Classweekly

Teaching Calendar

Holiday & event resources for K‑5 classrooms

SeasonKindergarten–Grade 5

Winter Break & New Year 2026

By ClassWeekly Teachers·

Taught in US schools

Kindergarten1st Grade2nd Grade3rd Grade4th Grade5th Grade
Winter Break & New Year, classroom illustration

Key Takeaways

  • The winter break & new year is one of the most naturally engaging learning opportunities of the school year
  • Students in Kindergarten–Grade 5 can observe, investigate, and celebrate seasonal change across subjects
  • Seasonal exploration builds science curiosity, descriptive language, and a sense of wonder in young learners

Understanding the Winter Break & New Year

The winter break & new year marks one of Earth's most predictable, and fascinating, natural transitions. Keep learning going over the winter break with fun, low-pressure worksheets on winter science, goal-setting, and New Year traditions. Humans have tracked seasonal changes for thousands of years, using them to organize calendars, plan harvests, and tell stories.

Ancient civilizations built monuments aligned with solstices and equinoxes. Indigenous cultures around the world developed rich traditions tied to seasonal shifts. Today, scientists track seasonal data to understand climate patterns and ecosystem health.

For students, the season is both a scientific phenomenon and a sensory experience. Understanding why seasons happen, and how they affect life on Earth, builds foundational knowledge in Earth science, ecology, and geography.

Why Seasonal Learning Matters

Seasonal hooks are among the most powerful tools a teacher has. Students in Kindergarten–Grade 5 are naturally curious about the changing world around them, and connecting lessons to what they see, feel, and experience outside makes abstract concepts tangible and personal.

Seasonal learning also builds cross-curricular fluency. The winter break & new year touches science (weather, ecosystems, Earth's tilt), literacy (descriptive writing, poetry), math (temperature data, graphing), and social studies (cultural traditions, agriculture, history).

Perhaps most importantly, seasonal learning cultivates wonder. Students who are taught to notice and investigate their natural world become lifelong observers and problem-solvers.

How to Teach Winter Break & New Year by Grade Level

Kindergarten

For kindergarteners, make Winter Break & New Year concrete and sensory. Use picture books, puppets, songs, and simple art activities to introduce the key concept. Focus on one big idea, "we are all connected" or "the world is changing", and return to it throughout the day through different experiences.

Grade 1

First graders are ready for simple explanations and structured discussion. Anchor Winter Break & New Year with a shared read-aloud, then use sentence frames ("I notice… I wonder… This makes me think…") to guide responses. Drawing and labeling lets emergent writers participate fully.

Grade 2

Second graders thrive with short informational texts paired with graphic organizers. For Winter Break & New Year, have students identify the main idea and two supporting details, then share with a partner. A class anchor chart captures key vocabulary and builds shared knowledge.

Grade 3

Third graders can tackle research tasks connected to Winter Break & New Year. Set up a "learning station" with two or three curated sources. Students take notes, discuss findings in small groups, and synthesize information into a paragraph or poster. Introduce multiple perspectives where relevant.

Grade 4

Fourth graders are ready to explore complexity. For Winter Break & New Year, use a structured discussion protocol, Socratic seminar, four corners, or philosophical chairs, to examine different viewpoints. Assign a short written reflection that asks students to take and defend a position.

Grade 5

Fifth graders can engage with primary sources, data, and big-picture thinking around Winter Break & New Year. Assign an essay, multimedia presentation, or debate that asks: why does this matter? What are the different perspectives? What would you do? These questions build the critical thinking that defines college and career readiness.

Winter Break & New Year Classroom Activities

1

Nature Walk and Observation Journal

Take students outside (or to a window) to observe seasonal changes. They draw what they see, hear, smell, and feel, then write 3 observations and 1 question. Builds science inquiry habits and descriptive language.

Kindergarten–Grade 5
2

Seasonal Data Collection

Students track daily temperature, precipitation type, or daylight hours throughout the season. They record data on a class chart and analyze patterns: Is it getting warmer or cooler? What changed most? Connects math and science.

Grades 2–5
3

Seasonal Poetry Anthology

Use mentor texts to introduce seasonal poetry forms (haiku, free verse, list poems). Students write and illustrate their own seasonal poems, which are compiled into a class anthology to share with families.

Kindergarten–Grade 5
4

Animal Adaptations Study

How do animals prepare for or respond to the season? Students choose an animal, research its seasonal behavior, and create an illustrated fact card. The class sorts animals by adaptation strategy (migrate, hibernate, adapt).

Grades 1–5
5

Seasonal Cooking or Tasting

Bring in seasonal foods (apples in fall, citrus in winter, strawberries in spring) and discuss where they come from and why they're in season. Students write a sensory description using five-senses language.

Kindergarten–Grade 5
Winter Break & New Year activities for students

Winter Break & New Year Games & Interactive Ideas

Seasonal Scavenger Hunt

Create a list of seasonal items to find, indoors, outdoors, or in books and pictures. Students work in pairs to locate each item and record a quick observation. A great movement break that connects to science content.

Kindergarten–Grade 5

Weather Charades

Students act out weather events, animal behaviors, or seasonal phenomena for their classmates to guess. Simple to set up, easy to differentiate, and always energizing after a long work period.

Kindergarten–Grade 5

Guess the Season

Show images, play sounds, or describe sensory clues from different seasons and have students guess which season is being described. Add complexity by including clues from different hemispheres or climates.

Kindergarten–Grade 5

Nature Bingo

Create bingo cards featuring seasonal plants, animals, weather events, and natural phenomena. Students look for these in real life over a week and mark off what they observe. Promotes ongoing noticing and curiosity.

Kindergarten–Grade 5

Frequently Asked Questions

When is Winter Break & New Year in 2026?

Winter Break & New Year falls on December 21, 2026 in 2026.

How do I teach Winter Break & New Year to elementary students?

Start with a brief hook, a story, image, or question, that connects students to the topic personally. Then move into structured learning: discussion, research, or hands-on activity. Close with a reflection that asks students to connect what they learned to their own lives. Activities work best when differentiated by grade level for students in Kindergarten–Grade 5.

What are the best Winter Break & New Year activities for kids?

The most effective activities combine learning with engagement. For younger students: read-alouds, sensory explorations, simple art projects, and games. For older students: research projects, structured debates, STEM challenges, and writing tasks. The best activities always connect the event to real life and invite student voice.

Why is Winter Break & New Year important for students to learn about?

Keep learning going over the winter break with fun, low-pressure worksheets on winter science, goal-setting, and New Year traditions. Teaching students about Winter Break & New Year builds cultural literacy, historical thinking, and empathy, skills that support learning across every subject and prepare students to be thoughtful, informed community members.

What grade levels is Winter Break & New Year appropriate for?

With the right scaffolding, Winter Break & New Year can be explored at every grade level from PreK through Grade 5. The content is the same; the depth, text complexity, and task demand shift by grade. ClassWeekly offers differentiated resources for Kindergarten–Grade 5.

Free Teaching Resources for Every Occasion

#1 Curriculum aligned resource library (K‑5) with teacher-made materials.

More Teaching Events