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Simple Way to Teach Children Chinese Zodiac

21 January 2014 by Eileen

I am bilingual and I would like both my children to learn Chinese, which is their mother tongue, as it will be very useful wherever they go.  I am not great at teaching my children Chinese and have to find fun ways to get them to learn.  We did this craft with our Lichfield Mandarin Club last year and this has proved to be a very useful way to teach children.

Chinese Zodiac Stick Craft

If you would like to know more about how the 12 animals were named in the Chinese zodiac, check out the explanation from wikipedia.

These are the 12 animals, in the order that they come:

Rat – 鼠

Ox – 牛

Tiger – 虎

Rabbit – 兔

Dragon – 龍

Snake – 蛇

Horse – 馬

Goat – 羊

Monkey – 猴

Rooster – 雞

Dog – 狗

Pig – 豬

To make this Chinese Zodiac stick craft, I have googled and found two templates to download.  I took the cute animals templates from xcn-chinese and the Chinese characters from vectorstock.  But please note that there is a missing stroke on the Chinese character Goat.  Feel free to google and download free images that you think are more suitable.

Chinese Zodiac stick matching game

To make this craft, you need:

  • 12 ice cream sticks
  • Templates (animals and Chinese character)
  • Glue
  • Scissors

1. Cut out all the animals.

2.Teach the children to identify the Chinese characters and ask them to match the animals with it.  Also teach them the animal cycle by placing them in their order.

Chinese Zodiac matching game

3. Glue the templates onto the ice cream sticks.  On one side is the matching animal and on the other side is the matching Chinese character.

Chinese Zodiac ice cream stick crafy
Chinese Zodiac stick craft rat

Instead of using plain ice cream sticks, I used coloured ice cream sticks: yellow, green, orange and purple and applied these in a sequence.  It helps them to remember them more easily by using colours.  These are the examples:

Chinese Zodiac what come next game

You can also make it in to a game by giving them three choices and guessing what comes next etc.

This is a very simple craft yet it can benefit the children in learning matching games and the Chinese zodiac.  Hope this is useful for you and and your child/ren!

Related

Filed Under: Chinese New Year Craft Tagged With: Chinese New Year Craft, Craft, Lunar New Year, 红包灯笼

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Comments

  1. Orli, Just Breathe says

    23 January 2014 at 11:58 am

    What a fab idea for teaching your kids about your culture. I was just writing about how hard it is to make sure they know it and understand, so I totally see myself in your post.

  2. Laura Close says

    23 January 2014 at 7:38 am

    This is a great idea – and it could be adapted for so many things… I could even use it in teaching!

  3. Vicky Wombwell says

    22 January 2014 at 11:13 pm

    What a great idea! I had a great chat with my kids and partner recently about the facets of all of our Chinese signs and googling their meanings. It was alot of fun – and this would defo be a great way to teach younger kids 🙂

  4. Nayna Kanabar says

    22 January 2014 at 11:04 pm

    Lovely activity , kids learn well when they learn through play.

  5. Laura Halls says

    22 January 2014 at 7:27 pm

    My daughter learnt some Mandrin in an after school club last year and thoroughly enjoyed it she came home teaching me some words.

  6. Sarah Bailey says

    22 January 2014 at 5:38 pm

    What a great idea – my Mum used to be a nursery nurse I’ll have to show her this idea as she’s still in touch with many of them there and they always look for ideas around celebrations. x

  7. Anna says

    22 January 2014 at 4:21 pm

    This is great! I need to do more like this for our arabic things

  8. Bek says

    22 January 2014 at 11:26 am

    Fantastic idea! I agree, Chinese does seem like a hard language to learn. This will help though! Thanks!

  9. mummyoftwo says

    21 January 2014 at 11:35 am

    Chinese seems like such a hard language to grasp, these look like a great way to help your children.

  10. LauraCYMFT says

    21 January 2014 at 10:38 am

    That’s a great idea! Z is learning about Chinese New Year at school and he’s loving it.

Trackbacks

  1. Chinese Zodiac Animals - ET Speaks From Home says:
    8 January 2022 at 11:06 pm

    […] you would like to learn more about the Chinese zodiac, why not try out this Chinese Zodiac craft game I made a few years […]

  2. Chinese New Year Drum - ET Speaks From Home says:
    3 January 2022 at 12:27 am

    […] in the Chinese zodiac. Take a look at my previous post if you want to familiarise yourself with the Chinese zodiac, and check out how we used simple crafts to teach children about […]

  3. 8 Chinese New Year Children's Activities - ET Speaks From Home says:
    12 December 2021 at 10:01 pm

    […] year, we made 12 different Chinese Zodiac ice cream sticks which can benefit the children in learning matching games and the Chinese […]

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Welcome to ET Speaks From Home!

I'm Eileen, a proud mum of two teenagers (aged 18 and 16), my daughter is living with visual impairment. Since launching this blog in May 2012, we’ve continued to grow and evolve, sharing our family’s journey and passions.

I love cooking, crafting, DIY projects, writing about Chinese culture, and creating YouTube reviews.

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