Home | Carnegie Learning
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
Back to Blog新年好!: 3 Fun Ways to Celebrate Lunar New Year With Your Students

新年好!: 3 Fun Ways to Celebrate Lunar New Year With Your Students

No matter what language your students are learning, they’ll have a blast with these Lunar New Year activities!

The Chinese New Year, also known as the Lunar New Year, is the world’s most celebrated holiday. About a quarter of the world’s population participates in the 15-day festival with traditions that celebrate family, culture, renewal, and good fortune. Oh, and fireworks! 

Celebrating the Lunar New Year with your classes is not only fun; it also presents an opportunity to explore a multitude of topics like immigration, art, symbolism, food, and geography. 

Check out these three ideas for celebrating Lunar New Year with your students!

1. Celebrate Lunar New Year With Traditional Stories

Everyone loves a good story, and Lunar New Year provides a wealth of these. You could start by telling your students the festival’s origin story, which revolves around Nián, a monster who terrorized Chinese villagers until he was driven away by a traveling stranger. You could also share the story of how the twelve animals were chosen for the Chinese zodiac, and since 2022 is the year of the tiger, you could read the fabulous Chinese fairytale, “The Tale of the Tiger Woman” (the story exists in its entirety in this Amazon preview and starts 79% of the way into the sample). As extension activities, have students share their impressions of the stories in the target language or write their own legend or folktale.      

2. Celebrate Lunar New Year by Researching the Chinese Zodiac

Split your students into twelve groups and ask each to collect information about one of the Chinese zodiac animals. Have each group share their research with the class and ask students if they think the description corresponding to their birth year fits their personality. If so, have them explain why (this could be an excellent time to practice target language skills). If they don’t see themselves reflected in their zodiac animal, ask them which sign aligns closer, and have them explain why their chosen match is a better one.  

3. Celebrate Lunar New Year by Making Hóngbāo

Hóngbāo is one of the Lunar New Year's most popular and long-standing traditions. Friends and family fill red envelopes with money and good wishes and give them to each other (red features prominently in Lunar New Year because of its associations with luck and prosperity). Ask your students to write a kind message to each student in the class (in the target language if you’d like), and seal them in red envelopes (there are several YouTube videos detailing how to make these). Then, each student can make a red post box decorated with the Chinese symbol “fu” (福), which means “good luck,” and is displayed prominently through Lunar New Year. Lastly, have each student deliver their hóngbāo, and voila! Every student will leave class with a box full of uplifting wishes.   

Celebrate with Us!

Do you have other ways you like to celebrate Lunar New Year with your students? Share them with the Language is Limitless Facebook group!

Happy New Year!  

Explore Our Chinese Language Solution
 

Author

  • Carnegie Learning

Carnegie Learning is helping students learn why, not just what. Born from more than 30 years of learning science research at Carnegie Mellon University, the company has become a recognized leader in the ed tech space, using artificial intelligence, formative assessment, and adaptive learning to deliver groundbreaking solutions to education’s toughest challenges. With the highest quality offerings for K-12 math, ELA, literacy, world languages, professional learning and more, Carnegie Learning is changing the way we think about education, fostering learning that lasts.

Explore more related to this author

You May Like

Is This the Best German Textbook? This Teacher Thinks So.
Kelly Denzler
How ClearLanguages Solutions Boost Listening Comprehension
Kelly Denzler
MATHia’s APLSE Report: Your Summative Assessment Crystal Ball
Karen Sloan
Can You Really “Teach” Language Listening Comprehension?
Kelly Denzler
Quiz: What Kind of School Administrator Are You?
Kelly Denzler
Low-Prep Winter Math Worksheets
Karen Sloan
  • January 24, 2022

Celebrating the Lunar New Year with your classes is not only fun; it also presents an opportunity to explore a multitude of topics like immigration, art, symbolism, food, and geography.

Carnegie Learning

Filed Under

  • Teaching Strategies

Tags

  • Chinese
  • Classroom Activities
  • Culture Corner
  • World Languages

Connect With Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Instagram
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Carnegie Learning, Inc.

4 Smithfield Street, Floor 8
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
  • P: 888.851.7094

© 2014-2024 Carnegie Learning, Inc.

Home | Carnegie Learning Close
  • Home
  • Solutions
    • ClearMath Solutions
    • Elementary Math Solution (K-5)
    • Middle School Math Solution (6-8)
    • High School Math Solution (9-12)
    • MATHia Adventure (K-5)
    • MATHia (6-12)
    • MATHstream (6-12)
    • ClearLiteracy Solutions
    • Lenses on Literature (6-12)
    • Mirrors & Windows (6-12)
    • Fast ForWord (K-12)
    • ClearFluency (K-12)
    • ClearLanguages Solutions
    • ¡Qué chévere!: Spanish (6-12)
    • En voz alta: Español para hispanohablantes (6-12)
    • T’es branché?: French (6-12)
    • Deutsch So Aktuell: German (6-12)
    • Zhēn Bàng!: Chinese (6-12)
    • Amici d'Italia: Italian (6-12)
    • Symtalk (K-5)
    • Exploring (6-8)
    • World Language Immersion (6-12)
    • Services
    • Professional Learning Services
    • Patterns Professional Learning
    • Instructional Services
    • District Impact Services
  • Our Difference
    • Research
    • Case Studies
  • Company
    • Careers
    • Events & Webinars
    • Press Room
    • Blog
    • Communities
    • Year One Podcast
  • Let's Talk
  • Blog Listings
  • Sample Center
  • Help Center
  • Customer Sign-in