We're Ready for Pesach . . .
We learned a lot about spring. On our trip last month, we noticed the trees, plants and flowers of our neighborhood. We sketched the daffodils that were growing on our school's property. We went on a springtime scavenger hunt, too. Then, our Sensory Table became a Bug Bin. Our table was full of pastel-colored rice, flowers and plastic bugs. Signs of spring were everywhere! (Above, Ari, Leiba, Yoni and friends enjoy Morning Arrival time at the Bug Bin.)
At Circle Time, we played a game: Passover food or Chametz? We took turns placing our food magnets on the floor in the appropriate place. Our surprise? We discovered that so many delicious foods, like apples, bananas, pears, oranges, are permissible on Pesach. We had focused on the chametz foods, not realizing that there are so many "regular" foods for us to eat.
(Above: Ruth uses our parsley to create a page in her Mah Nishtana book.)
(Ari, above, uses a sponge when working on her Mah Nishtana book. Below, Hannah works on her book.)
(Below, Henia and Leiba using gold paint and sponges on their Mah Nishtana books.)
(Above, Sam sets the Pesach table; below, dramatic play at the table.)
As they set the table, the children asked, "Do we need candles on Pesach? Grape juice?" There are so many similarities between the Seder and our Shabbat table, and so many differences. We sang some of Mah Nishtana, Why is this Night Different.
We learn other songs, too: parts of Dayenu, Who Knows One, and the refrain from the Order of the Seder song. We like singing, "Pesach, We Celebrate . . ." (To hear the Uncle Moishy tune that we sung in class, go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSMQLQcq5x4)
We took the box outside and painted it. It became the sea, for Yam Suf, the Reed Sea. We gathered our toy people and horses to act out the story.
(Below: Ari and friends decide to add cars to the parting of the sea. It's not as odd as it seems; the story is real. When the children use representations of actual items in their lives in their dramatic play, it heightens their sense of closeness to the story.)
(Below, Ruthie, Reed and Izzy decorate their glasses.)
The Morot had to think about how the Kitah Gimmel boys and girls would bring their Pesach items home. The teachers went together to the store, examining all the boxes at Richard's Variety, to see which one would be the perfect choice. We brought some of the children's projects along with us and placed them in the different varieties of boxes. We wanted to get a realistic idea of the spatial set-up. We picked the boxes with the handles. There were only about 11 on the shelf, but the cashier told us that there were 83 in stock! We needed 16, so there would be enough.
Days later, some of us went outside to pick flowers. We made pastel-colored paint by mixing our regular paint with white. We didn't know what to expect. Then we realized that the colors got lighter! We should do this again. We dipped the flowers in the paint and used them as brushes on our boxes. So pretty! The colors remind us of spring, and spring reminds us of Pesach. Some of the pieces of the flowers stuck to our boxes, adding a little bit of texture.
Happy Passover!
Morah Susan and Morah Yael
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