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How Taylor Swift Became a Chicken: or why we made puppets in 6th grade

9/19/2014

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This is a chicken puppet.
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Oh wait.  You need to see the back too.
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Sometime in the first few days of school, I decided all of my 6th graders needed puppets.

Short of buying them all a puppet, the only other option was to teach them all how to make their own puppet.

If you've ever taught someone to sew, you know how challenging it can be.  There are needles that hurt when they hit your finger, thread that is tiny and sometimes really hard to fit into the eye of the needle, and stitches that just don't hold together right.

Well, multiply that times 50.  With one class of 20 boys and 5 girls.  
I also had to teach them how to duct tape and felt the mouth, and then how to use hot glue to affix the mouth to the puppet body.  And while my friend Sam thinks that "fingers are made for burning," many 6th graders certainly do not agree.

We spent about two weeks making puppets; we used the last 20 minutes of class time ("If we don't finish, we can't have puppeting time" is a surprisingly effective motivator!) each day, and students worked at their own pace through the instruction I put on video for each major step.

The puppets that resulted from that process are...special.  Just like all first puppets. 
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This is my first puppet, Albert, and Sam's first puppet, Stuart. They are both very, very, very special. Albert has a file folder mouth and is still held together with pins. Like I said: special.
But like so much else in education, the results aren't the thing that really matter.  And this post isn't about how to teach students how to make puppets (although that post is coming).  It's far more about the why behind making puppets with every student.

Honestly, the most important why behind making puppets is that it has started teaching my students that mistakes happen, and that it's an essential part of learning.  That nothing will ever be perfect, and that needing it to be perfect robs you of the joy of imperfection and the profoundly important process of learning from mistakes.  

Their puppets are a great reflection of their creators: there are some that are planned and designed with clear intention, and others that are more haphazard in their construction.  There are unicorns, chickens, cyclopses, wizards and a whole lot of monsters.
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The puppets on the left table belong to 1st period, & the ones on the right belong to 6th period.
Many students had a clear design going in, and ended up with something pretty darn close.  If you can make out the cat puppets (there are five or so) and the grandma and the wizard, those are pretty identical to their original sketches.

And then there were the puppets that started as one thing and ended up as something completely different.  

Remember that chicken puppet?  It started like this:
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Yes. That is Taylor Swift. And if you have Aurasma, you can use this as a trigger image to hear Liza tell you about how Taylor Swift became a chicken.
One of the great things about making puppets is that often, you end up with something far cooler than you originally planned.  While I'm sure the Taylor Swift puppet would have been great, I definitely think making the chicken was the right call.

Technically, that chicken puppet is a mistake (just don't tell Mrs. Clucks I called her a mistake).  But it's a fabulous mistake, and one that is symbolic of the journey Liza went on to learn how to make her.  For a student used to being able to be "successful" in school, that is invaluable.

Making mistakes is part of learning.  And those mistakes are sometimes far more valuable than the "perfect" creations would have been.

***

The puppets are now fully created, and have been used for vocabulary tests, narrative writing assignments, and even learning about creation myths from around the world.

We will use the puppets in lots of different ways, but the one I'm most excited about is that they will have their puppet take a role in the society we are studying in history.  Andrew and I still are working on the details, but we basically want them to take the role of historian, researcher, and author in creating rich (historically accurate) backstories for their puppets in early human history, Sumer and Babylonian cultures, the Indus Valley Civilisation, and the early cultures of China, Egypt, Greece, and Rome.

I am hoping that there are other creative uses for the puppets I haven't even thought of.  And I'm really hoping some of you will write them in comments to share them with me on Twitter.

One thing is definitely true: puppets are magic.  

Even supposed-to-be-Taylor-Swift-but-now-it's-a-chicken puppets.
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    A completely incomplete record of three years spent flipping my high school English classes with my cross-country collaborative partner, Andrew Thomasson. But after a decade in high school, I made the switch to a new gig: flipping English and History for 6th graders in Tiburon, CA.

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