3 Little Pigs Activities for Preschoolers: Learning Through Storytelling and Play

“The Three Little Pigs” is a classic folktale that offers preschoolers opportunities to develop literacy, problem-solving, creativity, and social-emotional skills. Integrating this story into classroom activities encourages children to engage in hands-on learning while reinforcing story comprehension, sequencing, and collaboration. The following activities are designed to be fun, educational, and age-appropriate.

Activity 1: Story Sequencing with Pig and Wolf Cards

Objective: Develop comprehension, memory, and sequencing skills.
Materials: Printable or illustrated cards of the pigs building straw, sticks, and bricks, and the wolf blowing the houses.
Instructions:

  1. Read the story aloud to the children.
  2. Show the story cards and briefly discuss each event.
  3. Ask children to place the cards in the correct order of the story.
  4. Encourage children to retell the story using the cards.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Understand cause-and-effect relationships
  • Improve memory and verbal communication
  • Strengthen narrative comprehension

Activity 2: Build a House STEM Challenge

Objective: Introduce problem-solving, creativity, and early engineering skills.
Materials: Straw, popsicle sticks, blocks, clay, or other building materials
Instructions:

  1. Divide children into small groups.
  2. Provide materials for each group to build a house.
  3. Test the houses by gently “blowing” on them (or using a fan).
  4. Discuss which structures were strongest and why.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Hands-on problem solving and critical thinking
  • Teamwork and collaboration
  • Understanding concepts of strength and durability

Activity 3: Dramatic Play: Wolf and Pig Role-Play

Objective: Promote imaginative play and social-emotional learning
Materials: Pig and wolf props or masks
Instructions:

  1. Create a “play area” for the story, with marked spaces for straw, stick, and brick houses.
  2. Assign children roles as pigs or the wolf.
  3. Encourage children to act out the story, practicing turn-taking and dialogue.
  4. Discuss emotions such as fear, bravery, and teamwork after the play.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Empathy and emotional awareness
  • Cooperation and negotiation skills
  • Story comprehension through role-play

Activity 4: Piggy Math and Sorting

Objective: Introduce early numeracy and categorization skills
Materials: Pig cutouts, blocks of straw, sticks, and bricks, counting beads or blocks
Instructions:

  1. Have children sort pig cutouts by house type (straw, sticks, bricks).
  2. Count the pigs and materials together, matching quantities.
  3. Ask simple questions like: “Which house has the most pigs?” or “How many sticks are there?”

Learning Outcomes:

  • Counting, number recognition, and comparison
  • Sorting and categorization
  • Fine motor coordination through handling materials

Activity 5: Art & Craft: Create Your Own Pig or House

Objective: Encourage creativity and fine motor skills
Materials: Construction paper, crayons, glue, cotton balls, popsicle sticks, and blocks
Instructions:

  1. Children design pigs or houses using materials provided.
  2. Encourage children to explain their choices and describe their creations.
  3. Display artwork in the classroom or create a story mural.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Creativity and self-expression
  • Fine motor skill development
  • Story connection and comprehension

Comparison Chart: Skills Targeted by Activities

ActivitySkills DevelopedLearning Domain
Story SequencingMemory, comprehensionCognitive / Literacy
STEM House ChallengeProblem-solving, teamworkCognitive / Physical
Dramatic PlayEmpathy, cooperationSocial-Emotional
Piggy Math & SortingCounting, sorting, fine motorCognitive / Math
Art & CraftCreativity, fine motorCreative / Physical

Tips for Teachers

  • Repeat the story multiple times to reinforce comprehension.
  • Encourage children to use expressive language and describe feelings.
  • Integrate music or songs related to the story for engagement.
  • Extend learning by introducing related vocabulary such as “strong,” “weak,” “blow,” and “safe.”

Conclusion
Using “The Three Little Pigs” as a foundation for preschool activities combines literacy, STEM, math, art, and social-emotional learning in an engaging way. These activities support skill development while keeping children motivated and excited about learning through storytelling and play.