With the holidays upon us, the teachers at Teach Starter have been making puppets out of paper bags — with a holiday twist!
Maybe you already use puppets in your classroom? They tend to be most popular in the primary grades, and if you’re not already on the puppet train, adding a cute DIY paper bag puppet might not be a bad idea.
Consider this: Not only are they a great way to impart information that younger kids will retain, but making simple paper bag puppets can help students develop:
- motor skills
- increased levels of independence
- critical thinking
- the ability to follow a design process and instructions
- pride in their achievements
- resilience.
Or maybe you’re just looking for a fun Christmas craft for those last few days before the winter break starts. Either way, here’s how we make paper bag puppets with our students!
How to Make a Paper Bag Puppet
Meet our latest Teach Starter members Santa, Rudolph, Snowman, and Elf.
This friendly Christmas puppet crew is easy to make.
- Fold a regular-sized, brown paper lunch bag in half vertically and glue the two sides together.
- This forms a long, rectangular shape with a hole at the bottom, which students can use as a puppet.
- Color the cutouts on the template.
- Design your puppet’s outfit using a variety of craft materials.
- Cut out all of the pieces you need.
- Glue the template pieces and clothing pieces onto the paper bag!
Want to make the holiday crew above? Download our Paper Bag Christmas – Puppet Making Activity to set yourself (and your class) up with many holiday characters.
How to Use Paper Bag Puppets
So now that you’ve made paper bag puppets, what will you do with them? Never underestimate the power of puppets. Puppets provide a great opportunity for crafting, drama, imaginative play, narrative writing, and more. They encourage storytelling, oral language, and creative expression and provide endless opportunities for role-play!
Paper Bag Puppet Buddies
Does your class have a buddy class? If they do, why not invite your buddy class over to your classroom to create Christmas Paper Bag Puppets?
If managing another 25+ buddy students feels too much like hard work, surprise your little buddies with a paper bag puppet as a lovable Christmas buddy gift.
Paper Bag Puppet Show
Why not extend your learning experience by planning, rehearsing, and performing a puppet show? Puppet shows offer valuable learning experiences in many developmental areas. As well as being a huge amount of fun, playing with puppets can:
- support oral language skills and communication
- encourage social/emotional development
- help children learn and understand the world around them through safe, imaginative play.
Do you have students in your class who shy away from drama activities and oral presentations? If you do, puppet shows could be a hit. Puppet theaters provide a safe place behind the curtain; most children find them less intimidating for performing plays.
It’s easy to construct your own puppet theater. Cardboard boxes work really well!
Write a Christmas Puppet Narrative
Don’t let the time you spent making paper bag puppets go to waste. Instead, use your new puppet characters to inspire a narrative.
Check out our collection of Narrative Writing Resources to help your students plan a fun narrative.
The Narrative Plot Structure Diagram provides your students with a clear visual scaffold to write a narrative that includes the following structural features:
- exposition
- rising action
- climax
- falling action
- resolution.
Write a Procedural Text
Use your paper bag puppets as a lesson hook when introducing a festive procedural text activity. For younger kids, try our How to Build a Snowman – Procedural Writing Worksheets. Students cut and paste the steps of How to Build a Snowman in the correct order along with other procedural activities.
Character Description
Put the fun factor into the Christmas countdown and use the puppets you made with a paper bag to practice writing a character profile. Whether your students choose to compose a character profile for Santa, Rudolph, Elf, or Snowman, they will surely have a lot of fun writing it.
Don’t miss out on our Character Map Worksheet.
Informal Measurement
It’s true; puppets and math can go together! Make your paper bag puppets feel useful and use them as an informal unit of measurement. We measured how many elves high our Christmas tree is! Turns out, it’s not as tall as we estimated.
For more informal measurement activities, read our blog Teaching Measurement | The Best Informal Measurement Activities.
Festive Repeated Patterns
Make your paper bag puppets feel double the love by exploring repeated patterns!
Christmas Crafting STEM-Style
Why not challenge your class to plan, design, and make a puppet with a paper bag that has moving parts? The STEM process is guided by the Engineering Design Process.
- Ask: What is the problem? Are there any challenges?
- Imagine: Brainstorm ideas and pick the best one!
- Plan: Make a list of materials and draw a labeled diagram.
- Create: Follow your plan. Create a model if possible. Test it! Does it meet the goal?
- Improve: Did it work? Can you make it better? What could be done differently?
- Share: Is the problem solved? What changes need to be made? What do others think?
Set your students up for success by making the most of our Download: STEM Planning and Reflection Sheet – Upper and Download: STEM Reflection Sheet – Lower. These STEAM teaching resources will support your students through the process of designing a Christmas puppet with moving parts.
That is cool
Hi Abbie, Thank you for your lovely comment. I am so glad you are enjoying our resources.