The Best Websites For Learning About Halloween by Larry Ferlazzo


The Best Websites For Learning About Halloween

 


'Halloween Decorations' photo (c) 2010, Sarah_Ackerman - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/


Check out my New York Times post
 on using The Day of the Dead to help students learn about literal and interpretative questions.

Halloween’s approaching, and I thought people might be interested in seeing a “The Best…” list sites to help English Language Learners find out more about the holiday.

Check out The Best Movie Scenes For Halloween.

Here they are (not in order of preference):

SITES THAT PROVIDE SOME HISTORICAL CONTEXT FOR HALLOWEEN:

CBBC Newsround has a series of very accessible short texts describing Halloween that include images. They give a very good overview.

Watch good, short video clips about its history at the History Channel.

The New York TImes has a slideshow on how the holiday is celebrated in different parts of the world.

You can get a good understanding of how different countries recognize and celebrate Halloween at Halloweens Around The World.

The National Endowment For The Humanities has a nice site called Not Just Halloween: Festivals Of The Dead From Around The World.  It has lesson plan ideas and great links.

5 Minute English has a short reading following by comprehension questions about Halloween history.

Sean Banville’s ESL Holiday Lessons has some great resources on Halloween. Some can be used online, and others printed-out.

The Visual History of Halloween is a great infographic.

BASIC VOCABULARY AND ELEMENTS OF HALLOWEEN:

MES Games has a good audio review, including a game, of Halloween vocabulary.

Learn about monsters by reading about another Haunted House.

And, if you haven’t had enough of haunted houses, read another one by the British Council.

In A Dark Dark Wood is another British Council story.

Here’s a cloze (fill-in-the-gap) activity on the holiday.

EL Civics has a nice overview of Halloween traditions.

Enchanted Learning has a simple cloze on Halloween.

ESL Pods has an audio cloze activity on the holiday.

Many Things, the great source of ESL/EFL online activities, has a series of word games related to Halloween, including a “Word Drop”. In fact, in the drop-down menu on the page, you can choose to use the same Halloween vocabulary list in many different activities.

Take a “behind-the-scenes” visit to a Haunted House.

Here are two games that aren’t specifically related to Halloween, but they are word games with a spooky theme.

Spelloween is a spooky spelling game from the British Council.  It’s a bit difficult and most appropriate for Intermediate English Language Learners or above.

Mia Cadaver’s Tombstone Timeout is very similar to another BBC game that is a favorite of my students called Gut Instinct, which is ranked very high on my The Best Online Learning Games — 2008.

Both of these games ask questions related to Math, Science and English, and you can choose which subject you want to use.  One of the improvements that Mia Cadaver has over Gut Instinct, though, is that Math and Science are divided into levels of difficulty.  That makes it more accessible to a larger number of students.

But the big selling point for both of these games is that, within seconds, you can create a private “virtual room” where only your students compete against each other.  Everybody just types in the name you’ve given the room, and the questions begin.  After each question is answered the screen shows the overall ranking of everybody in the room.  Students love it!

Lanternfish, formerly Boggles World, has an excellent collection of hand-outs on Halloweendesigned for English Language Learners.

Jason Renshaw just posted about a bunch of excellent Halloween materials he has available for free on his English Raven site. I used them when I was teaching Beginning English Language Learners, and they were a real hit.

Happy Halloween! is from PBS and contains links to many accessible online Halloween-related activities on PBS sites.

Halloween: People and Costumes and Halloween Celebrations are two slideshows from the Las Vegas Sun.

You can’t go wrong with these fun Halloween Science experiments.

Here’s a listening exercise about Halloween.

“Interesting Facts About Halloween” is a good infographic.

Here’s a chart showing how Americans will be spending money on Halloween this year.

Describe Dracula’s castle in this fun language-learning interactive.

Here’s an interactive book about Halloween.

Learn Halloween vocabulary with this interactive.

