Title: Oral Interpretation Guidelines
1Oral Interpretation Guidelines
- The following information was borrowed from the
2001-2002 UIL Prose and Poetry
Interpretation Handbook
2Introduction
- The function of oral interpretation is not only
to discover, but then to share, and what joy
comes from sharing literature with an audience!
Those moments create a special bond between the
literature, the reader and the listener. - Jana Riggins, UIL Speech Director
3General Guidelines
- Getting Started
- Preparing for the Contest
- UIL Categories
- Resources
4Getting Started
- Finding Literature
- Where to Look
- Selecting Literature
- Understanding the Text
- Introductions
- Transitions
- Cutting
- Rehearsal
- Performance
5Where to Look
- Libraries
- Technology
- College Libraries
- College Bookstores
- Used Books
- Audio Resources
- Newspapers
- Internet
- Testimony
- Can you think of others?
www.wetmoredeclamation.com
6Selecting Literature
- Consider Yourself
- Consider Your Capabilities
- Consider Your Audience
- Consider Literary Value
- Consider Appropriateness
7Understanding the Text
- Speaker
- Scene
- Audience
- Act
- Agency
- Purpose
8Introductions should
- prepare the audience
- allow the audience to meet you
- provide essential information
- establish a mood
9Introductions should focus on
- how you relate to the selection
- the categorys requirements
- social issues
- the writers purpose
- an element of the selection
10Introductions should avoid
- running out of time
- spoiling the experience by giving away too much
- asking trite rhetorical questions
- copying someone elses introductions
- either reading or performing your introduction
11Cutting Literature for Performance
- Read the ENTIRE selection
- Thoroughly analyze the work as a whole
- Continuity is critical!
- Beginning, Middle, End
- Stay true to authors intent
- Avoid cutting vivid passages
- Cut repetition (in prose)
- Cut tag lines
- Cut subplots
- Cut references to something youve already cut
12Rehearsal Techniques
- Establish regular schedule
- 110
- Seek audiences
- Mark your manuscript
- Videotape
- Audiotape
- Work with other interpreters
13Rehearsal Techniques (cont.)
- Focus!
- Practice in noisy surroundings
- Use a variety of volumes
- Isolate portions of script for practice
- Ask people to listen ONLY to intro
- Prepare more than one intro.
14Preparing for the Contest
- Plan in Advance
- What to Expect
- Tournament Guidelines
- Ethics and Sportsmanship
15Plan in Advance for Competition
- School work comes first
- Know the rules
- Make sure you have met paperwork requirements
- Provide parents with schedule info
- Dress appropriately. . .
16Dressing Appropriately
- Sneakers are not appropriate
- Dress conservatively
- Dress neat, clean, unwrinkled
- Avoid clothing that draws attention to itself
- Men slacks, ties, jackets
- Women dress or suit
17Tournament Guidelines Contest Site
18Tournament Guidelines Contest Room
19Tournament Guidelines Awards Assembly
20Ethics and Sportsmanship
21UIL Categories
- Prose Category A B
- Poetry Category A B
- Documentation
22Prose
- In the 60s and 70s, the UIL prose categories
featured geographical distinctions, and
selections were restricted to those written by
authors included on an official UIL list. In the
80s, the categories featured genre distinctions
novels, essays, short stories, nonfiction, and
folklore.
23Prose (cont.)
- Because these distinctions are often so very
difficult to draw, the prose and poetry committee
sought to create prose categories that did not
rely on questionable parameters for what fit and
did not fit a category. The current prose
categories require documentation only in Category
A.
24Prose Categories
- Category A Celebrate Non-Fiction First Person
Narratives - Category B Celebrate Fiction
25Prose Category A
- The contestant shall perform a selection from a
published work of non-fiction written in prose,
from the first-person point of view. The goal of
this category is to encourage students to explore
narratives of human experience as reported by the
author.
26Prose Category A (cont.)
- Material for this category should be drawn from
one of the following published forms memoirs,
autobiographies, letters, diaries, journals, or
essays. In this type of literary work, the
author tells a story as he or she experienced it.
The point of view will be personal, making use
of the pronouns I, me, my, mine, and
we. The selection shall not be drawn from
published or unpublished speeches, one-person
theatre, or theatrical monologues. Works by
anonymous authors are not permissible.
27- For Category A, the contestant shall provide
published documentation verifying that the
selection is classified as non-fiction.
Verification shall consist of Library of Congress
or Dewey Decimal Classification system, or other
published source such as The New York Times
bestseller list, that establishes the selection
as a piece of non-fiction.
