The new RSC Shakespeare Curriculum revolutionises teaching and unlocks potential through the power of Shakespeare.

Actors from stage and screen including Ian McKellen, Helen Mirren, Alfred Enoch and Adjoa Andoh joined us and the Foyle Foundation to launch our new RSC Shakespeare Curriculum.

The first teaching and learning platform of its kind dedicated to Shakespeare’s plays (with user interfaces for both teachers and students), the Shakespeare Curriculum is set to revolutionise the way Shakespeare is taught and learnt about in secondary schools. 

Free to all state funded secondary schools and SEND schools, the platform distils the RSC’s award-winning teaching approaches into a digital framework based on the way our actors and directors work together in rehearsals.

The Shakespeare Curriculum gives teachers all the tools they need to unlock Shakespeare’s language, character and themes while building vital skills for school, life and work.

Ian McKellen, RSC Associate Artist says:

"Actors, better than other Shakespeare lovers, know how difficult it is to transform his words on the page into living, breathing characters on the stage where they belong.

"To expect schoolchildren to grapple with such problems may well put them off Shakespeare for life.

"Ever since I was at school, reading a troublesome text around the classroom, I have wondered how professional theatre people might help English teachers who too often feel inadequate to the task.

"Now the Royal Shakespeare Company has come up with an answer, a practical way for teachers to lead students to an appreciation of the plays,not just as written texts but as a starting place to explore the excitement of live theatre.

"A revolution is in the offing. “The play’s the thing…!”'

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This interactive platform distils our award-winning teaching approaches into a digital resource that can radically transform the way Shakespeare is taught and learnt about at KS3-4.

The Shakespeare Curriculum addresses the core issue that Shakespeare's plays – written for performance – are too often treated like novels. This approach can often be off-putting or alienating for many young people.

Developed in collaboration with technology partner, Charanga, alongside teachers and young people and with major investment from the Foyle Foundation, the aim is that by 2028/9 it will be used by 80% of all UK state secondary schools.

Jacqui O’Hanlon, RSC Director of Creative Learning, says:

"The RSC has worked with thousands of teachers and young people over 20 years and we understand the challenges of teaching and learning about plays that were written over 400 years ago. The Shakespeare Curriculum responds to this challenge.

"Research shows that the combination of Shakespeare’s language and RSC teaching approaches improve young people’s academic, social and emotional development. As well as improved language development, writing and oracy skills, this work improves communication, self-belief and well-being and develops creative problem-solving skills.

"Through the RSC Shakespeare Curriculum, all state secondary and SEND schools will have free access to this transformational way of teaching and learning about Shakespeare’s plays."

UNLOCK SHAKESPEARE, UNLOCK POTENTIAL

Approximately 2 million young people in the UK and an estimated 50% of schoolchildren worldwide study Shakespeare each year.

Launching with Macbeth, the Shakespeare Curriculum turns Shakespeare’s 10 most studied plays into a 24-part creative learning adventure.

The learning programme draws on thousands of unique archive resources, including videos and photos from our world-renowned productions that feature leading actors in defining performances.

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The RSC Shakespeare Curriculum has launched with a full learning programme around Macbeth. The next play to be added will be Romeo and Juliet in 2026.
Helen Mirren, RSC Associate Artist adds:

"Rehearsal rooms are places where we explore possibilities; where we look at a play written 400 years ago as if it was new, with the ink still wet on the page. In a rehearsal room we are questioning, experimenting and bringing our own experiences and interpretations to Shakespeare's stories.

"That spirit of collaboration and creative enquiry sits at the very heart of the RSC's new Shakespeare Curriculum: bringing the energy of the rehearsal room into secondary schools across the country, turning classrooms into places where inquiry, co-operation and creativity flourish."

The RSC Shakespeare Curriculum is now live at shakespearecurriculum.com.

EXPLORE THE SHAKESPEARE CURRICULUM

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