In VCE Theatre Studies, the process of making theatre is as important as the product. Documentation is the primary evidence of your learning, decision-making, and artistic development across all three stages of the production process.
KEY TAKEAWAY: Think of your production journal as a record of your thinking in action. The journal should show a reader how you thought, what you decided, why you changed your mind, and what you learned. A journal that only records completed tasks is a logbook; a journal that records decisions and reflections is evidence of artistic intelligence.
Your documentation should capture contributions across all three stages:
| Stage | What to Document |
|---|---|
| Planning | Script analysis, dramaturgical research findings, early design concepts, meeting notes, decisions and rationale |
| Development | Rehearsal notes, design iterations, feedback received and how you responded, problems and solutions |
| Presentation | Performance observations, post-show reflections, evaluation of production concept realisation |
STUDY HINT: Date every entry. A journal without dates cannot demonstrate development across stages. VCAA assessors look for evidence that your thinking evolved — dated entries make this visible.
Analysis goes beyond description. To analyse your contribution, ask:
- What did I contribute? (The factual record)
- How did I contribute it? (The process and techniques used)
- Why did I make this choice? (The reasoning and justification)
- What was the effect? (How did it serve the production concept?)
Descriptive (weak): “I designed the lighting for Scene 2. I used a blue wash.”
Analytical (strong): “In Scene 2, I chose a cool blue wash at 40% intensity to create an environment of emotional coldness that reflected the character’s isolation. This complemented the director’s decision to keep the actor static and the set designer’s use of minimal furniture.”
Evaluation requires honest, evidence-based judgement about the effectiveness of your work:
Use precise evaluative language:
- “was effective because…”
- “successfully communicated…through…”
- “could have been improved by…”
- “the intended effect of…was achieved/not fully achieved because…”
EXAM TIP: VCAA rewards honest, evidence-based self-evaluation. Saying everything was perfect suggests a lack of critical reflection. Identifying what worked, what did not, and why demonstrates genuine artistic understanding.
Your production journal directly supports your performance in written examinations. Students who document thoroughly and reflectively:
- Have detailed, specific examples to draw on in exam responses
- Understand why production decisions were made, not just what they were
- Can articulate the connection between process and outcome
COMMON MISTAKE: Leaving documentation to the end and writing retrospectively. Live documentation — recorded in or close to the moment — captures authentic thinking. Retrospective documentation often becomes selective memory.
REMEMBER: The quality of your documentation reflects the quality of your thinking. A well-documented modest contribution demonstrates more learning than a spectacular result with no process record.