In class, the teacher gave each of us a ping-pong ball, a chopstick and some plasticine of different colors. What is this going to do?
Then the teacher took out the finished work, which turned out to be a plasticine doll-angry birds. Looking at the angry bird in the teacher's hand, the young reporters began to get excited and insisted on trying it themselves.
The teacher pricked a hole in each ping-pong ball with a knife, and then put chopsticks in it. Use table tennis as the doll's head and chopsticks as the trunk. Little friends hold a large piece of plasticine and knead it into a round cake, and then wrap the ping-pong ball, so that the doll's face will have color. Squeeze a few round black and white plasticine, and the bird's eye will be done. Look at those little black eyes as if they were praising me.
Then do the bird's hair. Three black, round hairs, standing on the bird's head, look very energetic. I stuck the bird's hair on my head and accidentally fell off, only to find it was not tight enough. Never mind, start over. The last thing to do is the beak. The angry bird's mouth is very long, and its two lips are open, as if to open its mouth to eat.
The little friends took the angry birds they made, and everyone suddenly gathered around. You say something, he says something, and then he laughs. It turns out that everyone makes different birds. Some birds have lost their hair, some have crooked mouths, and some have red eyes. But we are all happy, because we get happiness from the handicraft class.