Introduction: Performing with Principle
Theatre is storytelling brought to life — an art that depends on trust, collaboration, and authenticity. In IB Theatre, every performance and reflection must express integrity: respect for others’ ideas, originality in interpretation, and honesty in process.
According to the IB Theatre Guide (IBO, 2023), “students must demonstrate academic honesty and ethical responsibility in all areas of performance and reflection.” Whether devising an original piece or interpreting an existing script, your creativity gains strength when it’s grounded in truth.
This guide explores how IB Theatre students can uphold integrity in creative work, collaboration, and performance — ensuring that every stage of production reflects authenticity.
Quick Start Checklist: Ethical Practice in Theatre
- Develop original performance ideas.
- Credit all scripts, directors, and influences.
- Respect your ensemble members and collaborators.
- Reflect honestly on rehearsal and performance.
- Avoid copying concepts or using AI-generated material.
- Represent cultures and identities respectfully.
Integrity transforms performance into artistry — and collaboration into community.
Understanding Integrity in IB Theatre
Integrity in IB Theatre is about truth — both personal and artistic. It combines three dimensions:
- Creative authenticity: Your work should reflect your genuine ideas and interpretation.
- Collaborative honesty: Give credit where it’s due, and acknowledge every contribution.
- Ethical awareness: Represent people, stories, and cultures with respect and accuracy.
The IB learner profile defines principled students as those who “act with integrity and honesty.” In theatre, that means being transparent about inspiration, open to feedback, and mindful of others’ voices.
Developing Original and Ethical Performance Ideas
Every IB Theatre project begins with creative inquiry — the search for meaning through performance. To ensure originality:
- Build your concept around personal or social questions you genuinely care about.
- Draw on multiple influences but synthesize them in your own way.
- Keep a detailed process portfolio showing how your ideas evolved.
- Reflect on how ethical or cultural contexts shaped your creative choices.
Example:
If inspired by Augusto Boal’s Theatre of the Oppressed, acknowledge his methodology and explain how you adapted it for your own message or audience.
Ethical Collaboration in Theatre-Making
Theatre is a collective art form — but collaboration must remain ethical and transparent.
- Define roles and responsibilities clearly.
- Credit all collaborators — actors, designers, directors, and technicians.
- Respect creative differences and maintain open communication.
- Avoid claiming full credit for group-devised ideas.
- Never use someone’s performance or text without permission.
The IB values ensemble integrity — every member contributes to the creative whole while maintaining accountability for their own work.
Respectful Representation and Cultural Sensitivity
Performing stories that involve different cultures, identities, or histories demands empathy and care. To maintain integrity:
- Research cultural practices deeply before portraying them.
- Consult credible cultural or academic sources.
- Avoid stereotypes, exaggeration, or tokenism.
- Acknowledge the origins of theatrical traditions you use (e.g., Japanese Noh, African storytelling, Commedia dell’Arte).
As theatre scholar Patrice Pavis reminds us, “Cultural representation in theatre is not imitation — it is dialogue.” Respect ensures your performance becomes an exchange, not appropriation.
Avoiding Plagiarism and Misrepresentation
Plagiarism in theatre occurs not only in writing but also in performance and design.
To avoid it:
- Create your own script or adaptation when devising original work.
- Credit playwrights, directors, or theatre companies if referencing their techniques.
- Do not copy staging, lighting, or movement from existing productions without attribution.
- Acknowledge use of public domain materials or scripts clearly.
Integrity is creative transparency — showing where inspiration ends and your interpretation begins.
Honest Reflection in the Theatre Portfolio
Your theatre portfolio demonstrates your process, growth, and self-awareness. Honesty here is crucial.
- Include both successes and challenges in your documentation.
- Reflect on feedback and how it shaped your work.
- Be transparent about what didn’t go as planned.
- Discuss how collaboration influenced your creative thinking.
Avoid rewriting your process to appear flawless. The IB values learning through reflection, not perfection through revisionism.
Using Technology and AI Responsibly in Theatre
Technology is an important part of modern performance — from lighting design to multimedia staging. But integrity still applies:
- Use digital design tools (e.g., QLab, SketchUp, Canva) to support, not replace, your creativity.
- Cite software or pre-made digital assets used in production.
- Avoid AI for scriptwriting, dialogue generation, or creative interpretation.
- Ensure all digital or visual content aligns with copyright and licensing rules.
Your digital creativity should express your artistic choices, not artificial imitation.
Evaluating Performance with Integrity
Critical self-evaluation demonstrates maturity and depth.
When analyzing your performance:
- Discuss what you learned about process, ethics, and collaboration.
- Be honest about audience reactions or unexpected challenges.
- Evaluate artistic success based on your goals, not just outcomes.
- Reflect on how integrity influenced your approach to performance.
Honest evaluation transforms theatre from expression into education — from product into growth.
How RevisionDojo Supports Integrity in Theatre
RevisionDojo helps IB Theatre students strengthen their artistic and ethical foundation through:
- Lessons on devising original, culturally aware performances.
- Guidance on ethical collaboration and documentation.
- Examples of honest theatre portfolios and reflective writing.
- Practical exercises that develop integrity alongside creativity.
With RevisionDojo, students learn to perform with authenticity, lead with respect, and reflect with purpose.
Conclusion: Integrity Is the Heart of Theatre
Theatre thrives on truth.
Every performance is a dialogue between artist and audience, and honesty is the language that connects them.
In IB Theatre, integrity means creating from your own experience, crediting others’ contributions, and performing with empathy and awareness.
When your art is honest, your impact is lasting — because real theatre doesn’t just entertain; it enlightens.
RevisionDojo Call to Action
Perform truthfully. Create ethically.
Join RevisionDojo to learn authentic performance, ethical collaboration, and reflective artistry — and make every IB Theatre project a celebration of integrity and imagination.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What counts as plagiarism in IB Theatre?
Copying another performer’s work, staging, or portfolio content without credit is plagiarism. Always acknowledge your influences and collaborators.
2. Can I base my piece on an existing play?
Yes, but you must credit the playwright and explain how your interpretation or staging differs from the original.
3. How do I show collaboration in my portfolio?
Document group discussions, shared tasks, and how ensemble work influenced your creative decisions.
4. Can I use AI tools in Theatre work?
No. AI should not generate creative content, scripts, or designs. You may use it for grammar checking or formatting only, with disclosure.
5. How does RevisionDojo promote theatre integrity?
RevisionDojo provides guidance on original creation, cultural awareness, and honest reflection, helping students produce IB Theatre work that is both ethical and inspiring.
