The holidays are an amazing time to tap into learning opportunities while enjoying all of the holiday activities. As we spend time in meal preparation, gift wrapping, cleaning, hosting, baking, and the aftermath of cleaning and organizing, these are opportunities to invite children to come alongside us and learn. Holidays like Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter are not only time for family gatherings, but are times children can learn valuable life skills if we bring them along.
As a parent and home educator, I try to consider what children can learn if we slow down, involve them, talk through tasks, and give them the opportunity to try things for themselves? Reflecting on how I involve my children in our home life has often led to me ask myself what the real measure of success in y life is? As parents, is our goal to be extremely “productive” or is training our children is the most productive thing we can do?
This reminds of me of a Charlotte Mason quote I like from The Original Home School Series:
“The mother who takes pains to endow her children with good habits secures for herself smooth and easy days; while she who lets their habits take care of themselves has a weary life of endless friction with the children.”
While the busy holiday season may feel like the most difficult time to slow down and invite children to help with everyday tasks, I want to challenge you (and myself) to reframe this in a different light. Will involving and relying on our children make tasks take longer? Yes. However, why are we rushing through these tasks instead of inviting them in?
If you are looking for ways to teach your children life skills, this blog post includes ideas to involve children in your holiday traditions while giving them opportunities for organic learning and responsibility.
In this blog post:
- Finding opportunities for learning during the holiday season
- Top 10 ideas for learning opportunities during the holidays
- Holiday studies from Treehouse Schoolhouse
Finding opportunities for learning during the holiday season
As we approach each holiday, I enjoy breaking up our homeschool studies and allowing time to focus on the upcoming season, whether that is Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Easter. In our homeschool, we often pause some of our academic subjects to allow time for a holiday unit study. With a study like A Treasured Thanksgiving or A Connected Christmas, we can continue academic study through the lens of the holiday season around us.
Related: Holiday Homeschooling: Adding Holiday Curriculum to the Mix
As we approach the holiday, we will typically break from school altogether to carve out time for travel or family gatherings and all the preparations involved. Reserving time to pause school and be intentional about our time is one of the reasons I love homeschooling, particularly with a year-round schedule.
Related: Benefits of Year-Round Homeschooling
Top 10 ideas for learning opportunities during the holidays
As we set aside time for meaningful holiday traditions and preparation, there are so many opportunities to learn from what I like to call “life school.” Here are some ways children can learn through participation in the holiday preparation.
- Writing and sending Christmas cards – Children can practice handwriting, grammar, language arts and teach practical skills like addressing envelopes, addresses, and stamps.
- Earning money and buying gifts – Prepare for the holidays by buying gifts, but allow for opportunities to plan, save, and prepare in advance of buying gifts. This develops work ethic, saving, giving, money math, thoughtfulness. (Tip: Encourage kids to make their own DIY gifts.)
- Wrapping and addressing gifts – Wrapping presents hones in on fine motor skills (scissors, tape), spatial awareness, problem solving, handwriting (and secret keeping).
- Meal planning and grocery shopping – Who doesn’t love extra help in the kitchen? Kids can easily help with list making, navigating the grocery store, budgeting, time management, and finding recipes. In addition, it will lighten your own burden of holiday baking and preparation.
- Cooking and baking – There are so many opportunities for learning in the kitchen. Practice reading comprehension by reading a recipe, then focus on math by multiplying ingredients to cook for a crowd, measuring and fractions, temperature, time, cleaning as you cook, and so much more.
- Hosting guests – This is one of my favorite ways to involve my children. Kids of any age can help with cleaning, serving the table, preparing a guest room, serving, and being a polite host. This is truly a life skill children can learn from an early age that will stay with them through life.
- Receiving gifts – Teach children to respond to gift giving with eye contact and thankfulness. Then, teach gratitude, handwriting, and language arts by writing and sending thank you notes.
- Home and toy organization – After the holidays or birthdays, children can help sort and organize the new items they received. They can practice categorization, personal responsibility, tidiness, and learn how to purge unused and unnecessary items.
- Planning for the new year – As January 1 or a new school year approaches, involve children by teaching calendar skills and setting goals together.
- Storytelling and recitation – Practice public speaking skills as children retell the Easter, Thanksgiving, or nativity story to siblings, relatives, or friends. Children can also practice reading their favorite holidays books to siblings and friends.
Related: 100 Life Skills to Intentionally Teach Your Children
Holiday studies from Treehouse Schoolhouse
If you are looking for more ways to make the holidays meaningful in your home, consider these holiday studies from Treehouse Schoolhouse. These studies include heartfelt Biblical studies, books to read together and cherish, along with hands-on activities to do with your children and make the holidays special. Use these studies as a menu to expand learning during the holiday season.
A Treasured Thanksgiving
A Treasured Thanksgiving is a Charlotte Mason-inspired curriculum designed with your whole family in mind. It’s an invitation to study the historical Thanksgiving story in a hands-on way. Spend two weeks diving into themes like the Pilgrim’s voyage to America, the Wampanoag people, the First Encounters, the First Thanksgiving, and the relationship between the Pilgrims and Native Americans in the first year. Featuring a robust book list of picture books and chapter books, this study will provide resources for the whole family.
Related: Introducing A Treasured Thanksgiving
A Connected Christmas
A Connected Christmas is a curriculum designed to connect hearts to the heart of Christmas – to the truth of Jesus coming to earth to seek and save the lost. Explore the nativity story through Scripture readings to delight in festive carols, stories, poetry, art, baking, and handcrafts.
Related: How to Use A Connected Christmas with All Ages
A Connected Christmas: Around the World
Celebrate Christ’s birth and connect hearts to the truth of Jesus while experiencing how Christmas is celebrated across the globe with A Connected Christmas: Around the World. Give your children a way to travel the world as you explore the Christmas season in different languages, climates, and cultures. Experience the unique traditions of different countries through festive carols, stories, poetry, fine art, baking, and handcrafts.
Related: Introducing A Connected Christmas: Around the World
An Expectant Easter
Use An Expectant Easter to focus on what Easter is all about through Bible stories, hymns, poetry, art studies, picture books, projects, baking, and more. Connect and focus on the newness of Spring, the sacrifice Jesus made, and the power of His resurrection.
Related: Curriculum Overview: An Expectant Easter
What learning opportunities to you find during the holiday season? Share your thoughts in the comments below.