Holiday Traditions...And Yellow Snow
First of all, let me get this out of the way: Yes, I have eaten yellow snow. When I was four years old I was playing outside with my family’s black lab on a snowy winter day. My brother, who was six years older than me, got my attention and pointed at a yellow patch in the snow near the bushes. He exclaimed, “Elly look! Apple juice!” Since I LOVED apple juice I instantly began to shovel the contaminated snow into my mouth. I was still enjoying the “apple juice” when Mom came outside and saw my brother chortling and me sitting in yellow snow. You better believe he got in trouble and I got my mouth washed out.
Now, how is this story possibly
related to a holiday tradition? Do I go around eating yellow snow every December?
(The answer to that question is a firm “NO.”)
When I worked at Will Rogers College Junior High School, the
teachers and students all over the school participated in a traditional winter
door-decorating contest through their advisory classrooms. In the past, the teachers had plenty of
notice to develop creative decorating ideas with their students and collect
supplies. The December of 2013 was different. We had little warning of when, or
even if, the judges would be coming around to take a look at the doors. By the
time we were notified of the date, my class of 7th graders only had
one forty-five minute class period to generate ideas AND decorate the door. Our
only supplies: white printer paper, markers, scissors, and tape. No glitter, no
construction paper, no garlands, no wrapping paper…You get the idea. Talk about
a creative challenge.
During that fateful advisory day, my students and I spent
about ten minutes discussing ideas. We were getting nowhere and wasting
valuable construction time. Then, suddenly, a student remembered a truth I told
during a “2 Truths and a Lie” game at the beginning of the year. He promptly
reminded the class of “Mrs. Thorsen’s yellow snow story.” Since the story took
place in winter, the class immediately decided to bedeck our classroom door
with a yellow snow theme. Lovely.
They had an idea and ran with it. Tasks were quickly
delegated among the students. At table one, students cut out snowflakes. At table two, students dried out my yellow
markers transforming the white printer paper. Students at table three were
working together to draw and color a dog posing in a certain three-legged
standing position. Table four had students crinkling paper to give it texture
and taping those pieces together to form a layer of snow. A few ladies at table
five made a sign stating “When Mrs. Thorsen was a little girl her brother
tricked her into eating a lot of yellow snow. Which is why we decided to
decorate our door this way!” The remaining students were working hard putting
it all together on the door. Here is the result.
Slightly inappropriate? Maybe. Beautiful? No, not really. But
the students worked together and finished our classroom door in less than thirty-five
minutes. You should have seen my
students; they were so proud. It was fun to watch them working together and
enjoying each other’s company. Many advisory classes had no decorated door to
present to the judges. Unfortunately, we
did not win the school wide competition, but most of seventh grade agreed: Room
320 had the best door of 2013.
Thanks go to ELA Buffet and Desktop Learning Adventures for setting up this Secondary Smorgasbord Traditions Linky and inviting me to participate. Check out the other blogs listed below for more teaching holiday traditions.
Thanks go to ELA Buffet and Desktop Learning Adventures for setting up this Secondary Smorgasbord Traditions Linky and inviting me to participate. Check out the other blogs listed below for more teaching holiday traditions.
You didn't win?! You guys were robbed! Thanks for sharing such a fun story and "festive" holiday classroom decor.
ReplyDeleteYea, another teacher found out early about the door contest and had something ready in advance. Oh well. :)
DeleteHilarious! Love the teamwork going on for your festive door :)
ReplyDeletethat is too much!! I love it! lol
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteWhat a great story. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading!
DeleteTalk about a teachable moment! What made this so great is that the students remembered your story and created a way to make it work for them.
ReplyDeleteHappy Holidays to all,
Connie
Yes, I was pretty proud of them that day. :)
DeleteThat is HILARIOUS! I love it!
ReplyDeleteLove this, Elly! I nominated your blog for a Liebster Award! To accept the award (and pay it forward) click on this link:
ReplyDeletehttp://literarysherri.blogspot.com/2014/12/thank-you-for-liebster-award.html
That's hilarious! I agree- you were robbed! Isn't it funny how they remember the unimportant-wish-they'd-forget-about-it things. Great story! Thanks for being brave and sharing this with the world. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat story....Gotta love those older brothers!
ReplyDeleteElly, this is hilarious! Obviously, growing up with a big brother like yours enabled you to become a great sport! And your door idea is so clever! Thanks for sharing it :)
ReplyDeleteDarlene
ELABuffet