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127 Days until K-12 SUMMERFEST
Texas Educational Theatre Association, Inc. was founded in October, 1951. Preliminary meetings in 1950 and early 1951 had resulted in tentative plans for the eventual establishments of an organization concerned primarily with improving the status of educational theatre in Texas.
However, when the proposals to revise secondary school curricula and teaching certification policies, the need for immediate action became apparent. Thus, the Texas Educational Theatre Association came into being in order to promote theatre and secure recognition for it as a course in the Texas school programs. Its purposes were stated as follows:
During its comparatively short existence, the Texas Educational Theatre Association has made significant contributions to the development of the national educational theatre. The Minimum Criteria Policy originated in and was first implemented by TETA. The Southwest Theatre Association and the American Theatre Association adopted the criteria without revision. It formed the basis for what was to become the Minimum Criteria Policy for the National Association of Schools of Theatre. It was a TETA committee which labored for several years to formulate a Play Selection Policy. The unique plan was approved by leading play publishers and has been adopted by the Southwest Theatre Association and the former American Theatre Association.
The Association played a significant role in establishing the Texas Fine Arts Commission. For several years, appointed representatives called upon the Texas Governor in person and urged that Texas join the growing number of states which had formed similar organizations. The Commission was approved by the Legislature in 1966, and TETA members occupied important posts and the program of the Commission's first state convention.
Since its founding in 1951, the Texas Educational Theatre Association, Inc. and its Committee on Academic and Production Standards have sought constantly to improve the status of drama and its teaching in Texas public schools and colleges. Thus, TETA eagerly accepted the invitation of the Texas Education Agency to collaborate in the preparation of the following proposals, all of which were officially adopted in 1966 and are now in effect:
Texas thus became the first state to provide for secondary school drama teacher certification and accreditation and to establish drama as a separate subject in a fine arts program in junior and senior high school curricula. When the Texas State Legislature mandated a required examination of teachers being certified for secondary school teaching, it was a committee composed primarily of TETA members from elementary, middle, secondary, and university level schools which prepared the Examination for Certification of Educators in Texas (ExCet) in the field of Theatre Arts. This examination was first administered in 1988.
The Texas Educational Theatre Association course outlines in Introduction to Theatre, Acting, Voice and Diction, Technical Production, Stage Make-Up, Directing, and History of Theatre have been prepared and distributed to all Texas college theatre departments and to numerous theatre organizations in other states. The outlines are kept up-to-date by committees which make regular revisions. They are then reviewed by all members of the Association whenever further refinements are made. Thus, they are representative of the best thinking and teaching practices of most of the college theatre instructors in Texas. Students of TETA Institutional Member Schools who complete such courses are able to transfer them to other TETA colleges or universities without loss of credit.
The need for secondary school drama teachers' organization became apparent as the demand for drama increased in junior and senior high schools. The Texas Secondary Theatre Conference was founded in 1964. It affiliated at once with TETA. Its meetings were held at the time of the TETA annual convention.
The Texas Creative Dramatics-Children's Theatre Conference was founded at the TETA convention at Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos in 1972. It affiliated at once with TETA.
At the February 1977 meeting of the Texas Educational Theatre Association, the basic structure of the organization was changed. The affiliates, Texas Secondary Theatre Conference and Texas Creative Dramatics-Children's Theatre Conference, were disbanded as organizations within TETA. In order that these groups would have equal representation with community/junior college and university/college members, four sections were formed to represent special interest groups:
The Constitution and By-Laws were amended in 1977 and a new policy of minimum criteria for secondary schools was written.
As the Texas Educational Theatre Association grew in membership and as conditions in educational theatre within the state changed, it became apparent that a reassessment of the mission and purposes of TETA was needed. Therefore, a Strategic Planning Committee was appointed to study the situation in 1988, and in 1989, the Constitutional and By-Laws were further revised. Under the new constitution, the mission and objectives of the organization have been restated as follows:
The Mission of The Association is the support, promotion, and expansion of educational theatre by providing quality educational opportunities, a network for resources, support, and expansion, a base for advocacy, and a forum for establishing standards, programs, and projects in order to celebrate the importance of theatre arts in the human experience.
The Objectives of the Association are:
The various sections were consolidated into two sections, and each section is represented on the TETA Board of Directors:
In carrying out the above mandates, TETA has added a variety of activities to its endeavors. Working with the Texas Commission on the Arts, the Creative Dramatics Network of the K-12 Section sponsors training sessions throughout the state for elementary teachers. The Teacher training Network works specifically with the College/University section to promote improved training to theatre specialists for the public schools. In 1989, the Texas Educational Theatre Association, in cooperation with the University Interscholastic League, formed the TETA Adjudicator's Organization which is charged with the training and evaluation of judges for the UIL sponsored One-Act Play Contests. TETA is also active throughout the state through its publication, advocacy, scholarships auditions, workshops, and the encouragement of scholarly research and publication.
Membership in the Texas Educational Theatre Association is open to all who work or teach in the non-commercial theatre of Texas. The annual convention is held in late January or early February.