illustration of panicked birds running around a farm
Art by Carolyn Ridsdale

Chicken Little

The sky is falling! Or.. is it?

By Spencer Kayden
From the May/June 2021 Issue

Learning Objective: As students read this dramatic version of a familiar folktale, they will identify inferences and understand the harm of jumping to conclusions, or making inferences that aren’t based on fact.

Guided Reading Level: U
DRA Level: 50
UP CLOSE

Inference

In this play, Chicken Little puts together clues to draw conclusions. That’s called making inferences. Look for which of his inferences are correct and which aren’t—and what he finally learns.

Scene 1

Chicken Little (loudly): Bok bok.

Henny Penny (loudly): Cluck cluck.

Goosey Loosey (loudly): Honk honk.

Turkey Lurkey (loudly): Gobble gobble.

S1: Now that we have your attention, we would like to tell you a story.

S2: A story about a farm full of fowl.

S3: There are chickens and hens and turkeys and geese galore.

S1: Let’s listen in as Chicken Big is trying to get out of doing her chores.

Chicken Big: Hey, Chicken Little, I’ll give you a magic stone if you sweep the barn for me.

Chicken Little: A magic stone? Awesome! What does it do?

Chicken Big: Anything you want in the whole world.

Chicken Little: Can I use it to magically sweep the barn?

Chicken Big: Oh . . . that’s the one thing it can’t do.

Chicken Little: That’s OK! Give me your broom.

S2: Chicken Big hands over the broom.

S3: She then turns around and picks up a rock without Chicken Little noticing.

S1: She holds it out to Chicken Little.

Chicken Little: Gee, thanks! This is gonna be fun!

Scene 2

S2: Later that day, exhausted after sweeping the barn, Chicken Little wanders in the forest.

S3: He stands in front of a bare blueberry bush and squeezes the rock.

Chicken Little: Magic stone, grow plump and juicy blueberries, please!

S1: Nothing happens.

Chicken Little: Hmmm. It still doesn’t work. Maybe I’m squeezing too hard. Or not hard enough.

S2: And then, out of nowhere—

S3: BONK! An acorn falls on his head.

Chicken Little: Ouch! What was that?

S1: Chicken Little looks up.

Chicken Little: There’s nothing in that oak tree. What else is up there except the sky?

S2: He gasps.

Chicken Little: The sky is falling! The sky is falling! I have to warn everyone!

S3: He runs off as fast as his teeny toothpick legs will carry him.

Art by Carolyn Ridsdale

 

Scene 3

S1: Henny Penny is checking on her eggs when Chicken Little comes tearing in.

Chicken Little: Bok bok! The sky is falling! The sky is falling!

Henny Penny: The sky is falling?

Chicken Little: Yes! Part of it fell on my head!

S2: Chicken Little shows her the bump that has started to rise.

Henny Penny: Oh me! Oh my! What will happen to us all? We’re doomed. DOOMED!

Chicken Little: We have to take cover! Let’s go!

S3: Henny Penny grabs her chicks and tucks them under a wing.

Henny Penny: Let’s go! Cluck cluck!

Scene 4

S1: Goosey Loosey is strutting down the path singing.

Goosey Loosey: Old MacDonald had a farm, ee-i-ee-i-oh, and on that farm he had a penguin, ee-i-ee-i-oh . . .

S2: Chicken Little and Henny Penny scurry toward him.

Chicken Little: The sky is falling! The sky is falling!

Goosey Loosey: Honk honk. What’s that you say?

Henny Penny: Haven’t you heard? The sky is falling!

Goosey Loosey: Good gravy! That’s the nuttiest thing I ever heard! Speaking of nuts, my cousin once ate a peanut, but it got stuck right in his—

Chicken Little: There’s no time to waste. The sky is falling!

Goosey Loosey: Well, why didn’t you say so?

Chicken Little: We must take cover. Let’s go.

Goosey Loosey: Let’s go! Honk honk.

S3: The three birds run smack into Turkey Lurkey.

Turkey Lurkey: Watch where you’re going. You almost ran me off the road.

Chicken Little: Sorry, Turkey Lurkey.

