As a part of our first day of Advent plans yesterday, we made our annual Advent Chain -- a simple and fun way for the children and us to countdown the days until we celebrate the birth of Jesus while also focusing on how He lives within each of us.
The Ideal: Two Montessori Trays for Making Paper Advent
Chains
Flashback: Nina concentrates as she cuts strips last year. |
I had imagined setting up two Montessori trays this year to
make our Advent Chain:
- one with purple paper, a ruler, kid-sized scissors and a pencil, so that the children could draw and cut straight lines to make our Advent chain strips,
- and, another with the cut paper strips, a pen and the children’s ideas for serving others written out on strips that the children could be used for copywork.
The Real: A More Free Flow Activity to Transition to
Quiet, Focused Time
However, Sundays are a bit too free-flow around here for
such structure, so, yesterday, we kept the essence of the project, but not the arrangement. Instead of working from pre-prepared
Montessori trays, we set about the project with a more impromptu nature.
After some outdoor family time, Jack needed a nap and Luke
and Nina needed a semi-structured activity to help them transition from
boisterous outdoor play to quiet (i.e. brother needs a nap) indoor pursuits. So, upon spying some construction paper I’d
purchased for our Advent lessons sitting on the kitchen counter top, I decided
that preparing our Advent Chain would be a perfect activity!
Out came a ruler, some writing utensils and the adult
scissors, which were all readily available in the kitchen. Down sat Luke and Nina. And, the project was underway.
Nina and Luke concentrated on drawing lines and cutting along
them to make paper strips for our chain.
They asked if they could make pink ones as well as purple ones this
year, which I was happy to agree to. By
doing so, I was able to weave in some patterning discussion – asking the kids
what type of pattern we should make and, then, proceeding to help create an
A-B-A-B pink-and-purple chain.
Since the children were in more of a construction mood than
a writing one, I forwent the copywork idea I had originally had for our Advent Chain
project this year and simply wrote out the children’s ideas on each chain link
myself. As I did, I smiled at the works
of service that they had come up with during our Christ the King liturgical tea
last week. During the tea, we had
discussed how Christ the King, unlike many worldly rulers, leads by serving. Then, the children had brainstormed ways that
we, as a family, might serve others during Advent. The breadth of their ideas – and the depth of
some of them – impressed me as I rewrote them on our Advent chain.
Finally, we hung the chain up high in our living room, so
Jack won’t be apt to tear it apart, and Nina excitedly took down the first link
– an idea the children had come up with last week which I had purposely put at
the end of the chain as the children had already accomplished its suggestion
today.
“Give stuff to other people,” it said.
At Mass, they had given an extra copy of one of our Christmas board
books to a family with three young children.
This small gesture of kindness was a HUGE thing for them, in my opinion,
as it demonstrated growth in areas of character development and social skills
that they have been working on: not
hoarding things we don’t need, sharing, approaching others and getting their attention
with politeness, speaking up with people they might not know, etc. Not to mention it started our Advent off
right with a focus on Faith, Others, then Selves.
Undoubtedly, the next 22 days will be filled with similar
growth as the children work to honor all the ideas they brainstormed on Christ
the King day.
Academic Links for
the Next 22 Days
To keep us accountable to our focus of service – as well as
to add an easy dimension to our Math work this month – I made a simple bar
graph for the kids and I to fill out daily.
Additionally, we will use the chain for practice with
counting, addition, subtraction, concepts of time, etc.
Since some of the ideas the children brainstormed involve
gifting things to others, practical life skills will be inspired aplenty. Likewise, there will be handwriting practice
as the children write notes and make cards.
And, of course, Luke will work on decoding as he attempts to
read some of the links.
For Posterity
Nina with Last Year's Advent Chain |
Since I already tossed the paper from the kids’ original brainstorm
into the recycling bin and the idea are now hidden inside each chain link loop,
I cannot share what the kids’ ideas were this year just yet. However, for posterity, I would like to list
some of the ideas that the kids came up with for last year’s chain. For it is not from the wind that they get
their bad habit of squirreling things away unnecessarily. In recent weeks, I found a stack of last year’s
purple strips that I had kept for who knows what reason. They are now headed to recycling, too, but
first, let me share some of them:
- “Make a card for someone.”
- “Paint a picture for someone.”
- “Hug someone.”
- “Visit a neighbor.”
- “Play ball with Jack.”
- “Let Mommy have computer time.”
- “Make Luke’s bed.”
- “Rub someone.” (i.e. offer a back massage at nap or bedtime)
- “Offer a compliment.”
- “Say something nice.”
- “Tell Daddy he runs faster than us.”
- “Tickle Jack.”
- “Make books. Read them to see if they’re good and give them away. If they’re not good, don’t give them away.”
- “Make a bird house.”
- “Protect the birds by saying, ‘Shoo, squirrel, shoo!’”
- “Kiss someone.”
- “Feed the birds.”
- “Pick a room and do a ten-minute cleaning.”
- “Clean all the doorknobs and light switches.”
- “Make a welcome sign.”
- “Give our neighbor’s food.”
- “Let Jack play with us.”
- “Make Mommy’s bed.”
- “Skip computer time to play with the kids.”
- “Let Nina go first at something.”
As I recall, I helped the kids brainstorm some of these
ideas last year by asking how we might be kind to one another, help people in
our neighborhood, help the poor, prepare our home for unexpected guests,
etc. From there, they came up with the
ideas.
Do you make Advent, or Christmas
Countdown, Chains? If so, do you have
children generate their own ideas, do you come up with them or do you use a
pre-made printable? What is the focus of
your chain? Service? Fun?
Prayer? Family time? Some combinations of all of them? We’d love to hear your thoughts.
This post is being shared over at Montessori Monday. Click on over to be inspired by many home and school ideas.
This post is being shared over at Montessori Monday. Click on over to be inspired by many home and school ideas.
What a great idea! I love anything that can involve the kids :-)
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