Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holidays. Show all posts

Monday, April 14, 2014

Happy Easter

Now that the assessment week is over and it is time for a break, I'm going to enjoy a few days to indulge in some free time and recharge energies. Spending quality time with my family will surely foster my stamina to face the last term of this school year. In the meantime, I wish you all a great Easter.

Picture via Google Images
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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

End of the School Year Lunch

Time for a break in the summer break (see previous post)!
Paperwork is finally over and today teachers and staff had a fantastic lunch at our school to celebrate the end of a very hardworking year and the beginning of the so much awaited HOLIDAYS! Here follows a video sponsored by Animoto which illustrates some of the best and most amusing moments of this afternoon. Unfortunately some of my fellow co-workers won't be around next school year, so it was time to say our good-byes... For those that are staying, see you in September! Do have a fantastic summer, enjoy the free time, hopefully the good weather, and let's hope for a great new school year! Best wishes to you all! 

Monday, December 24, 2012

Oppa Santa Style

I wish all my followers and visitors a Merry Xmas! T@PT is taking a short break to enjoy the Holidays season but I shall be back in January. In the meantime, enjoy your Christmas and celebrate the arrival of the New Year dancing the 'Oppa Santa Style'!...

Click HERE
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Thursday, December 20, 2012

UK Christmas Cooking Customs

MINCE PIES
Photo Elaine Lemm
Mince pies are the first sign of Christmas in the UK. These tiny tartlets, often served with mulled wine, start popping up everywhere, from workplace canteens and coffee corners to the local Starbucks. Shops advertise late opening hours and fashion shows accompanied by mince pies and mulled wine, Every pre-Christmas gathering, cocktail party and tea party will have a supply. Newspapers usually have features rating this year's supermarket and packaged variations. It's supposed to be good luck to eat a mince pie every day of December and most people don't turn them down when offered. So, by the time the holiday season is over, most people are well fed-up with mince pies. But whether they like deep or shallow mince pies, or simply can't stand them, most Brits know it's Christmas from their first mince pie of the season. 

TURKEY
Photo via Britain on View
Smoked salmon, served with buttered brown bread and a slice of lemon, or wrapped around some prawns, is a typical festive starter. Turkey long ago replaced goose as the most popular main course. But it is what the turkey comes to the table with that make it especially British. The accompaniments include: chipolatas (small sausages) wrapped in bacon; roasted root vegetables, especially roasted parsnips which are sweet and moist; brussels sprouts, often with chestnuts or bacon or both; bread sauce, a mixture of bread crumbs, milk, cream, onions and seasonings. 

CHRISTMAS PUDDING
Photo: RFB Photography
The traditional British Christmas pudding is a bit like a cannonball made of dried fruit,nuts, flour, eggs, suet or butter, spices and loads and loads of alcohol. It comes to the table sprigged with holly or winter cherries and flaming with brandy. Rich and heavy, a little bit of Christmas pudding goes a long way. A good Christmas pudding is started months before Christmas, steamed for several hours, then tightly wrapped and left to age. Whisky or brandy are used to plump up the dried fruit and are added to the cooked pudding from time to time. On the day, the pudding is once again steamed for a few hours. Then hot brandy is poured over it and set alight. Traditionally, a three-penny (thruppence) or six-penny (sixpence) coin, both long out of circulation, is baked in the pudding. Finding it is considered good luck. In some families, silver or porcelain charms are kept for this purpose.

CHRISTMAS CAKE
Photo via Sainsbury's
Like the Christmas pudding, the traditional British Christmas Cake is started months before the holiday. It is a very rich fruit cake which is 'fed' with brandy or whisky - a few spoonfuls at a time, every few days for weeks. Before Christmas, the cake is wrapped in a rolled layer of marzipan and topped by a thick layer of rolled white icing. Then the whole thing is neatly wrapped in a red ribbon and topped with a holiday motif. In effect, the cake is sealed, airtight, in all that marzipan and icing. That, plus the amount of alcohol it has absorbed, should make it last a very long time. And, kept in a biscuit tin or a plastic food box with a sealable lid, Christmas cakes have been known to be edible for months, even years. The Christmas cake is not usually part of Christmas dinner but is kept to be offered at tea time and for snacks during the holidays.