Turkey Lurkey: What’s ruffled your feathers?

Chicken Little: The sky is falling! The sky is falling!

S1: Turkey Lurkey looks up.

Turkey Lurkey: It doesn’t look like it’s falling.

Chicken Little: Of course it doesn’t! The sky is huge. You wouldn’t notice if a piece of it fell.

Henny Penny: But what if all the pieces fell? Then, BOOM! No more sky! No more birds!

Turkey Lurkey: I don’t like the sound of that. What are we going to do about it?

Chicken Little: We must take cover. Let’s go!

Turkey Lurkey: Let’s go! Gobble gobble.

Scene 5

S2: Foxy Loxy is admiring his reflection in the pond when he sees the group of birds running frantically.

Foxy Loxy: Well hellooooo, my fine feathered friends. Where are you rushing off to?

Chicken Little: The sky is falling!

Foxy Loxy: The sky is falling?

All birds: Yes! And we must take cover!

S3: Just at that moment, Foxy Loxy feels his stomach growl.

S1: A sly twinkle appears in his eyes.

Foxy Loxy: I know the perfect spot. You’ll be as safe as a fork in a toaster. Follow me.

Chicken Little: Oh thank you, Foxy Loxy. You are saving our lives!

Foxy Loxy (aside): I’ll be sharpening my knives!

Henny Penny: What?

Foxy Loxy: Bees are safe in their hives.

Chicken Little: But we’re not safe! Let’s go!

Foxy Loxy: Let’s go! (Quietly) Yum yum.

S2: Foxy Loxy trots down a path. The birds follow.

Scene 6

S3: When they arrive at Foxy Loxy’s den, he flashes them a spectacular smile.

S1: His teeth gleam like daggers made of diamonds.

Foxy Loxy: Just give me a moment to tidy up and get the fire started.

Turkey Lurkey: The fire?

Foxy Loxy: Yes. So it will be all toasty roasty in there.

S2: Foxy Loxy ducks inside. He comes back moments later with a large napkin tied around his neck.

Foxy Loxy: OK, right this way. In you go, one at a time.

S3: The birds head toward the opening.

S1: Just then, the farmer walks by and sees the gaggle of birds.

Farmer: What’s going on here?

Chicken Little: Farmer! Farmer! The sky is falling! Foxy Loxy is keeping us safe in his den!

Henny Penny: Yes! The sky is falling and we’re all doomed!

Farmer: Well, you are certainly doomed if you go into Foxy Loxy’s den.

S2: The farmer narrows her eyes at Foxy Loxy.

Farmer: We talked about this, Foxy. You stay away from my birds and I’ll bring you firewood for your fires.

Foxy Loxy (to himself): Rats! I almost had them.

S3: Foxy Loxy slinks back into his den.

Farmer: You birds need to be more careful.

Chicken Little: I know! That’s why we were taking cover!

Farmer: Did you not see the napkin around Foxy’s neck?

Chicken Little: What?

Farmer: Was he making his fire all toasty roasty?

Chicken Little: You mean . . . Foxy Loxy was going to eat us?

Henny Penny: AAAAAH! HE WAS GOING TO EAT US!

Goosey Loosey: That would explain the drool.

Turkey Lurkey: Could this day get any worse?

Goosey Loosey: Oh, definitely. This one time, I was eating a delicious worm, and I found a piece of apple in it. Disgusting!

Chicken Little: We must focus! Let’s not forget the sky is still falling!

Farmer: What’s all this about the sky falling?

S1: The birds get worked up into hysterics. They all begin talking at once.

Chicken Little: It fell on me!

Henny Penny: BOOM! No more birds!

Turkey Lurkey: They almost ran me off the road!

Goosey Loosey: Honk, cluck, gobble, bok!

Farmer: Whoa there. Slow down. Start from the beginning.

Art by Carolyn Ridsdale

 

Scene 7

S2: Chicken Little takes them all back to the blueberry bush. He begins describing the day he was born.

Chicken Little: So I pecked a hole in the shell and used my tiny feet to push . . .

Farmer: I mean tell me about today.

