...or if you have an extra group that you see for supplementary or whatever.
1. Warm-up 1: Christmas Word Web/Brainstorming on the board.
2. Warm-up 2: Visual images of Christmas, but toss in a few images from around the world... example: African-American Santa Claus, Santa on a surfboard, Santa on a camel and ask where these images are from. Since Chanukah is in this activity, I also show them a menorah and a star of David. Since I am the PowerPoint Queen, I naturally used a PowerPoint for this. Images are readily available on the Internet.
3. Hand out the worksheet.
4. On your projector, show the "Canada" text (the one with the highlighted words) and demonstrate how to fill in the worksheet grid. Do the Korea line yourselves (no text necessary). By the way, nobody eats turkey for Christmas in Korea, but they do eat cake.
5. Separate the class into 7 groups. Each group has a different text to read. For visual support, I also made up a page of colour images to go with each country (See "Australia Images" to get an idea). This is a text-scanning exercise for specific information, which they should be used to doing in class.
6. In each country group, assign A-B-C-D. Now, all the A's get together, all the B's etc. This should reunite one student from each country together. Now, they need to ORALLY share (NOT COPYING) the information so that everyone's grid is filled in correctly.
7. Correct together as a class.
8. If time permits, have a quick game or something (which country celebrates on December 5? Which holidays are not about Christmas?...)
The information for the texts was found online, or by speaking with friends who celebrate in this way. I don't guarantee that it's 100% correct. Still, it's nice to bring something that is about the rest of the world into the classroom.
And.... there are sites online with more info re:Chanukah. Even a stencil so that you can make your own dreidel and play with it.
Oh, and having Quebec as a separate page does not imply that I am a Separatist.... I lived there for a long time, and Christmas was very unique and completely different from Christmas in Ontario.