15 Ways to Use Play-Doh in the Middle and High School Classroom
Written by: Carrie Wisehart
As a high school teacher and administrator of 24 years, I have found we spend so much time preparing students for the future – pushing them to prepare for college or trade school or the military or work – that we forget one very important thing: High school students are STILL KIDS. Rigorous learning CAN STILL BE hands-on, collaborative, and fulfilling. Academic content is only enhanced by the use of creative vehicles – tools to create, synthesize, and assess. Students JUMP at the chance to use play-doh in the classroom. They love the “throwback” to their childhoods as well as getting to use their hands. The minute the play-doh came out in my AP English Language classroom, the students reverted immediately to their elementary days. It is important to note that CREATE is at the TOP of Bloom’s Taxonomy. When students are forced to synthesize what they’ve learned and make a sculpture, they are doing some crazy critical thinking. Play-doh is a great way to keep students engaged, let them use their hands, employ creativity, and YOU can have a new and different form of assessment that is actually FUN (did I just say FUN in the same sentence with ASSESSMENT? Mind = blown).
“Rigorous learning CAN STILL BE hands-on, collaborative, and fulfilling.”
Play-Doh – especially the kind that lasts – can be expensive. If you don’t know how to get enough Play-Doh, you can put it on your syllabus as an optional item for parents and students to donate. I also added some Play-Doh packs to my Amazon Wish List in the fall. Parent Night is a great time to advertise your Play-Doh engagement strategy. Students and parents are so excited about the possibility of Play-Doh that many of them bring in more than one tub! I have compiled a list of 15 activities I used Play-Doh for in my Language Arts, AP English, and World Studies (PBL English/World History) classroom. But these activities are broad enough they can be used in many classrooms at both the middle and high school level. These activities can relate to any reading assignments, vocabulary attainment, and/or reflection on topics that require student assessment.
Feel free to use all the ideas listed below, but if you’d like the handouts, click this link!
1. Play-Doh Check for Understanding Activity
This activity is a way to assess reading the students have done for homework. Students summarize the chunk of reading and then choose a section to create a Play-Doh sculpture. After the Play-Doh construction, students work with partners to reflect on what they chose to construct and why.
2. Play-Doh Vocabulary Matching Game
The teacher directs the students to ten vocabulary words he/she would like them to learn and/or reflect on. From those words, students can either be assigned or choose their own word to write a sentence in context and create a sculpture that best reflects that word. Students write their words and definitions or sentences on paper and play a “matching game” with other students from the class, matching the correct word to the sculpture. A great formative assessment or review game.
3. Kinesthetic Brain Engagement
One of the common assessments used by English teachers is a Socratic Seminar. One type of Socratic Seminar is called the “Fish Bowl”, when one group of students is in the center having discussion and the rest of the students are listening and taking notes. Often I’ve noticed the outside circle of students is not engaged in the class discussion. A great way to use Play-Doh is to ask students to create a sculpture related to the discussion and explain how and why that sculpture applies to the class discussion OR class lecture.
4. Process Play-Doh
Have students use Play-Doh to artistically represent a process.
5. Time-line Play-Doh
Have students create a timeline (or this handout could also be used for the process) by placing a small Play-doh sculpture in each of the five boxes on the handout. It is always good to have students explain their sculptures to someone else in a reflective activity.
6. Reconstruction
Students can reconstruct a location from a certain time period or a setting from a story. They can use clues from the text to make the construction. This can be used in most subjects with an emphasis on text evidence.
7. Model
In Science classes, students can create models of cells, etc. In History, students can create models of inventions or historical objects of importance. In English, models can be made of the writing process or symbols used in writing. In math class, students can make models of a story problem, or even create a graph out of Play-Doh just to give them the opportunity to look at things differently than the way they usually do.
8. Gallery Walk
With any of the activities you do with Play-doh, it is always great to have students do a gallery walk. You can use the critical thinking questions on the handout attached, or you can come up with your own.
9. Game of Bowling
Students create bowling pins and bowling balls from Play-Doh. Develop a list of questions based on how many “pins” a student knocks down.
10. Sculptionary Review Game
Based on the game Pictionary, make slips of paper with vocab or terminology on them. Place the students in teams or partnerships and have them draw the term. They have 30 seconds – 1 minute (you choose) to create that sculpture and see if the other students on their team can guess.
11. For Kinesthetic Students
For kids who have trouble sitting still (your tappers, clickers, and noisemakers), make Play-Doh an option. Obviously set rules for how and when they can use it, but if you need someone to keep their hands busy, make Play-Doh available whenever they need it. At the beginning of the year, I always have my students take a learning styles quiz so I know who is kinesthetic (more and more every year).
12. YOU create the sculpture!
Why should the kids have all the fun? Make a sculpture or sculptures for a bell-ringer. Have the students identify what the sculpture is and how it is related to yesterday’s class or last night’s reading.
13. Mapping
If you are using a map for any reason, Play-Doh is a great way to “emphasize” certain locations by adding little sculptures that identify what happened in that particular location or what important event happened there. This can be used in foreign language classes, History courses, and even ecological studies.
13. Living Comic Strip
Students can take parts of a story, chapter, and/or section and create a living comic strip complete with dialogue bubbles and captions. You can copy the handout as many times as needed. Students will probably prefer to make their own comic strip so it fits their own comic.
14. Living Comic Strip
Students can take parts of a story, chapter, and/or section and create a living comic strip complete with dialogue bubbles and captions. You can copy the handout as many times as needed. Students will probably prefer to make their own comic strip so it fits their own comic.
15. Show and Tell
When students come back from a break, instead of having them share what they did over the break, have them sculpt it. A great back to school activity.
“It makes learning fun, which I think leads to better learning.”
Student reflections about play-doh activities:
- “It makes learning fun, which I think leads to better learning.” – Molly R.
- “It makes you think, plus the chapter will most likely stick with you more.” – Mystic B.
- “It shows we should be allowed to be creative in school.” – Bradynn R.
- “The benefits of this activity is that we got to do hands-on learning while also socializing and reflecting…” – Jack L.
- “It’s fun to work with your hands because it engages you more. And I like play dough and being creative.” – Claire W.
If you have any additional Play-Doh ideas, please email me or use Twitter (@CarrieWisehart)! I would love to add them to my repertoire!
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