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

The history of Christmas Trees

The first Christmas tree was the centerpiece of holidays festivities in fifteenth century Latvia. Young men and women danced and sang around the tree before setting it on fire the last night of festivities. From those early traditions, to the first American tree in 1816, and into the present Christmas season, Christmas trees have been the focal point of holiday cheer. The following infographic takes a look at some of the significant moments in the modern history of the Christmas icon. May I suggest this timeline as a possible resource for one of your lessons about Christmas. I've found this information in Visual History of Christmas Trees. Due to the dimensions of the infographic, I only present a print screen of the timeline. Just follow the previous link to access the timeline in full size.



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Monday, September 24, 2012

The Autumn Season Teacher Guide


photo credit: Anguskirk via photopin cc 
Autumn, also termed as 'Fall' in North America, is an intermediary phase in between summer and winter. Autumn is a specific season in the temperate zone. It begins in September in the North, while in the Southern part of the Planet, the season of autumn arrives in the month of March. The end of summer signifies the arrival of autumn, which is characterized by mellowness. This is a time when trees get rid of their old look in the process of shedding leaves. Autumn leaves have a reddish tinge which falls away during this season, thereby paving the way for further growth. 
In, Maps of World (abridged and adapted)

Many people in Canada, the United States, Japan, China and Korea travel around their home countries during autumn just to watch the leaves change colors and fall off the trees because it is such a beautiful site of nature. In fact the tourist season of leaf watching is a popular time to go hiking, camping and enjoying being outside with nature since the temperatures are mild, as the heat of summer has past and the chill of winter has yet to come. 
Picture via Google Images
Some holidays that fall during the time of autumn are Thanksgiving and Halloween. Thanksgiving is a tradition that is symbolic of the Native Americans feeding the first colonists who were not prepared with steady crops of vegetables and fruits. We celebrate Thanksgiving to give thanks for the sharing of the harvest during the first years of settlers. Halloween is a time where people decorate pumpkins into jack-o-lanterns, and make displays of cornhusks and hay bales, also celebrating the harvest time of year. The Jewish holiday of Sukkot and the Chinese Moon Festival are celebrated by other cultures to show appreciation for the good food of the season and to get ready to settle indoors for the next season of winter, which often keeps people indoors and isolated. This makes autumn more of a fun and relaxing time as people anticipate the cold weather that is just around the corner. Follow THIS LINK, if you are interested in Fall Lessons Plans / Teacher Guide to the Autumn/Fall Season.
(abridged and adapted)

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Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Taking a break...

T@PT is going on a summer holiday. After a long hardworking, yet inspiring year, it is now time to take a break and indulge in some free time! It's been 8 months since I started this fulfilling project, which has led me to a new dimension of knowledge and whose doors are easily opened by the fantastic World Wide Web! I wish everyone enjoys a refreshing and magnificent summer! Do whatever you like the most, and return stronger in September! To my students, in particular, try not to forget the basics of what you've learned this past year... Practise your English, either with a British accent, or not, and BE HAPPY!

Friday, June 15, 2012

Last day of school

For those of you, lucky enough NOT to be entering the "exams' season", is this by any REMOTE chance your current mood??? Now that we are reaching the "study+dying" level and starting the paperwork marathon, T@PT is going to slow down its pace of writing... I shall continue to publish but probably not on a daily basis due to the amount of work that awaits me!... Those of you that start your holidays today, enjoy the free time!... The ones that are getting ready for the exams, 'Keep calm and Study on'... PineTree mates, we still have a great amount of work ahead!... Nonetheless our extreme need of a never ending vacation, we'll make it through...
Image credits: ZAZZLE


Thursday, June 14, 2012

The exams season is about to begin...

It's not a good season! Definitely NOT! Neither for teachers, nor for students! Every teacher has already been a student, so it's impossible not to remember how we feel amongst the tons of papers one has to study! But as teachers our life hasn't become any easier, you know... Someone has to correct the exams... Have you got any idea how long it takes to correct a single exam? Trust me, it takes much longer than you can possibly imagine!
Having said this, in case you feel like the caption below the picture, don't forget that you are not alone! Studying, dying, correcting & marking exams... It all comes together in the same miserable packet!
Let us yet keep calm and get focused: it's just the "exams season"!... Holidays will be here soon enough... I mean, the end of July is not that far, is it? "Time is psychological", I've heard that before!... Let us keep calm, anyway!... Always keep calm and carry on!... We'll make it through this 'dying' season!...

Found it @9GAG.com
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Thursday, December 22, 2011

An e-card to my students

Holiday e-cards are a great way to send our season greetings to the ones that are part of our everyday lives. Even though there are many options available hellocrazy.com and Jacquie Lawson  e-cards are still my favourite. However. this year egreetings.com was my choice to email my students season greetings... I hope you enjoy  it and Merry Christmas!...



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