Here’s a video and game for English Language Learners from Renee Maufroid (Thanks toMichelle Henry for the tip).

Both CNN and How Stuff Works have tons of Halloween-related videos.

Hopped Up On Halloween is a Wall Street Journal slideshow.

The Wall Street Journal also has an interesting story about Halloween’s history and what it has turned .... It’s not accessible to ELL’s, but a teacher could modify it.

Halloween Spending Trends is a useful infographic.

Punkin Chunkin is the name of a new “sport” of catapulting pumpkins to smash them. I’m not making this up. The New York Times has just published an article about it, and the Discovery Science Channel has a bunch of online videos.

Top Halloween Costumes of 2010 is a Wall Street Journal slideshow.

Dog owners celebrate Halloween by dressing up their pets in bizarre... is a slideshow from The Telegraph.

Halloween Candy Nightmares: 10 Worst Choices

The Best and Worst Halloween Candy

The economics of Halloween candy is a pretty interesting infographic

‘Stranger Danger’ and the Decline of Halloween is from The Wall Street Journal.

Bizarre Halloween Jack O’Lantern pumpkins is a slideshow from The Telegraph.

Animals tuck into Halloween pumpkins at zoos around the world is a slideshow from The Telegraph

The Scariest Halloween Party is an infographic

The transatlantic Halloween divide is an infographic from The BBC.

Slate has a slideshow of older Halloween images.

Masked politics: Halloween favorites in Washington and elsewhere is the title of a Washington Post slideshow.

Halloween Business Booming is a Newsy video.

Halloween Report is another neat infographic.

Halloween Across The Globe is an MSNBC slideshow.

The Business of Halloween is a good infographic.

How To Carve A Pumpkin For Halloween is another infographic.

The Washington Post has a slideshow about trick-or-treaters at the White House.

The BBC has a slideshow of fun Halloween pictures submitted by readers.

HALLOWEEN E-CARDS:

Choose a monster, use its text-to-speech feature to record a message, and send it to a friend with these two similar Halloween E-Card sites. You can post the link on a website or blog, too.

You can carve a virtual Jack-O-Lantern and send it to a friend or post the link on a website.

Send a talking E-Card from an evil clown — if you dare.

ONLINE VIDEO GAMES:

Ghost Motel is a series of “Choose Your Own Adventure” online video games where players role-play a ghost.  They’re great language-development activities, though some of the games have limited content that would not be appropriate for the classroom.  Here is one installment that seems okay to me:

Ghost Motel

With Halloween fast approaching, what would be more timely than a new online video game where the player has to rid a house of evil spirits… or else? House, in addition to providing a few scary moments, offers tons of English-language learning opportunities.  You can read this article to find-out how I use online video games with English Language Learners.  Here’s the Walkthrough for the game.

Halloween Pumpkin Room is an online video game in the “escape the room” genre.  Here is its  walkthrough.

Gatuno In Halloween is a brand-new online video game from the developer of the greatEsklavos series of games.  As in the Esklavos games, you have an option of playing it in English or Spanish. Playing them in English provides numerous opportunities for language-development since many items are given text labels.

Here’s the “Walkthrough” (the instructions to win). As I’ve described previously, English Language Learners playing these types of games with walkthroughs maximizes their use for language-learning. However, even without it, this game would be good for ELL’s.

Kidnapped by Ghosts is another good game for ELL’s. Here’s the walkthrough.

Here’s a “scary” online video game with Garfield the cat, and here’s its walkthrough.

DIA DE LOS MUERTOS

Here are several good sites that are specifically related to how Halloween is celebrated in Mexico and Latin America — as the Dia de Los Muertos.

These links, of course, are accessible to English Language Learners:

The Smithsonian’s Latin Center Theater of the Dead is very interactive, accessible, and informative.

Mr. Donn’s Day of the Dead page is not only accessible to ELL’s, it also has links to a number of good lesson plans.

