It’s beanie a long time - ‘joy’ at TA’s monster welcome

A teaching assistant kept her promise to crochet Shrek hats for pupils, making the beanies over 70 hours as she watched The West Wing
10th March 2021, 6:35pm

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It’s beanie a long time - ‘joy’ at TA’s monster welcome

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archived/its-beanie-long-time-joy-tas-monster-welcome
Shrek Beanies

A teaching assistant spent 70 hours making 34 Shrek beanies to welcome children back to their primary school after lockdown.

A photograph of 32 North Ormesby Primary Academy children wearing the green hats went viral after being posted to Twitter by the school’s headteacher.


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Y6: “Miss, will you make us a Shrek beanie please?”

Mrs Dowie: “When we get out of lockdown, I’ll make the whole of Y6 a Shrek beanie!”

Government: “Children will return to school on 8th March”

Mrs Dowie: ?‍♀️

??? pic.twitter.com/svh5B04eGu

- North Ormesby Primary Academy ? (@N_O_P_A) March 9, 2021

They were the handiwork of Chris Dowie, who made an offhand promise to a Year 6 pupil that she would make one for everyone in the class once lockdown was lifted.

“I just laughed it off but then when we realised that we were going back to school I thought, well, I should really do something for it because I promised them,” she said.

“I can’t let them down with what they’ve gone through.”

Mrs Dowie brought the finished hats into the school in Middlesbrough on Tuesday after spending around 70 hours working on them.

She said the reaction of the children was “a joy to see”.

“I brought the carrier bag out, opened the carrier bag and they were just ecstatic,” she said.

“They were just laughing and shouting, and I had to calm them down to get them to put their hats on before they went out.”

The resulting photograph showing 32 children wearing the hats - mostly with beaming smiles on their faces - has been liked on Twitter more than 30,000 times, gaining attention from celebrities including Kate Beckinsale and Carol Vorderman.

Headteacher Craig Nicholson said: “If anything, the pressure’s on Mrs Dowie now to make more.

“I’ve got a bunch of teaching staff that want one, I’ve got the rest of the children who are going to want one making, and there’s circa 30,000 people on Twitter who are all asking for Shrek beanies as well, so she’s going to be busy.”

Mrs Dowie said repeating the same pattern over and over again became “very boring”, adding: “I was doing it in my sleep towards the end.”

She revealed that she kept her mind occupied while crocheting by watching the classic US political TV drama The West Wing, getting through four series in the time it took her to complete the hats.

One beneficiary of her work was Mr Nicholson, who proudly wore his hat as he toured the school on Wednesday morning.

Mr Nicholson has joined the ‘Shrek beanie revolution’! pic.twitter.com/BsqpNaSyh3

- North Ormesby Primary Academy ? (@N_O_P_A) March 10, 2021

“There were some really nice giggles and wry smiles from everyone,” he said.

“I’ll be treasuring that…I’m a very proud member of the Shrek beanie revolution.”

He said the gesture was very in character for the “absolutely amazing” Mrs Dowie, who has been at the school for around 30 years and has brought her creations in from home regularly.

“We’ve got animals that have been crocheted that are sitting in one of our mental health rooms,” he said.

“There are tissue boxes, there are scarves, there are hats - there’s all sorts around school she’s brought in over the years.”

He added: “She’s absolutely amazing and has children right at the heart of everything that she does.”

After a disrupted year in which many children missed out on months of being in school, Mr Nicholson said it was important that schools pay as much attention to students’ social and emotional wellbeing as to their academic education.

That sentiment was echoed by Mrs Dowie, who said: “We hear in the news about catch-up and everything, but the catch-up should be them having fun, the catch-up should be about joy and laughter.”

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