28- Contest Director must ask for and verify written
documentation prior to the beginning of the
round. Students shall not be allowed to compete
without sufficient documentation. If an on-line
data service is used for documentation,
contestants should print the home page/main index
page of the site from which the documentation was
retrieved. Printouts of the documentation and the
home page should include the URL of the web site.
Bibliographic Information
29Prose Category B
- The contestant shall perform a selection from a
published work of fiction written in prose. The
selection should be drawn from a novel, novella,
novelette or short story. The goal of this
category is to encourage contestants to explore
the imagination of authors from any country
throughout the world. The author of this category
may not be used in the other prose category.
Works by an anonymous author are not permissible.
30- For Category B, the contestant shall provide
published documentation verifying that the
selection is classified as fiction. Verification
shall consist of Library of Congress or Dewey
Decimal Classification system, or other published
source such as The New York Times bestseller
list, that establishes the selection as a piece
of fiction
31Suggestion
- Students are urged to take to the contest site
the original published source of the selection
and/or to add bibliographic information for
selections in the form of a footnote on their
manuscript copy.
32Poetry
- Category Restrictions
- Material chosen for use in either category of
poetry interpretation shall meet the following
restrictions
33Poetry (cont.)
- all selections shall be published, printed
material, - selections from plays or screenplays shall not be
used, - song lyrics published only as music shall not be
used, - no contestant shall use an individual poet in
more than one category in the contest,
34Cont.
- no contestant shall use selections from the same
literary work more than one year at UIL State
Meet, - selections shall be read in the English
translation however, incidental use of foreign
language words and phrases in any selection may
be used as in the original.
35Poetry Categories
- Category A "Celebrate the Poem"
- Category B "Celebrate the Poet"
36Poetry Category A
- The contestant shall perform either one published
poem, or an excerpt from only one published poem.
The goal of this category is to challenge the
contestant to explore a single poetry selection
and to communicate its literary style and quality
through performance. The poet used in this
category may not be used in the other poetry
category. Works by an anonymous poet are not
permissible.
37- The contestant must provide biographic
information showing that the birthplace,
nationality, or naturalized citizenship of the
poet is from outside the Americas. No poets from
the countries of North America, Central America,
and South America and their territories within
the Western Hemisphere are allowed.
38Poetry Category B
- The contestant shall select one poet and perform
two or more published poems, or two or more
portions of poems, by that author. The goal of
this category is to encourage students to examine
the body of an author's poetic works. In the
choice of poems for performance, the student
should feature some aspect of the poet's work,
including but not limited to the following
39Poetry Category B (cont.)
- its development over time, thematic or technical
elements, use of imagery, or reflection of the
poet's life. The introduction and/or transitions
should demonstrate the performer's understanding
of the poet's work, as well as seek to enhance
the audience's awareness of the poet's work. The
poet used in this category may not be used in the
other poetry category.
40- Although this category does not require
documentation, the selections must be (a)
published works, (b) written by an identified
poet (anonymous authors are not permissible), (c)
written by a poet other than the one who wrote
the selection used for Category A.
41Documentation Requirements
- Although Category A and B do not require
documentation, contest material must meet
category restrictions.
42Bibliographic Information
- Students are urged to take to the contest site
the original published source of the selection
and/or to add bibliographic information for
selections in the form of a footnote on their
manuscript copy.
43Documentation Types
- Reference Book
- Published Newspaper
- Biographical Passage
- Magazine Article
- Book Jacket
44- If an on-line data service is used for
documentation, the source of the published
material should be included. Other acceptable
sources of documentation include - Letterhead stationery from the publishing company
or the author verifying the author's place of
birth or - Email from the publisher or author verifying the
author's place of birth.
45Taken from The Leaguer
- At the heart of this poetry category is the issue
of cultural diversity. Looking at some of the key
words in the description of the category found in
the Constitution and Contest Rules will give
focus to your program and probably add depth to
your first impressions of the category. Culture
can be defined as a body of customary beliefs,
social forms and material traits of a racial,
religious or social group.
46- Diversity deals with differences, and the
differences included in the CCR description
paragraph draw the boundaries for this fairly
open category economic, social and political.
Your program can explore financial issues, (i.e.,
the Great Depression), social issues (i.e., the
AIDS crisis), or political issues (i.e., the
Vietnam War) and be within the realm of its
intent. In fact, a good brainstorming session
with your teammates or coach can reveal many
themes upon which you can build your program of
material.
