Christmas Time is Here and It's Around the World!
Ready or not... it's almost here! Have you been thinking about what you're going to teach during December? There are so many possibilities! There's Christmas Around the World (which could take the whole month depending on how many countries you teach), Reindeer, Gingerbread, Evergreen trees, Writing Letters to Santa, Christmas Math Games, Elf on the Shelf Diaries... it's overwhelming! It's a lot of work, I admit, but if you're like me I LOVE to decorate my classroom for Christmas and I do it for the kids. Some of them never get to experience the decorations and holiday fun stuff... so I want to give that to them.
For each country, we color in the country, stamp and the flag. The students keep this in their Travel Journal so we can keep track of the countries we learn. Here is the cover page of our Travel Journal: Traveling Around the World for the Holidays! We complete two pages each day. One in the morning and one in the afternoon. I also have a table of contents at the beginning of the book. This is supposed to resemble an expository genre: using Table of Contents, Labels, Captions and Diagrams.
For each country, I created a 4 square where the students write about the food, traditions, customs, how to say "Merry Christmas" and illustrate the flag. Then on the other side, they illustrate pictures to go along with the country and glue them in the book. Here is United States:
Here is England:
Here is Germany:
Here is Russia:
Here is Mexico:
Here is Holland:
I've created vocabulary cards for each country, that you can print and laminate. I usually display these on my pocket chart or my theme center for the students to read:
For each country, I read a fiction story and a non-fiction story so we can compare the two books. For example: for Germany, I read The Gingerbread Baby for fiction, and Christmas in Germany for non-fiction. And, we even eat gingerbread men cookies! If you're interested in checking out my packet about the Gingerbread Baby, click below:
Linking Literature: The Gingerbread Baby Grades 1-3
We do a really cute Gingerbread Baby craftivity and writing! We write about how we can catch a gingerbread baby using a sequencing template.
We also decorate a gingerbread house using icing, candy, pretzels, paper plates, ice cream cones and cereal! It's so much fun!
When we talk about England, we do a science investigation with Evergreen trees. We read a book about trees and compare the Evergreen Tree with the Deciduous tree. Since the holly berry comes from England, we investigate different Evergreens: Blue Spruce, Holly Berry, Cedar, Frazier Fur, White Pine, Grand Fur, and Pine Cones.
This is the template that my students use when they rotate around the room and observe all the different evergreens. They have so much fun learning about them!
As you can see, in December we are extremely busy, but we are having a BLAST at the same time! I hope you got some great ideas about what to teach in December for your students! Have a great week! Happy Teaching!
Love, Kara
Christmas Around the World Theme Center |
Ready or not... it's almost here! Have you been thinking about what you're going to teach during December? There are so many possibilities! There's Christmas Around the World (which could take the whole month depending on how many countries you teach), Reindeer, Gingerbread, Evergreen trees, Writing Letters to Santa, Christmas Math Games, Elf on the Shelf Diaries... it's overwhelming! It's a lot of work, I admit, but if you're like me I LOVE to decorate my classroom for Christmas and I do it for the kids. Some of them never get to experience the decorations and holiday fun stuff... so I want to give that to them.
I'm here today to share with you my Christmas Around the World thematic unit. I teach 6 countries: United States, England, Germany, Mexico, Russia and Holland. Within these countries, I teach my students about where the country is on the map, the flag, how they say "Merry Christmas" in each language, the traditions and customs they have during Christmas and the food that they eat there. We have a blast learning about traditions and customs around the world! I can't wait to share them with you today! If you're interested in checking out my thematic unit: Christmas Celebrations Around the World, click below!
I've created lesson plans, a student travel journal, a student passport, craftivities, interactive notebook activities, vocabulary cards, math games, and science investigations for this thematic unit. The lesson plans have mentor texts, materials, directions and examples of craftivities. They are very user friendly.
Here is the student passport that I created:
For each country, we color in the country, stamp and the flag. The students keep this in their Travel Journal so we can keep track of the countries we learn. Here is the cover page of our Travel Journal: Traveling Around the World for the Holidays! We complete two pages each day. One in the morning and one in the afternoon. I also have a table of contents at the beginning of the book. This is supposed to resemble an expository genre: using Table of Contents, Labels, Captions and Diagrams.
For each country, I created a 4 square where the students write about the food, traditions, customs, how to say "Merry Christmas" and illustrate the flag. Then on the other side, they illustrate pictures to go along with the country and glue them in the book. Here is United States:
Here is England:
Here is Germany:
Here is Russia:
Here is Mexico:
Here is Holland:
I've created vocabulary cards for each country, that you can print and laminate. I usually display these on my pocket chart or my theme center for the students to read:
For each country, I read a fiction story and a non-fiction story so we can compare the two books. For example: for Germany, I read The Gingerbread Baby for fiction, and Christmas in Germany for non-fiction. And, we even eat gingerbread men cookies! If you're interested in checking out my packet about the Gingerbread Baby, click below:
Linking Literature: The Gingerbread Baby Grades 1-3
We do a really cute Gingerbread Baby craftivity and writing! We write about how we can catch a gingerbread baby using a sequencing template.
We also decorate a gingerbread house using icing, candy, pretzels, paper plates, ice cream cones and cereal! It's so much fun!
When we talk about England, we do a science investigation with Evergreen trees. We read a book about trees and compare the Evergreen Tree with the Deciduous tree. Since the holly berry comes from England, we investigate different Evergreens: Blue Spruce, Holly Berry, Cedar, Frazier Fur, White Pine, Grand Fur, and Pine Cones.
I have these branches in baggies that I have collected over the years and the students observe with magnifying glasses, then illustrate and label them on their template. Here is a picture of all of my evergreen branches:
This is the template that my students use when they rotate around the room and observe all the different evergreens. They have so much fun learning about them!
As you can see, in December we are extremely busy, but we are having a BLAST at the same time! I hope you got some great ideas about what to teach in December for your students! Have a great week! Happy Teaching!
Love, Kara
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