| Seggelke
          and Clark-Hansen met only a few months ago at the Illinois Social
          Workers Conference. With the support of Levek, Clark-Hansen, who has
          been a motivational speaker for 15 years, was able to bring her
          workshop to this small school in the Midwest. In part
          one of this series, Lincoln Daily News examined Cornerstone
          Production’s two-day workshop which prepared Illini Central sixth
          through eighth graders with the skills they needed to become a
          traveling performing troupe. Clark-Hansen,
          along with her husband Paul, is the founder of Cornerstone
          Productions, a traveling theatrical company, which conducts workshops
          and training sessions year ’round. Preparing students for
          improvisational roles is just one part of their job. In addition, the
          Hansens present plays and skits to schools and organizations
          throughout the United States. In these assemblies Clark-Hansen acts
          out the parts of many different characters that face difficult issues
          such as drugs, smoking, alcohol, eating disorders and school cliques.     [Paul Hansen, Laura
 Clark-Hansen, and Rita Seggelke]
 
 
 Clark-Hansen,
          who is working on a master's in human development from St. Mary’s
          University in Minneapolis, Minn., has a simple philosophy when she
          attends conventions like the one where she met Seggelke. "If you’re
          hungry we have this available," she says plainly. "The
          lessons are so obvious." The program literally sells itself.
          Schools must, however, raise funds or write grants for the Hansens to
          perform. Clark-Hansen was amazed at how quickly Illini Central
          responded.    [Laura Clark-Hansen explores
 the myths established by alcohol
 advertisers.  Her "drug" of choice: sauerkraut]
 
 
  
          
             |  
   Last
            week after the training, the Hansens performed for all Illini
            Central Middle School students. For grades six through eight,
            Clark-Hansen acted a play her husband wrote entitled, "The Next
            Level." In this play she focuses on women athletes and sports.
            The topic of exploration for kindergarteners through third graders
            included concepts about how your thoughts and feelings impact what
            you do. For fourth and fifth graders, Clark-Hansen transformed
            herself into a Barbie doll and focused on the pitfalls of
            perfection. The message here is to encourage kids to be themselves. The
            Hansens' dramatic and comedic scenes had an impact on teachers and
            students alike. Steffanie Sheldon, an eighth grader who attended the
            assembly, said, "The performance she [Clark-Hansen] did was
            wonderful. She never came out of her character once. She taught me
            more about drugs and alcohol and other stuff." It
            is with this type of reaction that Clark-Hansen feels the most
            rewarded. "I love it when the kids have an ‘ah-ha’ moment
            and when they take what they have learned in their head to their
            heart." The students must think so too. Adam Tucker added,
            "I can't wait to do it next year."
  [At the Illini Central Middle School's assembly]
 [Natalie
            Jeckel] | 
          
            | But this wasn’t an ordinary class in the fundamentals
                      of theater. The students were proactive as they explored
                      difficult topics that they face every day. 
                      Smoking, drugs, alcohol, violence, divorce,
                      depression, peer cruelty and stereotypes, eating disorder
                      and body image, and anger management were at the top of the
                      list.
                      
                      
                      
                       The
                      mission of Cornerstone Productions is to empower students
                      of all ages “by putting into their hands a powerful tool
                      to use for social change.”      [Members of the Illini Central acting troupe]
 
 Under the Hansens' direction these students learned how
                      to become an influence.
                      
                       On the first day, Mrs. Hansen explains, “they (the
                      students) teach from their hearts”—learning how to
                      explore a subject through feelings. 
                      “On day two,” she continued, “they teach from
                      their head to their hearts”—learning all of the
                      factual information. 
                      For example, Mrs. Hansen explained, “For the
                      students to know how to express what effects alcohol has
                      on the people around them, they have to understand their
                      feelings.”  Then
                      they can learn the facts and statistics about alcohol. 
                      “Prevention education works when kids learn new
                      information.”
                      
                      
                      
                      
                      
                      
                      
                        
                 | And these students are learning volumes. Eighth
                      grader Megan Hudgins exclaims, "I thought that the
                      training was a great experience. It really helped us look
                      at what was going on around us, and it taught us how to
                      help other kids deal with problems like drugs, alcohol and
                      divorce.”
                      
                      
                      
                       Over the two event-filled days, the Hansens equipped the
                      students with the skills they need to become an
                      independent theatrical troupe. 
                      These kids don’t have to worry about the stresses
                      of acting because improvisational acting does not require
                      complicated scripts or fancy costumes. 
                      Andrew Coulter, who is a member of the Illini
                      Central troupe, said, 
                      "I thought it (acting) would be kind of
                      embarrassing at first, but I also thought it might be fun,
                      so I joined, and in the end I had a great time." The topics the Illini Central Middle School students will
                      eventually present to groups around the county include
                      eating disorder, popularity, divorce, cliques and teasing,
                      and drinking and its consequences.
                      
                      
                      
                       To get their acting skills polished, the students
                      participated in theatrical exercises, which included mime
                      and short skits where they literally became their parts.  The
                      students took an in-depth look at bullying, smoking,
                      alcohol and its effect on the organs, and head lice. 
                      
                      
                      
                      
                       Throughout the “improv,” students comically
                      “became” head lice attaching themselves with curled
                      fingers to the head of the child with the lice. 
                      Or they “became” a withered organ of an
                      alcoholic, showing the impact alcohol has on the body.
                      
                      
                      
                       “This experience brought students from different
                      backgrounds together—a 
                      cross section of kids, high risk, high potential,
                      not just the trophy kids,” Mrs. Hansen said
                      passionately.
                      
                      
                      
                       When asked why she likes her job, Mrs. Hansen said
                      emphatically, “because it’s the right thing to do. It
                      changes kids’ lives.”
                      
                      
                      
                       To
                      learn more about Cornerstone Productions log on to their Web
                      site.
                      
                       Editor’s Note:  You
                      can read part two of this feature
                      with Cornerstone
                      Productions in the March 14 article above.
 [Natalie
                      Jeckel]   |