Skip to: Site menu | Main content




---Interested in Getting a Degree Online?

Acting Schools Offer Professional Training

by Michael Bustamante

Sure, there may be plenty of entertainers who never had any formal education, but the training provided by acting schools can really help bring you up to speed on professional acting methods, techniques and skills. Even a few months of acting training could mean the difference between a ho-hum acting career, and a career that hums along like a well-oiled machine.

You can find acting schools in colleges and universities, usually in the Fine Arts Departments. Some acting schools are dedicated strictly to teaching the art and craft of acting, with total immersion programs that offer excitement and camaraderie with like-minded individuals.

Acting schools can provide you with professional training in the performing arts for stage, film, and television performances. Some of the specialized acting schools provide programs that last just weeks, while a college degree in Theater can take two to four years to complete, depending on the level of acting education desired. In many cases, private acting lessons are also available.

A college degree from an acting school will prepare you to convey information, attitudes, feelings, moods, and ideas through natural behavior in imaginary situations. The typical acting course might include instruction in acting styles, script investigation, stage dialects, body movement, improvisation, theatre history, and much more.

In order to be admitted to an acting program to obtain a Bachelor of Arts (BA), Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA), or Master of Fine Arts (MFA) may require the student to provide application forms, academic records, portfolios, theater experience, and perhaps an audition. Admission requisites can vary greatly, depending on the acting school and the level of degree being pursued.

Whether you are interested in stage, film, or television acting, you can expect classes in technique, movement, play analysis, play production, production design, and even directing. Your acting course will most likely include theater history, theater theory, dance, music, and voice. Oftentimes, non-elective general education courses are also required for acting degrees. Master studies often include writing and directing. The first semester of your chosen acting program may find you onstage giving a live performance, so be ready to jump right in!

To learn more about Acting Schools and Performing Arts Schools, please search our site for more information and resources.

DISCLAIMER: Above is a GENERAL OVERVIEW and may or may not reflect specific practices, courses and/or services associated with ANY ONE particular school(s) that is or is not advertised on SchoolsGalore.com.

Copyright 2007 - All rights reserved by Media Positive Communications, Inc.

Notice: Publishers are free to use this article on an ezine or website, provided the article is reprinted in its entirety, including copyright and disclaimer, and ALL links remain intact and active.


About the Author

Michael Bustamante is a staff writer for Media Positive Communications, Inc. Find Acting Courses, as well as Colleges, Universities, Vocational Schools, and Online Schools at SchoolsGalore.com.

Stop Searching for the Right Colleges!