Intermediate East Newsletter
From the Desk of Principal Madigan, November 20, 2024
Pictured below are this week's Shining Stars, who were selected from all the nominees to win a free pizza from Papa John's.
INTERMEDIATE EAST FOOD DRIVE
Attention Rockets! Help us show kindness to our community by participating in a schoolwide food drive to benefit Fulfill of Ocean and Monmouth County. Each grade is competing to see who can bring in the most donated items! Students can bring their donations to their activity teachers until November 26th.
STUDENT OF THE QUARTER CELEBRATION
Celebrating our newly revamped Student of the Quarter program! On Friday, 11/15, we honored exceptional students (nominated by their homeroom teachers) who have truly exemplified the four core values of Intermediate East: Academics, Attendance, Behavior, and Kindness. 🌟We kicked off the celebration with a special ceremony and bagel breakfast to recognize their hard work and dedication.👏 Now, we challenge all of you to reflect on these values: Could YOU be the next Student of the Quarter?💡 Let’s keep pushing ourselves to be the best version of who we are—inside and outside the classroom! Rocket Ready...today and every day! 🚀
IMPORTANT UPDATE FOR PHYSICAL EDUCATION: CHANGING REQUIREMENTS
PAJAMA DRIVE
We are collecting pajamas for children living in shelter transitions across Ocean and Monmouth counties. Pajamas of ALL SIZES, tops and bottoms together, are welcomed. Each pair will be accompanied by a book and given to children this holiday season; promoting the gift of literacy. Please drop off donations by Friday, December 6 to Ms. Germano in G107.
CAREER ACADEMY OPEN HOUSES
ACADEMY VISITS FOR 8TH GRADE STUDENTS
The STEAM Academy will be here for an informational assembly for our 8th graders on November 20th.
The Business Academy will be here for an informational assembly for our 8th graders on November 26th.
Order your Yearbooks NOW for $50. Click on the attachment below.
https://www.jostens.com/apps/store/customer/1056300/Toms-River-Intermediate-School-East/
MARK YOUR CALENDARS FOR JINGLE JAM 2024
We are now accepting money for graduation gowns for our 8th grade students. Students only get a gown and tassel, no cap. Please click on the link below for the form.
FROM THE DESK OF THE SAC - MRS. KELLY ZUZIC
17 Thanksgiving Activities for Teens (They’ll Actually Want to Do)
by Bettina Weil
Written by Amanda L. Grossman
What do tie-dye Turkey cookies, blindfolded Pictionary, and matchbox car Macy’s Day parades have in common?
They’re three Thanksgiving Activities for teens that will keep them smiling, participating, and bonding with the family this year.
Whether you’re looking for Thanksgiving Day activities for teens, or activities teens can do to get ready for turkey day – you’ll find them below.
1. Let them Host a Friendsgiving
Choose a date leading up to Thanksgiving Day or after, where your teenager gets to invite 3-5 of their friends to come over for a Friendsgiving.
You can let them help in planning the menu, shopping for it, prepping, etc. OR, you can just totally do this for them – it’s completely up to you.
2. Set Up a Thanksgiving Bark Station
Let your teens create their own Thanksgiving bark to eat after the meal (or the next day…and the next day…and the next day…).
Set out half-sheet pans lined with parchment paper, and little bowls filled with things like:
Popcorn
Jelly beans
Candy corn
Sprinkles
Mini marshmallows
Reese’s Pieces
M&M’s
Peanuts
Pretzels
Crushed potato chips (bottom of the bag is great!)
Etc.
Give them instructions or help them to melt the chocolate bark part, pour it onto each person’s parchment-paper-covered sheet pan, have them spread it out with a spatula, then they can get to decorating.
3. Create Thanksgiving-Scented Candles
Your teens can be in charge of making soy-based candles with Thanksgiving scents to:
Use in the table centerpiece
Give out to guests as a mini-gift
Give as a hostess gift
Enjoy
4. Cook Breakfast for the Parents
Parents, you’re likely pretty busy on Thanksgiving Day – especially if you’re hosting.
