** Note that for this story time, I had loads of different versions of these books on display for check out. There are so many different versions, so I suggest you finding your favorites - whether told by using the picture book, in felt, or by heart - because your love of what you are doing is what will shine through.
This was great fun to tell with felt. Now, a little disclaimer that I had decided that 'no one in Miss Sue's story times dies'....after I had one little heckler telling me that I wasn't telling the story right. So in the end, my wolf just ran away screaming with the pigs safely giggling at home. A couple parents appreciated the comical ending, but it was really funny to see how far that little heckler would take her opinions on how the story should go!
Action Rhyme - Everyone stand up for squats!! OK, I am kidding, but we did do this chant a few times going faster and faster and faster - what a workout!
Nursery Rhymes work well in this kind of story time. Some people don't like them. I do for a couple of reasons. One is they are familiar and repetitive. Children are learning language through patterns at this age and latch on to nursery rhymes for this reason. Another reason is that preschoolers are learning unfamiliar words through rhyme. They are opening up their vocabularies. You are introducing words they may not get in normal conversation and that is a very good thing. Finally preschoolers are developing their little egos are feel very proud and excited when they recognize a rhyme and can repeat it back. They think "whoa! I got this!" and that is a cool thing to see on their faces.
With that in mind, here are some of Library Village's resources for Nursery Rhymes.
Our FELT sets are HERE for the SHEEP Rhymes, and HERE for Kristie's HEY DIDDLE DIDDLE set. Then you can click HERE for a bunch of blog posts on various uses for Nursery Rhymes.
Another disclaimer - I think I must be really good at troll voices, because I scared the pants off some of the more sensitive kids. I toned it down and kept the troll hidden for a lot of the story. I also stopped and whispered to the little fella "I'll tell you a secret - the goats win in the end!" Lesson learned as I think this one in full voice might be better for the older preschool crowd, or at least to get to know my audience better before pulling out the scarier stories!
Here is what my bulletin board and story time area looked like that day:
You can see my 3 Little Pigs felt set, my Good Morning Weather felts (which later became my Weather Bear), and the bulletin board. The Troll is hiding in my bin. On my cart, I had my Big Fat Hen puppet for more nursery rhyme run.
And here is a closeup of the 3 Goats. The artwork is right out of the book.
Craft - 3 Billy Goats Gruff puppets
If you may have noticed, I am a huge fan of story re-telling. I give out a parent newsletter with our rhymes and books, I have many books on display, and many of the crafts I select are designed so the child can go home and retell the story to their siblings or stuffed animals. We do a lot of puppets in story time - here is my goat puppet! Simply a white bag, goat head cut outs, snipped yarn, and markers make this craft.
No matter how you tell stories - through felt sets, via picture book, orally, with puppets, or through song, story times need to come from the heart...YOUR HEART. I enjoy telling stories through lots of techniques, and I hope my love of story telling shines through to my preschool kids and their families. I hope you enjoyed this story time. This was the one my boss attended for my performance review and I am happy to report that she was as pleased with the results as I was. Thanks for stopping by!!