Chicken Little: Oh, I see. I was standing here, and something came down from the sky and hit me on the head.

Farmer: And you assumed it was a piece of the sky.

Chicken Little: There was nothing above me, so what else could it be?

Farmer: Did a piece of the sky fall on anyone else’s head?

Henny Penny: Not mine.

Turkey Lurkey: Not mine.

Goosey Loosey: Not the sky, but one time a big butterfly—

All birds: Goosey!

Farmer: But you all believe the sky is falling.

Henny Penny: I heard it from Chicken Little. And he seemed very certain.

Turkey Lurkey: You all were so loud about it, I figured it must be true.

Goosey Loosey: Yes, seems logical.

S3: At that moment another acorn falls and—BONK!—it hits Chicken Little on the head.

Chicken Little: There! It happened again! See, the sky really is fa—

S1: Suddenly, Chicken Little sees the acorn in the grass. He bends down to pick it up.

Chicken Little (in a tiny voice): Or . . . it was an acorn.

Farmer: That seems more likely, don’t you think?

S2: Turkey Lurkey sees another acorn on the ground.

Turkey Lurkey: This must be the first one that fell.

Chicken Little: So the sky isn’t falling?

Farmer: No.

Henny Penny: Not even a little bit?

Farmer: Not even a little bit.

Goosey Loosey: Not even an ounce or a smidgen or a speck or a slice or a teeny, tiny piece?

Farmer: I am absolutely certain: The sky is not falling.

S3: The farmer and the birds walk back toward the farm.

Farmer: Can I give you all a bit of advice? Look at all the facts before you jump to conclusions. Now, let’s all pitch in and rake the garden.

Chicken Little: We don’t have to! I HAVE A MAGIC STONE!

S1: The farmer looks at Chicken Little doubtingly.

Chicken Little: Chicken Big gave it to me for sweeping the . . .

S2: Chicken Little smacks himself in the head with his wing.

Chicken Little: Doh!

This play was originally published in the May/June 2021 issue.  


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Activities (8)
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Can't-Miss Teaching Extras
Explore the Storyworks Archive

Share more of our folktales and fables that feature delightful animal characters, like The Elephants and the Mice, The Lion and the Mouse, and The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs.

Share Chicken Little History!

Tell students that the story of Chicken Little dates back to the mid-1800s, and different versions of the story are told around the world today. Sometimes, the story is called "Henny Penny” or “Chicken Licken.” Also, some versions have a rose petal or even a pea falling on the bird’s head instead of an acorn! See if students can check out copies of the story from your school or local library and have them compare the versions they find.

Address Thinking Traps

When Chicken Little catastrophizes and assumes the sky is falling, he falls into what psychologists call a “thinking trap.” Thinking traps like this can trap kids into anxious thought patterns. Share this video from a mental health app for kids to open up a conversation about healthy and unhealthy thinking patterns. After watching, provide students with strategies for reframing negative thoughts with an activity like this one from Mentally Healthy Schools.

Practice Inferring!

Invite students to practice drawing conclusions with The New York Times’s “What’s Going On in This Picture?” feature. Each day the newspaper provides one image, without a caption, and encourages students to guess what’s going on. It’s a fun way to practice making inferences! Plus, you can see what assumptions other students and teachers are making about an image by looking at the comments.

More About the Story

Skills

inference, vocabulary, fluency, character, plot, tone, drawing conclusions, evaluating, text-to-self/text-to-world connections, narrative writing

Complexity Factors

Levels of Meaning

This play retells the popular children’s tale “Chicken Little” in a fun and humorous way. On another level, it delivers important messages: don’t jump to conclusions without knowing the facts, and don’t follow along without thinking about whether it’s a wise thing to do.

Structure

The play has seven chronological scenes.

Language

The language is mainly simple yet playful and includes some similes. It has some challenging words, such as gaggle, assumed, and logical.

Knowledge Demands 

No special knowledge is required.

Step-by-Step Lesson Plan

1. Preparing to Read

Engage Students and Preview Vocabulary

  • Post this sentence in your virtual or physical classroom, and ask students to think about it:

    The sky is falling!

