Oh, and also a large polar bear who wants to have all those treats to himself.įind out what your elf name is and create your own story. I haven’t finished my story yet, but I already know it will involve delivering goodies to other North Pole residents on the snowmobile. And get those gears turning about what your elf adventure will be. Use this free printable to accomplish it all! Go ahead, find out what your elf name is. You’ll be finding out your elf name, coloring your elf and his or her Christmas tree, and then writing an elf adventure story. Try this simple Christmas creative writing assignment. Paint Nativity Scenes (I want to save and frame the kids’ art to put up in future years).Go on a Christmas Lights Scavenger Hunt (see below).Look Under the Tree (I’ll put treats under the tree ahead of time).Look in Your Stocking (I’ll put a treat in there ahead of time).We’ll tear one ring off the paper chain advent calendar each day until Christmas and read and do the activity. Inside each ring, I wrote one activity or treat per day in December. We made these Printable Advent Calendar Tags to attach to the rings to up the style. Or you can start later in the month with fewer rings. You’ll need 25 for a Christmas countdown. Just cut strips of paper and glue them in a ring. Add up all your points and declare a Christmas Scattergories champion. Then you choose another letter and play another round. You get a point for each unique word you come up with. If anyone said the same thing as you, everyone with that answer must cross it out. When the timer runs out, you compare answers with everyone else. Something you’d see at a lights displays – Sleigh.Here’s an example, if our letter was “S” I might write down: When you’ve played both rounds you tally up the scores and the one with the most points wins! Then you choose a new letter and play the next round of Game #1. You get a point for each unique answer you come up with. Once the timer runs out you tally up the scores. You start in the Game #1 column and write down something for each category that begins with the letter you chose. ![]() For bigger kids, one minute is usually long enough, but when my little ones are playing we use a two-minute timer. Start by choosing a letter and putting time on the clock. In case you haven’t played before, the rules for Scattergories are really simple. ![]() Building A Layers of Learning HomeschoolĬlick on the picture to get the Christmas Scattergories printable.
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