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School Success with Dr. Seuss: Exploring Themes Through Creative Activities

| Dr. Katie Klinger

In part one of this entry, I wrote about an interdisciplinary event that our school planned and carried out. Here's another schoolwide activity to inspire you and motivate your students.

For the book event, held at the Myron B. Thompson Academy (MBTA), in Honolulu, Hawaii, all the elementary school teachers help design costumes, props, artwork and innovative hands-on activities for a daylong learning experience. The activities for this event are based on the key ideas from a book or a set of books. Previous selections have included Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

This year's event, Seussville, stimulated student creativity and fostered their awareness of subjects such as discrimination, ecology, friendship, responsibility, and war through the innovative prose and poetry of Dr. Seuss. Prior to the event, students completed a structured assignment that focused on major themes in his books.

The entire faculty of MBTA, both elementary school and secondary school teachers, dressed up as characters from such Dr. Seuss works as The Cat in the Hat, Horton Hears a Who, and One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish. In addition, teachers asked the children to think about which characters impressed them in the Dr. Seuss books they'd read.

As a result, the majority of students also dressed up as their favorite character or as a citizen of Whoville (a town in some of his stories). Student government officers dressed up as the Cat in the Hat and escorted the K-6 students from workstation to workstation. The sixth-grade teacher also dressed up as the Cat in the Hat and delighted the children with his original, workstation-appropriate rhymes. The children laughed and giggled every time he would enter their work space.

Patty Rothrock, the second-grade teacher, created innovative passports. Students would have them stamped in each room as they finished the authentic learning activity for that workstation. The staff and faculty encouraged the students to do their best at each workstation and to benefit from the constructivist hands-on activities.

Teachers challenged the students to produce artwork and writing that illustrated how the themes in Dr. Seuss's books -- social justice, environmental awareness, equality, and nonviolence -- were relevant to their daily lives. The educators provided the students and parents with feedback on the work and proudly exhibited the art and text in a gallery. They also documented the work with digital photographs to use in future discussions about the efficacy of classroom-assessment tools. The new MBTA Web site will feature these Seussville images as its opening photo collage.

Please share your thoughts about this event, or describe similar events you have organized or your school has held.

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Comments (24)

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Dr. Katie (not verified)

Timeline for student planning and preparation

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Hello, Melissa - we send out the flyer with the instructions for the event a month prior to the exciting day...this gives them time to design and illustrate their original artwork for their travel brochure, etc. if that is one of the choices they pick ...we send the flyer out via email to the parents to ensure that the entire family becomes involved. You and I share the same love of the "Oh, The Places You Will Go"...it was hard for me to choose the Foot Book and the Lorax, but I did because of their versatility for teachable moments by their parents and me during the time up to the event in class.

Annette (not verified)

A day with Dr. Seuss

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I am currently a college student. I loved this school wide activity. The whole concept is great from having teachers and students dress up, the workstations, passports, everything. As a student myself I love it when my teachers give me hands on activities that let be creative. Assignments like these keep students and teachers intrested.

Melissa C Iglesias (not verified)

Big fan of the creative ideas

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This is schoolwide activity is a great idea. It seems like an awesome creative outlet for the students and the teachers. I wish I was a part of this school, but thank you for sharing I would love to see something to this idea being started at school, Alexander Montessori. I think everyone has a favorite Dr.Seuss book. My fave, "Oh, The Places You Will Go". It really pays off to see the children work with something they love to learn about and can really express themselves with.

Quick Question: For this activity, you obiviously set a date; but how long do you give the students to prepare and plan? A week or two?

thamani (not verified)

School success with Dr. Seuss

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u know katie, as a preschool teacher, i have noticed that children are extremely fascinated and intrigued when they are allowed to participate, hands-on, in learning experiences. then, to add costumes and the enthusiasm of an entire staff was definately a brilliant and memorable idea for both staff and student. with all of the chaos in the world today, events or activities such as this allow teachers like me to keep my faith alive in the school systems. to know that there are many people out there who do indeed care about our children and the importance of spreading the messages of discrimination, ecology, friendship, resposibility and war is awesome. what a great way to celebrate the birthday of the great, late Dr. Seuss.

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Dr. Katie Klinger STEM & Digital Equity Grantwriter & Education Technology Integration Expert

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