  • Poll your students to see if they are familiar with this expression. Then have them write down what they think it means for someone to think that the sky is falling. Have one or two students share their answers, asking them to explain their reasoning. Tell them they will be reading the folktale that this expression came from.
  • After reading the play, return to the expression and work together to come up with a class definition. (See critical-thinking questions.)
  • Look at pages 20-21 with the class. Point out that Chicken Little is a folktale. Explain that a folktale is a story that’s been told for many generations. In some folktales, the characters are animals who talk and act the way people do. Folktales often teach listeners and readers an important lesson about life. Invite students to name any folktales with animal characters they have read in Storyworks or elsewhere. 

  • Read the title and subtitle with students. Ask them to describe the illustration.

  • Show or assign the Vocabulary Slideshow (available in your Resources tab) to preview challenging words in the play. Reinforce learning before or after reading with the Vocabulary Skill Builder. Highlighted words: fowl, galore, frantically, aside (as a stage direction), gaggle, hysterics, assumed, logical

  • Call on a volunteer to read aloud the Up Close box for the class.

2. Reading the Play

  • Assign parts and read the play aloud as a class or in groups. Remote learning tip: Go to the Presentation Mode of the play and share your screen for students to read the parts. Students might also change their screen name to their character’s name. After reading, discuss the close-reading and critical-thinking questions.

  • NEW! You can now have students listen to an editor read-aloud of the play! In response to your requests, we have created an audio version of the play. It's available in your Resources tab.

Close-Reading Questions (20 minutes)

  • In Scene 1, what trick does Chicken Big play on Chicken Little? What do you learn about Chicken Little from this opening scene? (character) Chicken Big tricks Chicken Little into believing that the stone she gives him is magical. She wants to persuade Chicken Little to sweep the barn in her place. Because Chicken Little accepts the unbelievable things that Chicken Big tells him, it’s clear that Chicken Little is gullible, or believes things too easily. 

  • In Scene 2, what inference, or conclusion, does Chicken Little draw? How do you know that he draws an incorrect conclusion? (inference) When something falls from the sky and knocks Chicken Little on the head, he draws the incorrect conclusion that the sky is falling because he doesn’t see the acorn that hit him. You know that he’s wrong because Storyteller 3 tells us that an acorn bonks Chicken Little on the head. Also, common sense and prior experience tell us that parts of the sky don’t fall down to Earth.

  • What happens when Chicken Little tells the other birds that the sky is falling? Why do you think the other birds believe Chicken Little? (plot) The other birds believe Chicken Little without question and come along to help warn more birds. Answers to the second question will vary but should suggest that the other birds are also gullible like Chicken Little, or that Chicken Little is very passionate and convincing in his belief that the sky is falling.

  • Reread Scenes 3 and 4. What is the tone, or feeling the author creates, in these scenes? How does this tone compare with the way the birds are probably feeling? (tone) The tone is funny and hectic, while the birds are probably feeling stressed and scared because they think the sky is falling.

  • In Scenes 5 and 6, what clues tell you that Foxy Loxy is planning to eat the birds? What fact do you know about a fox’s natural diet that helps support this inference? (inference) Foxy Loxy’s stomach growls; he says that the birds will “be as safe as a fork in a toaster”—meaning they aren’t safe; he says that he’s sharpening his knives; he makes a fire; and he puts a big napkin around his neck. Plus, in nature foxes eat birds, which supports the idea that Foxy Loxy is probably planning to eat the birds in the story.

  • What two things happen in Scene 7 to finally convince Chicken Little that the sky isn’t falling? (plot) Another acorn falls from the tree and hits Chicken Little on the head, and this time he realizes that it was an acorn. Plus, he sees the acorn on the ground that probably bonked him earlier and made him think the sky was falling. 

  • How does Chicken Little feel about being wrong about the sky falling? How does the stage direction in italics in Scene 7 help support your answer? (character) Chicken Little feels relieved and a little embarrassed. The stage direction suggests that he feels embarrassed because it says that he speaks “in a tiny voice” when he realizes that he mistook an acorn falling from a tree for the sky falling.

