Once Thanksgiving is over and the calendar flips to December, many
  well-meaning schools, teachers, and librarians will start preparing their
  lesson plans to teach their Christmas Around the World units.  There is
  nothing inherently wrong with teaching a Christmas Around the World unit, but
  I get irked when I see teachers and staff using bulletin board displays,
  storybooks, and worksheets that depict cartoony children with big goofy smiles
  and dressed in stereotypical cultural clothes.  Instead, I prefer to see
  books, drawings, and resources that depict real children engaged in authentic
  activities and traditions.  
  A World of Cookies for Santa: Follow Santa's Tasty Trip Around the World by M.E. Furman does a good job of teaching us about Christmas around
  the world without having to resort to cartoony stereotypes.  The children
  in A World of Cookies live in various countries around the
  world and they set Christmas cookies out for Santa on Christmas Eve. 
  Each cookie is delicious and unique to the country it comes from.  At the
  end of the book, the author includes recipes for each of the cookies for you
  to try on your own.  Read on to learn more about A World of Cookies and about ways you can integrate it into the lessons you teach.
  Disclosure:
    Affiliate links
    to Amazon are included in this post.
About A World of Cookies for Santa
🍎 Author's Summary: A World of Cookies for Santa takes readers across the globe to see all the treats that await Santa on Christmas Eve. Head to the Philippines, where children leave out puto seko cookies and ginger tea for Santa; jet to Russia for a honey-spice cookie; then set out for Malawi for a sweet potato cookie! When you've returned home, the journey's still not over—M. E. Furman provides recipes for children to bake some of Santa's cookies for themselves. A World of Cookies for Santa is a multicultural celebration that families will return to year after year.
    🍎 Title: A World of Cookies for Santa: Follow Santa's Tasty Trip Around the
      World
🍎 Author: M.E. Furman
🍎 Illustrator: Susan Gal
🍎 Date: October 17, 2017
🍎 Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
🍎 Pages: 48
  🍎 Author: M.E. Furman
🍎 Illustrator: Susan Gal
🍎 Date: October 17, 2017
🍎 Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
🍎 Pages: 48
  What Are Traditions?
    A World of Cookies for Santa is about children who live around
    the world and leave some of their country's traditional cookies out for
    Santa.  Depending on the age of your students, you may need to do a
    quick mini-lesson about traditions.  What are traditions?  What
    are some examples of holiday traditions you follow at home?
  
  
    A tradition is the handing down of information, beliefs, or customs from
      one generation to another.
  
  
  Reading the Story
    A World of Cookies for Santa is a non-fiction book students can
    read to learn specific information.  Each page follows the same
    format.  We learn the name of a country, what Santa is called there,
    one type of Christmas cookie from that country, and an interesting fact or
    two.  This format lends itself well to introducing kid-friendly
    research projects to your students.  Before Christmas, read and
    discuss A World of Cookies for Santa with your students to
    learn a little bit about the countries in the book.  Then after
    Christmas, revisit it.  Have each student select one of the countries
    from the book to research.  What country did they choose?  Where
    is it located?  What is its capital?  What is its
    population?  Language?  Culture?  Traditions?  Any other
    interesting details we should know about?
  
  
  Geography
    Santa has to visit a lot of countries in A World of Cookies for Santa.  He visits countries on every continent not counting
    Antarctica.  Pull out a world map and try to find each of the countries
    Santa visits on the map.  Does he visit your country?  Can you
    track the route Santa took in the book?  Can you come up with a better
    route?  What are some interesting land and water features Santa will
    fly over?  If you are really ambitious you could take a globe, some
    clear tape, and yarn to trace Santa's route.
  
  
    Note:  Be prepared... this happens to me every year... whenever
    my students and I look at world maps prior to Christmas, one of my littles
    will always look at the North Pole, see that there is no land at the North
    Pole, and panic.  How can Santa's workshop be real if the North Pole is
    in the middle of the Arctic Ocean???  My response... sea ice... 
    Santa's workshop is built on sea ice.  That usually satisfies
    them.  
  
  
  My Grandma's Christmas Cookie Recipe
    In the back of A World of Cookies for Santa, you will find
    recipes for each of the cookies in the book.  These are authentic
    recipes that you can make at home or at school with your students. 
    Yum!  A few years ago I participated in
    a virtual cookie recipe exchange
    with some of my online friends.  Reading A World of Cookies for Santa reminded me of the recipe I typed up and shared with them.  It's
    the recipe for my grandmother's Mexican chocolate cookies that I posted
    below.  These cookies are best served warm and with a glass of cold
    milk.  
  
  
  
    What about you?  Do you have a favorite Christmas cookie you like to
    bake with your family?  Do you leave out special cookies for Santa on
    Christmas Eve?  Tell us about them in the comments below!
  
  
  
    Did you enjoy reading this post about A World of Cookies for Santa?
    If so check out these blog posts for more Christmas books and crafts:
  
  - Craft: How to Make a Milk Carton Gingerbread House Christmas Craft
 - Craft: How to Make Cinnamon Scented Christmas Ornaments Christmas Craft
 - Book: The Saint Nicholas Day Snow by Charlotte Riggle
 - Book List: 10 Quirky Corona Christmas Books
 - STEM: Hot Chocolate Surprise + STEM Activity
 - Craft: How to Make a Macaroni Christmas Wreath
 


This book looks so good! I’m definitely adding it to the list of Christmas books I get my daughter this year.
ReplyDeleteThis book looks like so much fun, with recipes too! I am going to look out for this...
ReplyDelete