One of the things that makes the holiday season great is the opportunity to celebrate our diversity.
Since your classroom is ultimately a microcosm of society, your students should acknowledge and understand that their classmates may have different customs and celebrate different holidays — neither better nor worse, just different. Thus, it is important that your holiday lesson plans cover each winter holiday that may be represented in your student body:
These are the three most common winter holidays. However, you may have students who celebrate other holidays that are not listed here, including Ōmisoka, the Japanese year-end celebration; Shabe-Yalda, or Yaldā Night, the Iranian celebration of the Sun’s rebirth; and Festivus — a humorous holiday celebration that originated on the television show, Seinfeld.
Below are some lesson plans for fun craft activities appropriate for elementary students to learn about the holidays:
Have your students each choose a principle. Next, instruct each student to write a brief story about the principle they chose using colored construction paper. The purpose of this lesson plan is to have your students create their own book with pictures to accompany the story. When the lesson is completed, share each student’s colorful book with the class.
To emphasize this point while also having fun, you can have your students make Christmas ornaments to gift to friends or family members when the activity is over.
You may want to stick to a wintry theme — snow, snowflakes, snowmen, reindeer, Santa Claus, and gingerbread cookies, for example. Materials could include string, tape, construction paper (color varies based on theme), glue, and scissors.
To help your students understand Hanukkah, you can bring in and light a Menorah and explain the significance of lighting one candle each night with the Shamash Candle. If you are restricted from lighting candles in your classroom, you can use an electric Menorah or paper flames. Another great Hanukkah lesson is teaching your students Hanukkah songs. A fun example is the classic tune, "I'm a Little Dreidel".
Happy Holidays from the SafeStop team!