Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

When a Student Yells "Santa is Satan" ... Other Holiday Fun (Episode 62)

      Today, we�re gonna talk about When Your Student Yells, �Santa is Satan!� and Other Holiday Respect Conversations.

       Watch the YouTube video here >>> https://youtu.be/MBUodyYaCG0
Today, we�re gonna talk about When Your Student Yells, �Santa is Satan!� and Other Holiday Respect Conversations. How do we teachers successfully and sanely navigate the complex holiday environment with all the various religions and holiday traditions?
       Christmas time! Yay!
       No � it�s Happy Holiday time.
       But what if it isn�t �happy� for me?
       What�s not happy about snow days?
       I grew up in California where there isn�t really �winter� and we never got any of your stupid snow days.�
       Oh, as teachers how do we handle this?! We are going to share some of our thoughts and experiences from holidays in the classroom. The hope with this is not to tell you what you should be doing in the classroom but to get you thinking about how you handle the holidays and the effect it has on your students and the classroom environment as a whole.
       This topic can get heated because there are some strong beliefs involved with the �Holiday Season� and when it comes down to it causes us to question our own personal truth about our existence. If we let it.
       Let�s not get that deep right now. Let�s just focus on some basics. We as teachers get to decide how we want to direct our classroom environment to be.
       The decision is affected by whether you teach at a public or private school. If you teach at a religious private school the decision may be easier for you. If you are at a public school that doesn�t have administrative restrictions, you get to decide if you are going to try to represent all holiday traditions in your classroom or are you going to avoid teaching about any holiday themes. 
       In elementary school we are often with the same group of kids so you might have time to integrate themes into your classroom more extensively.
       With secondary I had lots of students for a shorter periods of time.
       I�m the type of person that tends to be hyper-sensitive to the complexities of situations or possible complexities. So for my peace of mind and attempt to decrease my stress, I chose not to teach holiday traditions.
       So what complexities do you identify with the holiday season?
       Identifying all the holiday traditions that my students could possibly celebrate while not unintentionally offending anyone with how they are represented.
       I can think of: Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Christian Christmas with Jesus, secular Christmas with Santa, a mixture of both, people that don�t celebrate anything, and people that don�t celebrate things, like Jehovah�s Witnesses.
       I avoided all that stress on myself and just kept my classroom winter-themed with snowmen and snowflakes. I like snowmen.
       Snowmen or snowpeople?
       Ok, snowpeople.

       Anyway, I taught first and second grade and even though I just integrated fun winter themes into our classroom activities, holiday always came up when kids talked about life. So during casual student discourse things always came up:
  • there was always some variation of a conversation about Santa not being real, that is often debated in the lower grades,
  • or even if a child believed in Santa, another student told them, �You�re going to Hell!� . . . yes, more than once that was said.
  • Talks about Jesus being real
  • Whatever the variation of the conversation, these were distressing to the students involved in the conversation.
       Usually I only needed to address it with the small group of students that were involved in the discussions. I think one year I needed to address it as a whole class because there was a particularly passionate and vocal student about their personal worldview being right.
       I would love to hear other teachers� stories of how they handle these situations. I tried to model listening that showed people were heard and respected.
       Don�t take sides! You are the mediator.
       You are the teacher, you are neutral (unless you are at a private school where your beliefs are accepted as the dominant belief).
       In this world lots of people believe different things and celebrate differently. It�s interesting to learn about each other and how we live life. We want to remember to always show respect to each other. I would ask them if they wanted the other student to make them feel bad for what they believe, they would say no. So I reminded them to treat each other the way they wanted to be treated.
       The possibly more distressing example, �Santa is Satan!� (In secondary grades, this morphs to �Santa anagrams to Satan � they have all the same letters� to which I would answer, �Yes, and Britney Spears anagrams to Presbyterian! Is that supposed to mean something?�) To which they reply, �Who�s that?� �Wait, is she that crazy old mom lady who shaved her hair?�
       I�d leave the Santa is Satan situation to a one-on-one conversation with the student.
       When I was asked bluntly by students during school hours, I tried to switch to questions about their beliefs. I used redirection. Example: Is Santa real? Me: Do you celebrate Santa? Does Santa bring you gifts? Etc. Most students didn�t realize I didn�t answer. Or I would just say those are conversations they can have with their parents.
  • Identify that they have different views or experiences.
  • Tell them it is important to show kindness and respect.
       Basically I taught them to either respectfully ask each other about what they believe OR agree to disagree and change the subject.
       Always remember there are most likely parents or guardians represented by each of these students and imagine they are hearing what you are saying to their children and whether they will approve. I often told students to talk to their parents about whatever topic distressed the student.
       Can you defend your approach to how you addressed the disagreement in a way that will be acceptable to the parents and your administration?
       If you need a quick out, you can redirect students to what they should be focused on but log the disagreement in your mind because things can brew from strong feelings from opposing views that aren�t talked through.
Conversation of the Day: Share a funny or cute or difficult holiday story that you had to work through.
       Hop on over to watch the video and share your thoughts in the conversation.
Today, we�re gonna talk about When Your Student Yells, �Santa is Satan!� and Other Holiday Respect Conversations. How do we teachers successfully and sanely navigate the complex holiday environment with all the various religions and holiday traditions?

2014 Holiday Blog Hop

          December is here! One of our favorite times of year. Sure, it's easy to get sucked into the crazy cyclone of shopping, so we are stoked to be joining this Holiday Blog Hop set up by Julie Faulkner over at Faulkner's Fast Five and Lauralee Moss at the Language Arts Classroom. We wanted to share some things we're looking forward to.
       1. One thing on our Bucket List for the holidays. This year we want to take our girls and some cups of hot chocolate out to a dark field at night with flashlights and read the story of Jesus. Why out in a field? We want to give them a feeling similar to the shepherds out at night and imagine what it would've been like for the angels to appear to them in the middle of the night. So much fun!
http://www.heifer.org/       2. Each year we're confronted with the reality that we have so much. We're not rich or anything, but when we think about people around the world, we end up wanting to give rather than receive. One way we've done this as a whole family is we split the costs of a heifer through www.HeiferInternational.com and gave a cow to a family who will benefit HUGE by having one. You can give chickens, bees, goats, llamas, water buffalo(s?), clean water, or a heifer. A fun and out-of-the-box idea!
http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/CHRISTMAS-CAROL-Unit-Teaching-Package-by-Charles-Dickens-1571923       3. A haunting activity for the classroom is our teaching unit for A CHRISTMAS CAROL by Charles Dickens. Truly one of the most meaningful and deep stories I've ever studied, these 110+ pages of activities are sure to engage middle school or high school English students. Chains Activity, Ghosts Activity, Plot, Conflict, Characters, Writing Journals, Pop Quizzes, Vocabulary, Figurative Language, Essay, Movie Comparison.
http://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/CHRISTMAS-CAROL-Chains-Activity-Discussion-1571763       4. And a FREEBIE activity! We love this free resource that is included in our CHRISTMAS CAROL teaching unit. With permission and help from our teaching friend Scott Ragan, we've put together a fun and meaningful activity built around Marley's chains and their greater meaning in life. Students love this activity!

       Thanks for stopping by for this quick blog hop. Now go enjoy all the other holiday hoppers! We hope you and your family experience a deep and meaningful holiday season filled with family time and lasting memories. And in the words of Tiny Tim . . .

"God bless us, everyone!"



       Your thoughts?

PLUS - The BIG news is.... Everything in our Teachers Pay Teachers store is 30% off today and tomorrow!
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