  • At the end of the play, what lesson has Chicken Little learned? How do you know? (drawing conclusions) Chicken Little has learned that he can’t believe everything without first thinking about whether it’s true. The play shows that Chicken Little has learned this lesson because he quickly realizes that the stone he assumed was magic earlier was actually part of a trick Chicken Big was playing on him. 

Critical-Thinking Questions

  • In the final scene of the play, the Farmer advises Chicken Little to “Look at all the facts before you jump to conclusions.” Why is this good advice? How would the story have been different if Chicken Little had looked at the facts before he jumped to conclusions? (evaluating) Answers to the first question will vary. The story would have been different if Chicken Little had taken time to consider all the facts. He probably would have realized that it makes much more sense that an acorn hit him on the head, not a piece of the sky. If he looked around, he would have seen the acorn on the ground. He then wouldn’t have spread this scary and false news to his friends, and they could have avoided nearly being eaten by a hungry fox. 

  • The expression “the sky is falling” is commonly used to describe a belief like Chicken Little’s. In your own words, what do you think this expression means? (inference) Answers will vary, but students might suggest that it means someone has a mistaken belief that a huge disaster is happening and is spreading that belief to others.

  • What real-life problem is shown by all the other birds joining in with Chicken Little? Can you think of an example of this problem that you’ve seen or been involved with? (text-to-self/text-to-world connections) The other birds joining in shows the problem of people following along with others without thinking, especially in situations that are filled with fear or other strong emotions. Examples will vary.

3. SEL Focus

Making a Reasoned Judgment

Like Chicken Little, we all sometimes come to conclusions without knowing all the facts. Explain to the class that another term for this is “making assumptions” or “jumping to conclusions.” Ask: What assumptions did Chicken Little and his bird friends make in this play? Then share an example from your own life where you made an incorrect assumption. Ask: Can anyone else give an example of an assumption they’ve made in the past about someone or something that ended up being wrong? (You can suggest they think about a food they assumed they’d hate until they tasted it, or a task they assumed would be too difficult until they attempted it.) Finally, lead a discussion about judging something before actually experiencing it or getting all the facts about it—and why that can be harmful.

4. Skill Building and Writing

Featured Skill: Inference

  • Assign the Inference Skill Builder and have students complete it in class or for homework. This new interactive Skill Builder Slide Deck (available in your Resources tab) will walk students through understanding what an inference is and understanding the inferences Chicken Little makes. They will then be prepared to respond to the writing prompt on page 25. 

Great Idea for Remote Learning

  • Immerse students in the world of Chicken Little! On the day that you’re reading the play as a class, have your students set their video backgrounds as a picture of a farm.

Differentiate and Customize
For Struggling Readers

The play includes a variety of lively action words and phrases related to movement that may be challenging to some students (wanders, squeezing, take cover, strutting, scurry, run smack into, rushing off, trots, ducks, slinks). On the board or a big sheet of paper to share over video chat, write each word in its simplest form (wander, squeeze, take cover, strut, scurry, run smack into, rush off, trot, duck, slink) as well as its definition. Review this information with your students. Then assign a word to each student. Have them take turns acting out their word while their classmates guess which one it is. 

For Advanced Readers

Divide students into small groups and have them discuss this question: What if one of Chicken Little’s bird friends had been better at making inferences? How would this play be different? Then have them write a new version of a scene from Chicken Little that includes a new character, Ducky Lucky, who helps Chicken Little make better decisions.

For ELL Students

In Scene 6, point out the word gaggle. Ask students what they think it means by looking at the context: “Just then, the farmer walks by and sees the gaggle of birds.” Explain that gaggle means a group of birds, usually geese, and that there are many other words that name other groups of animals, like flock, herd, pack, etc. Explain that some words are usually used for only certain kinds of animals (e.g., flock is usually used to describe a group of birds, and pack is usually used to describe wild animals or wolves). Then have each student choose a common animal and research what word or words can be used to describe a group of that animal. Finally, have each student share their word with the rest of the class. They might include a picture of their animal group!

Text-to-Speech