Looking for a meaningful Christmas vocabulary activity that still fits your ELA standards?
In this post, I’m sharing how I turn a craft into an academic vocabulary routine using Greek and Latin roots. It’s festive, effective, and upper elementary approved.

’Tis the season for peppermint, parent gifts, and classroom chaos. But December doesn’t have to mean ditching all academic routines.
In fact, it’s the perfect time to lean into high-impact, low-prep activities that reinforce essential skills while still feeling fun.
One of my favorite go-tos?
A Christmas Greek and Latin roots activity that combines the holiday festivities with serious vocabulary practice.
In my classroom, I use this seasonal craft to reinforce morphology, review common roots, and build vocabulary before winter break.
Let me show you exactly how it works.
Table of Contents
Why a Christmas Greek and Latin Roots Activity Belongs in Your December ELA Plans

When December hits, routines tend to get wonky. Assemblies pop up, field trips happen, and you’re suddenly trying to fit meaningful instruction between winter show rehersals and the winter break holiday classroom party.
That’s exactly why I created a Greek and Latin roots Christmas activity that feels festive but still keeps academic goals in focus.
It’s not fluff, it’s morphology with a holiday twist.
Greek and Latin roots instruction is one of those practices that pays off all year long.
Teaching students how to recognize and decode word parts helps them read more fluently, understand academic language, and tackle tricky texts.
So why stop just because the month is shorter?
Truth is you don’t have to!
A Closer Look at This Christmas Roots and Vocabulary Craft

My favorite December morphology activity is the Christmas Lights Greek and Latin Roots Craft. Students receive bulbs with different roots, Greek, or Latin.
On each one, they write the meaning, a word that uses it, and write a sentence to go with it.
Then they string the bulbs together to create a colorful strand of vocabulary lights.
The result?
A classroom display that sparks conversation and reinforces word knowledge without taking up your entire week.




How to Use This Greek and Latin Roots Activity in Centers, Homework, or Projects

One of the best parts about this activity is its flexibility.
In my classroom, I start assigning December vocabulary activities the week before Thanksgiving break.
That gives us plenty of time to explore roots and finish our crafts before winter break.

Here are a few ways you can assign it:
- Independent Work: Students can complete bulbs during morning work or fast-finisher time.
- Centers: Add it to your vocabulary rotation. Just print the templates, provide root lists, and let students work at their own pace.
- Homework or Take-Home Projects: Let students start it in class and finish at home. Many love the art component and enjoy showing it off to family.
Morphology in December: Why Vocabulary Instruction Still Matters

As a teacher, I often feel pressure to “lighten up” in December. And while there’s room for fun, we shouldn’t underestimate our students’ ability to engage in meaningful academic work especially when it’s designed with them in mind.
Morphology is essential for vocabulary growth. Students in grades 4–6 are expected to encounter domain-specific and multisyllabic words in their reading.
Understanding how prefixes, roots, and suffixes work gives them tools to figure out unfamiliar words on their own.
This kind of word analysis boosts confidence, comprehension, and even writing skills.
A themed activity like this one lets you reinforce those skills while still leaning into the festive energy of the season.
Low-Prep Ways to Extend Your Christmas Vocabulary Craft


Want to get even more out of this activity? Here are a few easy ways to extend it:
- Interactive Notebooks: Instead of printing it full page, just reduce it to 80% in your printer settings. Then, have students glue their bulbs into their notebooks with a written explanation of the root.
- Partner Talk: Students can trade bulbs and quiz each other on root meanings.
- Display Them in the Classroom: Let students create strand of lights in the classroom. Just staple the bulbs to a string and you have an instant display to hung up in the class.
- Writing Prompt: Challenge students to write a paragraph using at least 3 of the root-based words they explored.
How This Christmas ELA Activity Supports Vocabulary Standards

This activity isn’t just another cute Christmas activity; it aligns beautifully with ELA standards related to morphology and vocabulary.
Whether your standards reference affixes, Greek and Latin roots, or decoding unknown words, this craft supports those skills in a way that feels fun and enjoyable.
For example, my standard specifically references using Greek and Latin roots to determine word meaning.
With this Greek and Latin roots craft, students aren’t just exposed to the words; they’re applying and creating with them.
When Do I Assign This Greek and Latin Roots Activity?

In my own classroom, I typically introduce this project in late November or early December. It runs alongside our regular ELA lessons, but I carve out 10–15 minutes a day for students to work on their bulbs.
By mid-December, they’re ready to assemble and display their vocabulary strands. Not only is it a great academic review, but it also brings a sense of ownership and joy to our classroom during the holidays.
Turn Holiday Crafts Into a Vocabulary Practice

It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking academic activities can’t also be engaging or festive. But with a thoughtful approach, you can absolutely blend content and celebration.
This Greek and Latin roots Christmas activity does just that. It’s structured, standards-based, and vocabulary-rich.
At the same time, it lets students be creative and contribute to a classroom tradition they look forward to each year.
Where to Find More December ELA Resources for Upper Elementary
Looking to keep the momentum going with more meaningful December ELA activities? Check out these related resources in my store:
- Gingerbread Narrative Writing Prompt
- Winter Text Evidence Practice
- Christmas Tree Vocabulary Sort
- Christmas SEL Writing Prompt
Each one is designed to make vocabulary and writing skills meaningful even in the most festive time of the year.

Pin This Christmas Greek and Latin Roots Activity for Later
If you’re looking for a simple way to keep vocabulary instruction strong in December, give this Christmas Greek and Latin roots activity a try. It’s creative, low-prep, academically aligned, and your students will love it.
Pin this post to save the idea and come back when you’re ready to prep your December ELA plans.



