Storytelling Exercise for Kids: Puppet Show

Storytelling Exercise for Kids: Puppet Show


Purpose

Storytelling and the ability to develop a character is an important part of a child’s development. This exercise helps kids telling a story without worrying about not knowing where to start.

Here, you provide a set of random characters so each person has a doll, a puppet or an action figure in his hands. The story is then primed based on what they have got. It will also make it easier for them to develop the story when they have a physical representation of the character in their hands. Kids also get to practice puppeteering while going through their storytelling which further immerses them in the story and engages more of their senses.

Objective

Tell a story based on the character you picked from the box.

What You Need

  • A collection of puppets, dolls, action figures or stuffed animals. Choose everyday characters as well as those that exist only in a fantasy world.
  • An empty box so you can place these characters in it.
  • A piece of cloth with a whole to cover the box.

Setup

  • Ask kids to come forward one by one and pick up a random object from the box without being able to see what they are picking. It is important for their selection to be random.
  • Once everyone has a character, explain that in this exercise the aim is to make a story based on these characters.
  • To kick start the story, pick a character yourself from the box. Then elaborate on the setting of the story and talk about this particular character, its life and its thoughts.
  • Next, ask who wants to continue your story with their own character.
  • While each kid is telling his story, encourage him to act it out using the puppet, doll or action figure they picked.
  • Make sure other kids pay attention to the story because it is important to make one consistent story throughout the exercise.
  • Continue one by one until everyone has contributed to the story.
  • At the end, highlight important points about storytelling and character development. Make sure to praise them on their storytelling and puppeteering skills.

Timing

Explaining the Exercise: 5 minutes

Activity: 2 min storytelling per person = 20 minutes for 10 kids

Group Feedback: 0 minutes

Discussion

N/A

Leave a comment

All comments are moderated before being published.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.



The Most Similar Exercises & Articles to this in Order of Similarity Are:

Acting and Improvisation Exercises
Personal Impact Exercise: How to Improve Diction
Storytelling Exercise for Kids: Get Inspired by a Comic
Fortunately - Unfortunately
Chocolate Packaging Design Competition Exercise
Emotional Intelligence Exercise: Making Eye Contact

Training Resources for You

Course Design Strategy

Course Design Strategy

Available as paperback and ebook

Training Resources

Free Training Resources

Download a free comprehensive training package including training guidelines, soft skills training activities, assessment forms and useful training resources that you can use to enhance your courses.

Body Language Guide

Our Comprehensive Guide to Body Language

Train the Trainer Guides

Train the Trainer Resources

Get Insights - Read Guides and Books - Attend Courses

Training Materials

Get downloadable training materials on: Management Training, Personal Development, Interpersonal Development, Human Resources, and Sales & Marketing

Browse Full Product Catalogue About Training Materials