It’s Springtime and time for Passover and Easter! Puppets are a festive way to celebrate the spring holidays and the change of season. Easter puppets are a great addition to any Easter Basket and give your kids something to do over the spring break.
12 pieces Vinyl Easter Bunny rabbit chicks Finger Puppets party favorsThere are rabbit puppets and little chick puppets and lamb puppets which signify spring and rebirth. They can be hand puppets or finger puppets. A plush rabbit puppet makes an excellent Easter gift and the smaller Easter finger puppets are fun to put in Easter baskets or even hide inside plastic eggs for an added surprise.
Folkmanis White Rabbit, Bunny PuppetThese faith-based Easter puppets feature the characters who were with Jesus and his disciples at the time of the crucifixion and resurrection and can help teach the true Easter story to young children. These are a nice addition to a Sunday School lesson or youth ministry.
He Lives! Easter Finger PuppetsThese Passover puppets are also a great way to teach the bible story of Exodus and Moses. These Passover finger puppets represent the ten plagues on the Egyptians and teach this bible lesson to children in a humorous way.
Passover "Ten Plagues" Finger Puppets JudaicaWhether you go traditional or contemporary, puppets are a fun way to engage babies, preschoolers and older children during the spring holidays.
Technorati Tags: bunny, chick, easter, easter puppets, lamb, passover, passover puppets, preschool puppets, rabbit, spring holidays, spring puppets
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Preschool Puppets
Preschool Puppets
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Easter and Passover Puppets : : Preschool Puppets
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Make a Dragon Puppet | Chinese New Year Crafts -- Festive Kids' Crafts for Chinese New Yea | FamilyFun
- Total Time Needed:
- 1-2 Hours
Dragons represent good fortune, so they often make appearances at celebrations of Chinese New Year (this year, it's February 3). Create your own luck with this puppet-size dragon.
- Materials
- Cardboard egg carton
- 15- by 28-inch piece of red fabric (we used fleece)
- Acrylic paint (Note: use only gold paint labeled "nontoxic")
- Paintbrush
- Stapler
- Rubber band
- Tacky glue
- 18-inch-long dowel with a 1/4-inch diameter
- Card stock
- Puppet template
X
- Instructions
Cut the top from the egg carton, then cut the top in half. Cut the bottom into sections of two, four, and six cups, as shown. Discard half of the top and the four-cup section.
Paint the red fabric with a dragon-scale pattern. Paint the egg carton sections as shown.
To form the head, staple the eye piece to the egg carton top, then staple the top and egg carton bottom together at the back, so that the dragon's jaw is hinged. Fold the fabric in half lengthwise, gather the fabric at one corner, and secure it with a rubber band as shown.
Center the other end of the fabric so that the fold is between the dragon's eyes. Flip the fabric over the head, as shown, and staple the fabric to the outer edge of the eye cups and head. Add a bit of glue between the staples for extra hold. Insert the dowel into the rubber band.
For the beard, whiskers, and eyebrows, cut jagged shapes out of colorful card stock and glue them in place. For the tail, cut and glue two matching shapes together at the edges, leaving the bottom open. Let this tail pocket dry, then slide it over the fabric bundle and secure it with glue.
- Tips:
- This year, Chinese New Year ushers in the Year of the Rabbit. Each year is assigned one of 12 animal signs. If you can, hang onto your puppet until 2012, the Year of the Dragon!
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Monday, November 22, 2010
Thanksgiving Puppets - Pilgrims, Indians, the Mayflower and a Turkey for Thanksgiving : Preschool Puppets
Thanksgiving is a time for families to gather together to give thanks for all their blessings. It’s also a wonderful time for preschool and school age children to learn about our nation’s history.
A fun way to teach children about the Pilgrims and their trip to the new world in the Mayflower and that first Thanksgiving is to use puppets.
Here is a set of Thanksgiving puppets that includes Pilgrims and their ship, Indians (Native Americans) and a turkey puppet.
This is a wonderful plush puppet set.You can also make your own paper Thanksgiving puppets of the Pilgrims and Indians and tell the story of the first settlers to America and how thankful they were after their long journey and that first harsh winter to finally discover the promise and plenty that this new land held.
Here is another wonderful plush Thanksgiving turkey puppet that makes a great gift for Thanksgiving and can also be used to tell a fun Thanksgiving puppet story like A Turkey for Thanksgiving that tells the story of some animal friends who want to have a turkey for Thanksgiving but not to eat, instead he becomes the honored guest at the harvest feast.
You could also act out a Thanksgiving scene with these cute Thanksgiving turkey pilgrim finger puppets.
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Friday, November 12, 2010
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Therapy on a puppet string - The Irish Times - Tue, Nov 02, 2010
Puppetry allows the dramatic distance necessary for children to talk about difficult subjects. Puppets from the Puppet Portal Project.
