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ChanukahEducator's Guide
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    Classroom Ideas


    Projects and Research

    • Chanukah project: Students should choose to focus either on the Chanukah story, Chanukah celebrations or broader themes. Students should fill a scrap book with text and pictures that best present their chosen area.

    • Research different Chanukah traditions among different Jewish communities e.g. Orthodox, Reform, Ashkenazi, Sephardi, French, Indian

    • Organize a class gallery of interesting Menorahs. Students bring their menorahs to school for a day and the class votes on the most interesting one.

    • Conduct a survey among family and friends to reveal attitudes towards Chanukah. Compile a list of about 6 questions to ask your family and friends. Present the results in chart form and analyze them. Here are some examples of questions:

        a. What are we celebrating on Chanukah?
        b. Does your family light a menorah at home each night?
        c. Do you light your own menorah?
        d. Do you eat doughnuts and latkes on Chanukah?
        e. Why is Chanukah an eight day holiday?

    • Working in groups of 3-4, find out where menorahs, candles, great latkes and doughnuts can be purchased locally. Create a pamphlet/flyer to circulate around the school containing all the info you need for Chanukah preparations.

    • Hidur Mitzvah - It is praiseworthy to beautify the mitzvah of menorah. What other mitzvot are we required to beautify? Find out why this is deemed important? Do you think it is important?

    • Pirsum Hanes - We are commanded to publicize the miracles of Chanukah and Purim. Why is this important? Do we do it for the benefit Jews or non Jews? Find out the answers and present them in writing.

    Pair and Group Work

    • There's no such thing as a Chanukah Megillah so make one! Split the story into "chapters" have each group work on one chapter - write the story, illustrate it.

    • The Megillah can also take the form of a play, an audio cassette or film; it could even be done as a wall frieze.

    • A delicious Chanukah activity is doughnut decorating! Each student has to decorate a plain doughnut and the most yummy and original looking doughnut wins. If possible, organize this activity for the classroom on Chanukah itself but if this will get too messy, simply ask students to bring in their entries from home.

    • A great idea is to create a Chanukah drama Chug by spoofing popular musicals. Try spoofing "Grease! Oil! Latkes!". Keep to a 1958 Grease setting. There are two rival High Schools, therefore 2 rival sports teams, The Macabbees vs. The Greeks. You can drop the love story, and integrate the best elements of the popular musical to the traditional Chanukah story. Some of the best songs include: "Summer Fighting", "Greased Latkes", "One Hopefully Devoted Jew".

      The above lesson idea was kindly submitted by Dean112200@aol.com who comments: "You may ask, has this been successful? Where else could you get 30 Religious School students to volunteer to stay til 2:00 pm every Sunday for 9 weeks?"

    • Divide class into 8 groups representing each day of Chanukah. Each group is given a subtopic to work on for the weeks leading up to the festival. Topics can include Chanukah, the heroes, women and Chanukah, customs, laws, Chanukah throughout the ages etc. After researching material prepared by the teacher, students create worksheets providing information, activities and the answers. Each station presents its material for the rest of the class to work through in small groups.

      The above lesson idea was kindly submitted by Rivka R.Liberow who comments: "My students LOVED IT!!! They worked really hard and enjoyed the learning process too."

    • Conduct an imaginary interview between a Jew and a gentile in which the Jew explains the significance of the various holiday customs. This can be in writing, as a role play or recorded in audio or video.

    • Train your students' powers of perception! Prepare "spot the difference" pictures of kosher and non kosher Menorahs and ways of lighting them. Students decide in pairs which are correct and which are not and tell the class why.

    • Help your students develop a Chanukah charity project in which menorahs, dreidels and Chanukah foods are sold at school for charity.

    • As a Chanukah review, working in small groups, students compile a list of query questions that they still have about the festival. A spokesperson from each works together to compile one class list of questions (to avoid repetition). Email the list to "Ask the Rabbi" at http://www.ohr.org.il/ask/page/askrabbi.htm and wait for his reply!

    • Ask your students to make a class newspaper for Chanukah. Include local real news stories, Chanukah and school news, ads for Chanukah products, recipes, notices for organized parties and events and articles on the meaning of the holiday.

    • Students organize a Chanukah Party for their class, school or even a local old age home. Delegate tasks to small groups based on students' talents and interests. Groups could include: catering, advertising via flyers, emails, posters and invitations, music, entertainment, games etc.

    • Teach your students to always remember the old, needy and infirm on the festivals. A simple but effective idea is to choose a group of people you would like to treat this Chanukah. Ask your students to bring in beautiful food baskets of non perishables for old people or gift bags with small toys for children. Enlist parents to help deliver them or if they are in a group home, you students can deliver them themselves.

    • On Chanukah it's customary to give presents. Hold a class draw whereby each student picks a name out of a hat. He/she will buy a small gift for his/her classmate. Who gives to who is kept a secret until the first day of the festival.

    Art and Music

    • A wonderful idea for younger students is to create a monthly mural in your classroom spanning the length of the room. Make this month's mural a Chanukah one. You can add to the festive feeling by putting up a wire line from one end of your room to the other. Display outstanding artwork held up by colorful plastic clothes pins - cheap but very cheerful!

    • You can also use this wire line to display the facts of the Chanukah story as you teach it. This will give students a sense of order as they move from date to date and help them retain the sequence of the Chanukah story. It will also act as an effective memory hook.

    • Create an ancient Israeli newspaper reporting news from the time of the Chanukah story.

    • Make a candle lighting card to laminate for use at home. Include the blessings, accompanying laws and songs. This could be a competition with the best designs reproduced and sold for charity.

    • Make a pictorial Chanukah Megillah. It could a booklet, a scroll, a classroom wall frieze or even a patchwork quilt!

    • Create a larger than life menorah wall hanging for the classroom - every night of Chanukah add a flame.

    • Make up a new tune to Ma'oz Tzur or to Hanerot Hallalu. This could be a class competition.

    • Design your own Menorah. Draw out the plans or make a 3 dimensional one! Choose interesting materials and an original design - but it must be kosher.

    • Create a Chanukah guide book explaining how to make it special as special as possible.

    • Teach your students festival songs.

    • Ask your students to put a section of "Al Hanissim" to music or to make a new tune for "Hanerot Hallalu".

    • Make a Chanukah class mosaic or collage to decorate the wall of your classroom.

    • Ever tried making a patchwork quilt? Create a quilt made up of segments depicting the Chanukah story customs and themes.

    • Create Chanukah greeting cards and send them to students in the class. If they can be printed the best could be sold for charity around the school.

    • Create a Chanukah calendar including candle lighting times and a different feature for each day.

    Multimedia

    • After Judah finds the jug of oil amid the mess in the Temple he is interviewed by CNN! Record/film this interview.

    • Interview - radio and film - one of the heroes of the Chanukah story or a normal civilian explaining what life was like at the time of the Hellenists.

    • Make a short Chanukah film. Film people lighting the menorah, eating doughnuts without licking their lips and chilren playing dreidel.


    • If your school has the facilities, let your students design and send e-cards for Chanukah greetings.


    • Record/video an advert for menorahs, latkes or doughnuts. Include a jingle as well as convincing reasons why your products are the most convenient to obtain, the best value and the most kosher. The class should listen to/watch all the ads and vote for the best one.

    Games

    • However old your students are, a quick, fun game or quiz will always rouse an apathetic class and win their attention. Get hold of a good games book or brainstorm with other teachers but don't neglect this powerful pedagogic tool!

     

 

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