47- The key issue is What type of diversity does
your theme express? Are you examining the
socially different, such as the homeless or the
handicapped? Are you exploring the effects of
cultural ethnicity? Is the diversity of religions
at the heart of your program? Are you reading
poetry from the war-torn country of Bosnia or
economically depraved Russia? Have you, perhaps,
built a program of poems from the American
working-class perspective?
48- Your concern might be Will the judge perceive
what diversity I am exploring? The answer can lie
in your introduction and transitions that you
build within the program. These will be critical
to ensuring that judges and audiences understand
the diversity issues you are examining within
your program. Just as debaters must keep the
"spirit of the resolution clear in their approach
to the resolution, so interpreters must keep the
"spirit" of this performance category clear.
49- Keep in the forefront the original intent of this
category, which is to explore the differences in
mankind, building an understanding of your
differences, while exploring great literature.
Remember that interpreters must not assume that
their critics and audience will automatically
comprehend the diversity. It will be
advantageous to the performer to use the
introduction and transitions to forward the
diversity being explored through the poetry
selected for the program.
50Resources
- Internet
- Printed
- Rules and Ranking
51Evaluation Criteria Prose
- Judges evaluate each performer individually based
on the total presentation. At the end of the
round, performers are ranked in order of the
quality of the presentations Best is first,
second best is second, and so on. All contestants
are ranked. There can be no ties.
52Evaluation of Introduction
- Did the performer prepare you to listen to the
selection? - Did the content, form, and delivery style of the
introduction add to the over-all effectiveness of
the performance?
53Evaluation of Selection/Performance
- Did the performer recreate the narrator - the
person talking in the prose - and the characters?
(age, gender race,, educational level, social
status, psychological and dispositional traits,
etc.) - Did the performance reflect the scene - when and
where the prose takes place and appropriately
indicate any changes in location or time? (in a
living room, supermarket, automobile, classroom,
etc morning, evening, winter, summer, etc.)
54- Did the performer reveal the narrator's purpose
in the selection - why is the narrator talking?
(to convince, to persuade, to understand, to
remember, to console, to tease, to explain, etc.)
- Did the performer demonstrate an awareness of the
audience - to whom are the narrator and
characters talking? (to him/herself? to another
person? to a group of people?)
55- Did the performer make appropriate use of
physical skills in the performance? (movement,
gestures, expressions, stance, posture, eye
contact, etc. were motivated by the text and
purposeful to the performance?) - Did the performer make appropriate use of vocal
skills in the performance? (dialect, dialogue,
volume, rate, pitch, etc. were believable?)
56- Was the performer in control of the literature?
(was the material appropriate for the performer?)
- Was the performer in control of the performance
situation? (use of manuscript, internal pacing
and pauses, sense of closure were appropriate?)
57Evaluation Criteria Poetry
- Judges evaluate each performer individually based
on the total presentation. At the end of the
round, performers are ranked in order of the
quality of the presentations Best is first,
second best is second, and so on. All contestants
are ranked. There can be no ties.
58Evaluation of Introduction
- Did the performer prepare you to listen to the
selection? - Did the content, form, and delivery style of the
introduction add to the over-all effectiveness of
the performance?
59Evaluation of Selection/Performance
- Did the performer recreate the persona - the
person talking in the poem? (age, gender, race,
educational level, social status, psychological
and dispositional traits, etc.) - Did the performance reflect the scene - when and
where the poem takes place and appropriately
indicate any changes in location or time? (in a
living room, supermarket, automobile, classroom,
etc morning, evening, winter, summer, etc.)
60- Did the performer reveal the persona's purpose in
saying the poem - why is the persona talking? (to
convince, to persuade, to understand, to
remember, to console, to tease, to explain, etc.)
- Did the performer demonstrate an awareness of the
audience - to whom is the person in the poem
talking? (to him/herself? to another person? to a
group of people?)
61- Did the performer make appropriate use of
physical skills in the performance? (movement,
gestures, expressions, stance, posture, eye
contact, etc. were motivated by the text and
purposeful to the performance?) - Did the performer make appropriate use of vocal
skills in the performance? (dialect, dialogue,
volume, rate, pitch, etc. were believable?)
62- Was the performer in control of the literature?
(was the material appropriate for the performer?)
- Was the performer in control of the performance
situation? (use of manuscript, internal pacing
and pauses, sense of closure were appropriate?)
63In conclusion
- For more information, visit the UIL website at
http//www.utexas.edu/admin/uil/index. html - Or ask me to see the UIL Prose and Poetry Handbook