The BBC has an online slideshow about how The Day Of The Dead is celebrated throughout the world.

The Day Of The Dead is a slideshow from The Telegraph.

Mex Connect has a lot of colorful images if you scroll down to the section titled “Images and Photos.”

The New York Times has a short slideshow on how the Day of the Dead is celebrated in Mexico.

Days Of The Dead is a series of images from The Boston Globe’s Big Picture.

Day of the Dead is a group of photos from The Sacramento Bee.

Day of the Dead – El Día de los Muertos – Worksheets and Exercises comes from ESOL Courses.

Day of the Dead | Día de los Muertos in Los Angeles, a slideshow from The Los Angeles Times.

The Day of the Dead: people around the world celebrate All Saints’ ... is a slideshow from The Telegraph.

The Sacramento Bee has a series of photos related to The Day Of The Dead.

As always, feedback and suggestions are welcome.

Teaching Tolerance has a lesson that relates to Halloween stereotypes. It’s called What Halloween Costumes Say.

Halloween 2009 is a neat resource from National Geographic (thanks to Interesting Pile for the tip)

114 Cool Pumpkin Art Carvings

Detroit Fights Devil’s Night is a TIME Magazine slideshow about a tragic tradition of arson in Detroit.

ESL Courses has good resources on Halloween and on The Day Of The Dead.

Happy Halloween Escape is an online video game that has potential as a language development activity, especially if it’s used with a walkthrough.

Halloween – 10 activities for the computer room, connected classroo... is a not-to-be-missed post by Kyle Mawer.

You can look through a ton of old Halloween advertisements here.

Happy Halloween is a series of images from The Sacramento Bee.

Holidays for Dressing Up, and for Remembering is a slideshow from The Wall Street Journal.

Ghostscape 2: The Cabin is an online video game that is probably too scary for very young children, but adolescents should love it. The walkthrough isn’t posted yet, but should be soon at this site. It has a lot of language development opportunities.

Halloween At The White House is a slideshow from The Washington Post.

Not-so scary sights is another slideshow from The Washington Post.

Laurence Haquet creates great interactive books that are exceptional learning tools, including her book on Halloween .

Jason Renshaw has created a “Halloween Challenge” to ESL/EFL teachers to create/modify Halloween materials. Check it out here.

Kyle Mawer has posted a great list of ten Halloween online games and how to use them with ELL’s.

Halloween By The Numbers is an infographic from The History Channel.

The History Channel has several good videos on the history of Halloween.

Haunting Ideas: Halloween in the Classroom and ‘On the Street’ is from The New York Times Learning Network.

What will Americans be dressing up as this Halloween? is a useful infographic from Newsweek.

Amazing Literature-Inspired Jack-O’-Lanterns

Check out The Witch’s Stew online story.

Students Organize Against Racist Costumes

I’ve previously posted about The Good Guide. It began as a University of California research project, and is now an independent organization that evaluates companies on their social and environmental policies and actions, and invites people to participate in those evaluations.

Thanks to Brain Pickings, I learned about this YouTube video they just posted where they evaluate different types of popular Halloween candy. You can also find the written info at their website.

ESOL Courses has many Halloween resources.

Old-School Halloween Photos is from LIFE.

Halloween celebrations around the world is a slideshow from The Telegraph.

2011′s Best Cities for Trick-or-Treating is from The Atlantic.

TIME Magazine has a slideshow of “haunted” houses.

In Pictures: Mexico Day of the Dead is from the BBC.

Martians at the Halloween Sock Hop: Photos of Bizarre Vintage Costumes is from The Atlantic.

Here’s a complete collection of Halloween resources from The New York Times Learning Network.

Zombie pumpkins invade New York’s Botanical Garden is a video from the BBC.

Dogs Dress Up is a Wall Street Journal slideshow.

Here are Halloween videos from English Central.

The 10 best scary paintings is from The Guardian.

The Dead Have Something To Tell You is from The New York Times.

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