Why not take this opportunity to let your teenagers take over in the kitchen and make breakfast for everyone?
Let them plan out what they want to make ahead of time, help them purchase any ingredients they’ll need (you could tack them onto your own Thanksgiving grocery list), and then give them as much free reign as you think they can handle.
Great learning experience, and you might just get some much-needed fuel on that day.
5. Put them in Charge of the Centerpiece…for the Kids’ Table
Maybe you don’t want to hand over the centerpiece to your teens to handle…but what about for the kid’s table?
Let your teens design, plan, shop for, and then create a centerpiece that they can proudly display on Thanksgiving Day (the kids will likely think it’s cool that their older cousins/siblings made something for them, too).
6. Play Thanksgiving Pictionary…Blindfolded
Your teen may or may not find Pictionary cool…but if they have to do it blindfolded? Well, that certainly might intrigue them.
Here’s a free Thanksgiving Pictionary printable.
7. Make a Mini-Car Macy’s Day Parade
Let your teens borrow their sibling’s matchbox cars, and create a mini-Macy’s Day float parade.
They can have a lot of fun with this – they could attach pipe cleaners and wires around signs they create, or tie strings with balloons, feathers, or any number of things.
The younger kids can even help them execute on the “parade route” at the end.
8. Play Minute-to-Win-it Games
There are all kinds of silly and hilarious Thanksgiving-=themed minute-to-win-it games out there.
I’ll highlight a few here:
Stuff the Turkey
Candy Corn Ring Toss
Turkey Rockets
9. Give them a Turkey Cake to Bake
Hear me out on this hands-on Thanksgiving activity: some of my most cherished teenage memories came from attempting the basically-impossible, and laughing my way through it with another teen friend.
Give your teens the crazy task of trying to pull off one of those Pinterest-worthy turkey cakes…and dare to serve whatever their creation looks like.
10. Do a Thanksgiving-Themed Jelly Belly Bean Taste Test Challenge
Did you know that Jelly Belly beans have a Fall line?
It includes flavors like:
Red Apple
Pumpkin Pie
Chocolate Pudding
Toasted Marshmallow
11. Set Up a Candied Grapes Station
I’ve heard teens are kinda obsessed with Jolly Ranchers (remember those from our childhood?).
Set up a station where your teens get to make candied grapes.
12. Have their Friends Over for Candy Apple-Making
Maybe you don’t want to host an entire Friendsgiving – that’s totally fine. You could just invite your teen’s closest friends over leading up to Turkey Day, and set up a candy-apple-making station.
They can make the traditional red-coated ones, or have them dip the apples in melted chocolate and add any of the following toppings:
Sprinkles
Chopped nuts
Coconut flakes
Candies
Etc.
13. Make Tie-Dye Turkey Cookies
Use these turkey cookie cutters, and these instructions for making tie-dye cookies, and let your teens make some rad (is that a word anyone uses anymore?), colorful turkey cookies.
14. Put them in Charge of Making Fido’s Thanksgiving Dinner
Maybe your teen doesn’t want to work on their cooking skills by helping cook the big meal…but how about cooking a Thanksgiving treat or meal for your family dog?
Here are some Thanksgiving Doggie Recipes:
15. Let them Take Over the Blender
There are so many fun, yummy, and…interesting Thanksgiving-flavored milkshakes.
Let your teens plan out the kind they want to try – researching the recipes, writing down the ingredients that they need, and then actually creating them.
16. Present them with a Gratitude Journal
Here’s a really cool teen gratitude journal that you can give to your teenager to start on Thanksgiving Day.
The prompts are fun and thought-provoking, and they include a mood tracker as well.
17. Do a Thanksgiving Cosmic Yoga
Okay…so your teens/tweens might get totally into this (or it might be way too young for them).
But I thought I’d mention it because sometimes silly kid things are just the thing a teenager needs to break a smile and have some fun.
Here are two free Cosmic Yoga Videos:
We may miss the days when our child-now-teen used to smile and jump up-and-down in excitement for an upcoming holiday. But we don’t need to throw in the towel on continuing to build a relationship while enjoying the holidays with our teens.