We've loved the cultural exchange for learning about other countries. The other resource that is popular here is the UsborneJigsaw World atlas -simple enough for a five year old, and even our three year old enjoys joining in.
This was our Polish package..
It had sweet goodies,
a beautiful painted egg,
amber,
a sweet little sheep made from corn, I think,
and more besides-postcards, leaflets, a map, a book about the culture, egg decoration and information about the country.
Next year, I'm hoping to extend this and learn about countries in little mini-projects-unit studies if you like- lasting 6-8 weeks. We've done this a couple of times before, with Middle Son, and this has been very successful but now hope to do this with the younger children. Successful components before included
- map work including salt dough and cookie maps as well as more traditional maps
- cooking
- history
- read alouds
- music
- industry
- interview with person from the country
- famous artists and their pictures
There is so much more that can be done-just need to decide where to start!
What a sweet little sheep! I've never seen anything like it before!
ReplyDeleteHello, my name is Ludwika, and I'm from Poland. It's wonderfull you teach children about Poland too. Cultural exchange is a brilliant idea!
ReplyDeleteP.s. The sheep is made of wheat straw.
Ludwika-thank you for commenting. We've really enjoyed learning about Poland. Thank you for the correction about the sheep. Yes, the cultural exchange is a great idea-I've learned loads and I think the children have too.
ReplyDeleteLearning about one country in depth is such a great idea. We've never really managed to do something like you're doing--we're not hands-on enough to get away from the books, I guess--but I love reading about projects like this.
DeleteMy mom and sister learned to do wheat weaving, but nothing as intricate as the little lamb. It's beautiful...and the cake looks yummy too.