27, 2025 12:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - Price $25
Roundtrip Transportation Provided
(from the Westin to the theater.)

Hosts:
Pamela DiPasquale, Director of Education and Artistic Strategies
Jenna Messina, Associate Director, CARE - Cleveland

Meet the cast, production team, and take part in the workshop of Cleveland Play House’s newest Family Theatre touring production of The Throwaways, followed by a guided tour of the Cleveland Play House theatre, rehearsal, and office complex located in the heart of the Playhouse Square district.
Sunday July 27, 2025 12:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
TBA

12:00pm EDT

MASTER CLASS D: Accessibility Design: A Hands-on, Artistic Approach Toward a More Inclusive and Accessible Theatre
Sunday July 27, 2025 12:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
Pre-Purchase Required - $60 per ticket

Want to incorporate sensory friendly/relaxed performances? Provide access services and tools for blind and low vision audience members or d/Deaf or hard of hearing patrons? How about all of the above! This hands-on master class will introduce participants to a myriad of accessibility tools that can be implemented for productions with a variety of budgets, building foundational techniques toward comprehensive accessibility design, with materials to keep for future use.
Sunday July 27, 2025 12:00pm - 3:00pm EDT
TBA
 
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