10 | LUXlife Magazine here’s a growing conversation around children’s confidence, communication and wellbeing, and with it, increasing interest in the activities designed to support those skills. Families are choosing from a wide range of drama and performance-based programmes, many of which can sound very similar on the surface. What’s less often talked about is the thinking behind them. The way a drama programme is put together influences not just a child’s experience, but how clearly its purpose is understood and how easy it is to deliver well over time. Here, Becky Goodfield, COO of Drama Kids, explores the difference between performing arts and developmental drama, and why that difference is becoming increasingly relevant for children, parents and franchisees. Two routes to confidence In many performing arts programmes, confidence grows through achievement. Children work towards a performance, presentation or assessment, and there’s a clear sense of reward in reaching that point. For some children, that structure can be motivating and enjoyable. Developmental drama takes a steadier approach. Rather than building everything around a final outcome, confidence develops through regular participation. Children practise speaking, listening and expressing ideas in a setting that feels supportive rather than high-pressure. Over time, those small moments of participation begin to add up. That shift, from outcome to process, subtly changes how drama feels. It opens the door to children who might not naturally gravitate towards performance, but who still benefit enormously from creative expression. Why this approach feels timely There’s growing recognition of how important communication skills are in children’s development, from early speech and language through to social confidence and emotional wellbeing. Government initiatives are increasingly looking for ways to support these areas earlier and more effectively, reflecting a broader focus on giving young people strong foundations from the start. Why developmental drama matters for children – and for those building programmes around it T Developmental drama fits naturally within this landscape. It creates regular, playful opportunities for children to organise their thoughts, share ideas and connect with others in ways that feel encouraging rather than performance driven. That alignment with wider priorities helps explain why more families and settings are looking for programmes with development at their core. Built to develop, built to last At Drama Kids, development isn’t an added extra. It’s the starting point. Each session follows a clear, age-appropriate structure designed to support communication and self-expression in a way that feels natural and inclusive. This same structured approach is offered to every Drama Kids franchisee. It sits within a progressive curriculum refined over many years, with skills layered and revisited rather than repeated term after term. For children, this creates a reassuring sense of continuity as they grow. For those delivering the programme, it provides clarity and direction, allowing teachers to focus their energy on the children in front of them rather than the logistics behind the scenes. Drama as a tool, not a target Improvisation, storytelling and roleplay sit at the heart of developmental drama. These activities encourage children to explore language, ideas and collaboration in a way that feels natural and engaging.
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