Tuesday, November 5, 2019
Creative Easter Words List for Classroom Activities
Creative Easter Words List for Classroom Activities          Easterà  is a time of renewal. It falls each year in the early springà  when flowers are blooming, plants are sprouting, and hatchlings are starting to break out of their shells and enter the world. Indeed, the season of Easter- the season of spring, really- is an annual time of beginning when much of the country is waking up and thawing out from a cold and bleak winter into a renewed world filled with signs of rebirth and splashes of color. Use the season as aà  thematic teachingà  tool.         Kids, seeing the changes in the season, will be naturally curious and interested in what isà  happening around them. Harness thatà  curiosity with this comprehensive Easter word list to create manyà  seasonalà  activitiesà  such asà  worksheets, writing prompts, word walls, and word searches. The words below are sectioned according to Easter- and spring-related concepts. Each section begins with an explanationà  followed by a list of appropriate words.          Aprilà        Explain to students thatà  Easter falls in late March through much of Aprilà  depending on the year. So April is a great month to introduce students to words such as:         TulipsPastelPaintingShowers         You can explain that a 16th centuryà  English writer and poet namedà  Thomas Tusser penned the phrase,à  Sweet April showers do bring May flowers, and that many writers- even the greatà  William Shakespeare- were enamored of the month and wrote many poems and stories about this season of bloom. If you have younger students, explain that this month is the time whenà  tulipsà  bloom, offering a great time for painting when the world sparkles with pastel colors.ââ¬â¹          Easter      Easter, of course, is the highlight of the season for young children. Its a time for putting on bonnets, decorating and dying Easter eggs, grabbing a basket and scurrying to find the hidden eggs. Children may be most interested in coloring eggs and finding candy, but dont forget to mention that theres even an annualà  Easter parade and bonnet festivalà  in New York. This gives you a chance to cover geography, the planning, and pageantry involved in staging a parade, and even possible art projects, likeà  making bonnets.         BasketBunnyBonnetChickChocolateCandyDecorateDyeEggsFunFindGrassHideHopHuntJellybeansMarshmallowParadePeepsTreatsLily          Spring      Spring, the season in which Easter and April fall, provides plenty of opportunities for learning and art activities. You can have students study the lifecycle of a butterfly, how vegetables such as carrots and flowers like daffodils grow. You can even throw in some science lessons such as how birds build nests and how hatchlings emerge from their shells. Or, take a field trip to a local pond and observe ducks and flowers residing there.         ButterflyCarrotsColorfulDaffodilsDuckFlowersJoyLambPlantsNestHatch          Sunday      Though you cant teach religion in public schools, you can certainly mention thatà  Easter is a religious Christian holidayà  where families dress up in nice, new clothes and attend church on Easter Sunday. This also gives you a chance to cover theà  days of the weekà  and social norms, such as, Why do people dress up to go to church on Easter (as well as for other special occasions)? Use the season to teach cultural lessons, too, such asà  Holy Week and Easter in Mexico. Easter- and the season that it falls in- provides an endless opportunity to teach writing, spelling, history, science, art, and more.    
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