An enduring source of fun, puppets can also be used to help children deal with emotional difficulties
PUPPETS HAVE long been associated with children. The classic Punch and Judy is still going strong, though its violent overtones may be somewhat dated today. Rainbow , Bosco and Sooty are familiar to an older generation. Puppets abound in current children’s television too, with programmes such as CBeebies’ Big City Park , Penelope K by the Way and Mighty Mites all incorporating them.
While puppets can be both entertaining and fun, practitioners are increasingly seeing their value in teaching and therapy. In the UK, educator and author Ros Bayley has written extensively on the benefits of puppets in education and therapy.
Meanwhile, Dr Lynne Jones, a child psychologist with the International Medical Corps, has taken puppets to Kosovo and regions affected by the 2004 Asian tsunami, working successfully with traumatised children. In Ireland too, puppets are used for both education and therapy.
Helene Hugel runs the Puppet Portal Project, a programme which brings puppetry to paediatric hospital settings. Artists help children to create puppets and the worlds these characters inhabit. Using technology provided by Trinity College, they transmit films to children in other hospitals, thus engaging them in creativity and attempting to allay the isolation children can experience in hospital.
“We are not targeting a specific problem . . . it is about creating a sense of community within the hospital and bringing the soul back into the healing environment,” says Hugel.
Puppetry provides a safe place for children to go – they can go places in their imaginations despite what they might be experiencing in hospital.
“It’s about the child gaining control over their own experience through the characters they make and the stories they tell,” she says. “Hospital can be very much about people doing things to them, so puppetry allows them to develop a world that they can control.”
Siobhan Prendiville is a primary school teacher and play therapist who incorporates puppets into her work. She uses puppets as educational tools to develop the social and emotional wellbeing of her students – tackling issues such as bullying or parental separation.
Puppetry, she says, allows the dramatic distance necessary to talk about difficult subjects and acts as a bridge between projected play (using cars, dolls and so on to create imaginary scenarios) and role play.
As a therapist, Prendiville uses puppets alongside other techniques to deal with bereavement, parental separation or to help children with learning difficulties. They can be used to help kids control their emotions and fears, and deal with separation anxiety or impulsivity. Prendiville believes that puppets can also be useful with teenagers in therapy, as they are attracted to the creative aspect of the medium.
When Prendiville meets a child in therapy, she uses finger puppets to create a story about the child. The puppets give an indirect mode of address and help the child to avoid difficult eye contact. “[A child’s] play is an external representation of their internal world,” she says. “If a child can’t tell you what’s happening, their play can show you.”
Prendiville’s approach is non-directive. However, she finds that children are often attracted to the puppets and will start to role-play their lives in the sessions.
“They can use puppets to externalise what’s happening in their lives, or they can try out new ways of being. For example, a child can learn to say ‘no’ in play. If they can play at saying ‘no’ then they may be able to say ‘no’ in real life.”
Helen Sholdice, also a play therapist, agrees that puppets are invaluable in her work. Parents often approach her with issues such as toilet training, problems at school or marital disharmony.
“Instead of acting out feelings of violence or frustration themselves, they can imbue the puppet with those feelings,” says Sholdice. “If they have a ferocious feeling, for example, and it manifests through the puppet, it can be followed by great relief and joy.”
Sholdice says that often children do not have the sophisticated language to deal with difficult topics and emotions.
“It is natural for children to play and take leaps of fancy. The more you can allow natural play to take place, the more you can return that child to a good place inside,” she says.
“When children feel powerless, they can become tyrannical. Puppetry play can restore feelings of power within a child.”
For more information, contact Helene Hugel at 087-780988, helium.ie;
Siobhan Prendiville at 086-196250
Helen Sholdice at 086-1204781, helen sholdice.com
- via irishtimes.com
Puppets With A Purpose
CLARK — Arthur L. Johnson High School’s Puppetry Club paid a visit to Valley Road School to teach the students about bullying. With the hand-held puppets serving as the actors, the puppeteers used a variety of role-played skits to illustrate to the audience the many different forms of bullying. Children were made aware that simple acts, such as excluding a child from a play group or preventing him from sitting at the same lunch table, is actually bullying. The children were taught some important ways to keep from becoming a bully, how to deal with bullies directly and how to report a bully to a grown-up. Shown are the members of the puppetry club along with their teacher, Brian Klimchak; Sarah Badillo, Guidance Counselor for VRS School; Lisa Dunn, the content area supervisor for English and art; and some VRS students.
This entry was posted on Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010 at 8:58 am and is filed under Clark, Schools. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
How to make puppets with Jim Henson vintage footage 1969 - Preschool Puppets
How to make puppets with Jim Henson vintage footage 1969
Filed Under : preschool puppets,puppets for kids by adminOct.20,2010
Here is some excellent vintage footage of the master puppeteer Jim Henson from 1969 where he shows the various different types of puppets you can make.
It is very interesting to see the essence of some of Henson’s favorite muppet characters in these basic puppets. Lots of great ideas here for making puppets for kids, especially the potato head and fruit puppets as well as the classic sock puppet.
Technorati Tags: fruit, how to make puppets, jim henson, muppets, paper puppets, potato head, sock puppet, vintage footage
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