It was truly an incredible day,” Foster said. “Before leaving the restaurant, the sixth-grade students sang aloud the “Copa de la Vida” song in Spanish, which they had learned in class. vivid atmosphere of local bars, interesting restaurants, and gift shops. Sixth grade students also watched the Disney film “Coco,” which presents the Day of the Dead holiday and the significance it has in Hispanic culture.įinally, students visited “Maya Riviera” restaurant in Briarcliff, and enjoyed an authentic lunch, which included a taco bar, chicken and steak quesadillas, fried plantains, Spanish rice, black beans and churros con chocolate. Enjoy a relaxing Mexico vacation on the Riveria Maya beaches in North Akumal. “Vogrincic and I were so excited to celebrate this amazing holiday with our students and the faculty,” Foster said. It included all the main components of a traditional altar, including artifacts such as pan de muertos (bread of the dead), velas (candles), frutas (fruit), calaveras and calacas (skulls and skeletons), mole (a spicy chocolate sauce) and colorful papel picado (tissue paper with cut out designs). “The colorful and creative ofrendas were beautiful and the student presenters did an outstanding job.”įoster and Vogrincic created an ofrenda of their own in the main lobby of the middle school for faculty and students to view. “ Jennifer Vogrincic and I were so proud of our students,” Foster said. Next, students created their own hand-made altars for famous Hispanic people who died, and presented them to the sixth-grade students. “The presentation also included the importance of the “ofrenda” or altar, as the central component,” Foster said. The PowerPoint included the history and traditions of the holiday. Students in Johanna Foster’s Spanish class began by watching a presentation about the holiday prepared by seventh graders. Those were just some of the ways sixth and seventh graders at Briarcliff Middle School celebrated the Mexican holiday, “Dia de los Muertos.” Watching a presentation about Day of the Dead, creating altars and having an authentic Mexican lunch at a local restaurant.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |