Download the black and white PDF.
Saint Patrick Unit Study*
St. Patrick's Day often gets beat up to the point of not being recognized. An online search for Saint Patrick's Day yields recipes for cabbage, tips on which bar offers green beer, and oodles of coloring pages of leprechauns and their pots of gold. Sure, you can study those things as part of Irish lore, but I'd rather not study those things on the day that we celebrate Patrick's life. Especially considering his life was about teaching truth. Geography: Locate Scotland on the map. (Patrick was born in Scotland, probably Kilpatrick). Locate Rome (to point out that the Romans' reach stretched all the way to Britain. They were in charge of that area at the time.) Locate Ireland. (He was kidnapped by a raiding party at fourteen and taken to work as a slave in Ireland. Later, he escaped, but then returned back to Ireland due to a dream he had. He, as a bishop, preached and converted most of the people to Catholicism.)
Writing: Write your own version of an Irish blessing. Practice penmanship with the following traditional Irish blessing: "May the road rise to meet you, May the wind be always at your back. May the sun shine upon your ace, the rains fall soft upon you fields, and until we meet again, may God hold you in the palm of His hand."
Write a brief report about Saint Patrick. Pretend to be Saint Patrick. Write a journal entry about your time either as a slave, on the ship or as a bishop.
Reading:
"Patrick, Patron Saint of Ireland" by Tomie DePaola (Good for the littles) Look up other Irish saints: Brigid, St. Kevin of Glendalough, St. Columba, St. Brendan
DVD: Watch "Patrick, Brave Shepherd of the Emerald Isle."
Art:
Art:
Print the paper doll above.
Make heart shamrocks. (Use green construction paper, draw and cut three hearts. Arrange and glue them to sheet as a clover. Saint Patrick used the shamrock to explain the Trinity. Label each leaf Father, Son and Holy Spirit.) Use green construction paper and your imagination to create an Irish saints booklet. (You can use the printable lapbook pages here.)
Read about Irish saints, draw a picture of them (or download one from the Internet. Use Google image search ... carefully) and write a sentence about each one for your own Irish saints booklet.
Make Irish soda bread.
Informative links:
Irish Culture and Customs Women for Faith and Family
Enchanted Learning has some maps of Ireland and craft ideas, but the site is heavy on the leprechauns and Irish lore.
* This post is from 2009, but it's still relevant. :)Informative links:
Irish Culture and Customs Women for Faith and Family
Enchanted Learning has some maps of Ireland and craft ideas, but the site is heavy on the leprechauns and Irish lore.
This is so great! Thank you Vee!
ReplyDeleteThank you Vee for the coloring page of St. Patrick. I've printed it off and will be using it with my daughter and her 5 cousins next weekend at a St. Pat's party at their grandparents' house. I will post about it next weekend, and will let you know incase you'd like to come visit pictures of their colored saint Patrick! I love your blog and grabbed your button.
ReplyDeleteAmy Caroline: You are welcomed! (hugs)
ReplyDeleteGardenia: Oh, that's neat. I'd love to see the paper dolls in action and a St. Pat's party, too. :) Thanks for taking the time to comment.