Spark. Transform. Mobilize.
Purpose: To share cultural information about New Year’s celebrations around the world and to encourage students to set goals by making resolutions.
Prep Time: 10-15 minutes, not counting food preparation, which is optional.
Materials: Calendar, copies of chart for conversation activity, envelopes, greeting cards for New Year’s (if desired).
Prep: Prepare chart, if you intend to hand it out to students; think about specific vocabulary you’ll want to pre-teach and how you want to illustrate it; think of examples of resolutions to share.
Procedure:
I do it (Part I):
We do it:
You do it:
Note: Emergent readers and writers may be able to do the first three columns after lots of modeling. They can interview two students instead of four and ask the fourth question orally.
Wrap-Up:
Ask for volunteers to report on what they’ve learned. Now encourage students to find some commonalities amongst all the traditions. Make a list together.
I do it (Part II):
We do it:
Elicit examples from students. What might they encourage their friends, family members or classmates to set as goals for the coming year? Why? What resolutions might they set for themselves? What would help them keep those resolutions?
You do it:
Wrap-Up: Wish everyone a happy New Year. Share expressions that are used in the U.S. or show examples of greeting cards and talk about images and words associated with the holiday. Eat some black-eyed peas!
Recipe for New Year Peas:
Preparation: Rinse, prepare, soak, and cook peas in about three cups water, following directions on the package. Drain and reserve half of the cooking liquid. In a skillet over medium heat, brown sausage and onions; drain off excess fat. Place peas in a three-quart casserole; add sausage and onions. Stir in reserved liquid, brown sugar, mustard, salt, and barbecue sauce. Bake at 300 degrees for one to one and a half hours. Serves six.
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