Tag: origami
Too Busy Folding Pencils To Read
The Strange Case of The Origami Yoda
I’m always on the lookout for a new read-aloud for my third graders. Usually, I like to introduce them to classic literature no one else reads them such as Carlo Collodi’s Pinocchio. Or, Edith Nesbit’s Five Children and It. But, knowing my great passion for origami they begged me to read The Strange Case of Origami Yoda by Tom Angleberger, and I have to admit that I enjoyed it almost as much as they did.
The strange case is that Dwight, an awkward and nerdy middle school boy, has an origami Yoda finger puppet which has a unique ability to give exactly the right advice when needed. So the strange case involves answering the question, “Can Origami Yoda be real?” Each chapter is a little scenario where Origami Yoda saves the day.
For example, when Kellen accidentally leans across the sink in the bathroom he discovers that only the front of his pants is wet. It looks, unfortunately, as if he has wet himself. But, the Origami Yoda puppet on Dwight’s finger advises him to wet all of his pants before going back to class. Then the one spot is no longer conspicuous. This is the stuff that children love. It is too funny for words. Plus, what if Origami Yoda is real? At the end of the book, after reading many accounts of Origami Yoda giving sage advice, the reader must decide.
I can’t answer that. I can only show you the finger puppets which my third graders made, holding them up in all the appropriate places when Origami Yoda speaks
And, I can leave you with the suggestion that if you have an elementary or middle school child, “Read this book you should.”
(p.s. My favorite Yoda quote? “Do or do not…there is no try.”)
Folding. Reading. Playing.
An Origami Kiss for Valentine’s Day
Last year, I gave each of my students a Valentine bookmark. This year I’m giving them a kiss. If you want to give your Valentine such a kiss, here are the directions:
Fold the triangle into approximate thirds along the bottom so that the overall shape resembles a house.
Origami Directions for A Five Pointed Star
Hello Japan! August mini-challenge: Origami

How to Fold Two Simple Origami Bookmarks
Origami Stars…Origami Wreaths…Original Ways I’ll Decorate My Classroom
Then, I cut them into 4cm by 8 cm rectangles:
to make little dog-eared pieces like this:
By inserting one into the other, all eight together make a wreath like this: