
Inclusive Fall Holidays
During the fall, we have a handful of holidays and events that can be celebrated!
- Indigenous Peoples' Day
- Halloween
- Veterans Day
- Thanksgiving
- Dia De Los Muertos (Day of the Dead)
- Diwali
- Earlier this fall was Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Moon Festival and so many more.
Some tips and tricks that you can use to be inclusive in your classroom this fall:
- Get to know your students. Learn what holidays they celebrate at home or if they celebrate holidays at all, and even if no one in your class celebrates a certain holiday, acknowledge it! Most importantly, don’t make assumptions.
- Saying things like Fall, Spooky Season, Harvest, Foliage, and Autumn instead of Halloween or Thanksgiving.
- Acknowledging the histories of the holidays (both good and bad).
- Avoiding things specific to these holidays like pumpkin carving and eating turkey.
Inclusive Winter Holidays
- Kwanzaa
- Christmas
- Hanukkah
- Winter solstice
- New Years Day
- Three Kings Day
- Chinese New Year
- And many, many more
Holidays Around the World:
They always say knowledge is power and the best way for someone to understand is for them to learn.
Holidays Around the World is a unit that can take you and your students on a trip to 16 different countries where you can learn about their holidays and how they celebrate.
Inclusive Holiday Language:
Let's start with the phrase “holiday season.” Here is a list of ways to say to wish someone a happy holiday season without including any of the specific holidays during this season. There are also some options for us to use when we want to include those who don’t celebrate any holidays this time of year.- Happy Holidays
- Seasons Greetings
- Warm Wishes
- Enjoy your Holidays
- Best Holidays
- ‘Tis The Season
- Happy Winter
- Happy New Year
Knowing the difference between holiday symbols and religious symbols:
Many holidays have a religious history, making it hard to maintain neutrality in the classroom when celebrating certain holidays. Here is a list of religious symbols associated with the Winter holidays.- Cross
- Menorah
- Nativity Scene
- Angels
- Aum
- Nine pointed Star
Don’t want to celebrate any holidays at all?
Not celebrating holidays is okay too. There are other ways to be festive, have classroom parties, or make a day special that is not based around any specific holiday.
- First day of a new season
- The last day of a new season
- 100th day of school (or any number of days you feel is special enough)
- The first day of a month
- The last day of a month
- Full moon
- New moon
- Celebrate the end of a book the class is reading
One last thing:
This list can go on forever because there are so many unique ways people spend this time of year, but simply remembering that family dynamics are different for everyone is a way you can maintain inclusive language all year long. Acknowledging that even though parents are usually a mother and father, that is not true for everyone. Some students have only one parent. Some have no parents or two parents of the same gender. Students may be raised by a grandparent, aunt, uncle, older sibling, resource parent, or legal guardian. Remembering to avoid using the words ‘mom and dad’ or talking about a specific parent can help a student feel more included. Other things to say:- Guardian
- Adult
- Caretaker
