Pubdate: Thu, 7 Jan 1999 Source: The Washington Post Copyright: 1999 The Washington Post Company Page: M01 Contact: http://washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/edit/letters/letterform.htm Website: http://washingtonpost.com/ Author: Lisa Frazier, Washington Post Staff Writer MAKING MAKE-BELIEVE WORK FOR REAL ACTORS HELP TEACH PEACEFUL SOLUTIONS For the moment, the multipurpose room at Rogers Heights Elementary School in Bladensburg is a theater and classroom. Actor Alan Rubinstein becomes Joe, a rebellious character who can't accept responsibility when his mother chastises him for keeping his room messy or when a teacher scolds him for making bad grades or when a friend complains that he borrowed a toy and broke it. Joe, dressed in a red baseball cap, gray slacks and a white T-shirt with the words "Just Say No to Drugs" on it, weaves through the audience of children sitting cross-legged on the floor to get advice on how to solve his problem. "What's the problem I'm having with my parent?" Joe asks. A boy in the back of the room stands and says, "You're not cleaning your room." Joe turns to another student. "What do I have to do to work things out?" he asks. "You have to talk it out," a girl says. Through his Involvement Theater, Rubinstein travels the region presenting one-man skits designed to help schoolchildren find peaceful ways to resolve conflicts. Grants from the school system's Safe and Drug Free Schools Program and the Maryland State Arts Council will allow Rubinstein to take his show to 40 Prince George's County schools this school year. He calls the program The Problem-Solving Project. Rubinstein's technique, using interactive drama to deliver a serious message to students, seems to be growing in popularity with local schools. The Safe and Drug Free Schools Program also is financing puppet and magic shows that visit schools with a message encouraging children to avoid drugs and solve their problems peacefully. "We've found they learn best that way," said Betsy Gallan, supervisor of the Safe and Drug Free Program for the county school system. "We don't just talk at them anymore." Some county schools dip into their own funds to bring in theater groups to deliver a positive message to their students. Matthew Henson Elementary School in Landover recently hosted the Bridgework Theater, an Indiana-based company that has three troupes that travel to schools throughout the country to perform plays with a problem-solving theme. Rubinstein, 44, of Columbia, founded his Involvement Theater in 1987. Rubinstein, a graduate of Oberlin College/Conservatory of Music and Towson State University, worked as a teacher before leaving the profession to devote most of his time to performing. In his skits, he sings and strums the guitar to tunes such as "Kids Are People Too." He also uses puppets, such as Billy, a big, green frog and former bully who followed Rubinstein's prescribed steps and now gets along with everybody. As the goofy Professor Rubio, Rubinstein changes into a white lab coat, fuzzy white wig and black rim glasses to teach the students problem-solving steps posted on a banner hanging from a basketball goal: Identify Problem, Accept Responsibility, Brainstorm Solutions, Create Plan, Take Action, Evaluate. He also teaches them three easy steps to use in a difficult situation: Stop, Listen, Think. Rubinstein and his wife, Karen, put together a handbook of more than 130 pages to help teachers create fun lessons designed to steer children through the problem-solving process. "Hopefully, I'm here just to give an idea for teachers to use in the classroom," he said. "The most I can expect is that [the students] will know that they are not alone in facing these kinds of struggles." The Bridgework Theater uses more serious drama. A half-hour play performed recently for the fourth-, fifth- and sixth-grade students at Matthew Henson showed how gossip and rumors escalate and cause conflict. The students watched with rapt attention as the actors, playing middle school students embroiled in a feud, moved from scene to scene, eventually resolving their conflict. "It showed me we shouldn't be fighting in school because it's not a good example for the little kids," said sixth-grader Ana McGruder, 11. Another sixth-grader, Hannah Tipton, 11, added: "I think it had a good example of a problem that can be solved by peer mediation. It seemed real." Fourth-grader Dominic Walton, 9, summed it up this way: "It was realistic. That really can happen in school." Four students narrated the play: Willie Stokes, 12, a sixth-grader; Elizabeth Wubishet, 11, a sixth-grader; Hannah Slaughter, 9, a fourth-grader; and James Berkley, 11, a sixth-grader. The theater company performed a different play for the school's first-, second- and third-graders. Don Yost, the founder of the Bridgework Theater, wrote the plays based on actual incidents he witnessed at schools, said Claudia Torres, 26, one of the actors and the spokeswoman for the group. The other actors are Nikki Kaplan, 22; Jonathan Bailey, 25; and Justin Via, 26. They perform throughout the Washington region. Mildred Alexander-Moses, the guidance counselor and coordinator of peer mediation at Matthew Henson, said the play reinforced the problem-solving techniques the school tries to teach. "I think it was a prime example of the reason kids have conflict at school--gossip and instigation," she said. "I think they took a lot of things we're already doing and told the kids this is the way." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake