The Festival of Booths · early elementary Judaic Studies

Sukkot lesson pack חַג סֻכּוֹת

A week of meals in the sukkah, four special plants in a child's hands, and joy. 14 slides take your child from frame-and-walls of the sukkah to each of the four species in turn, all the way to the big finish — Hoshana Rabbah and Simchat Torah.

Ages 5–9 · K–3 14 slides + 7 worksheets Digital download
Sukkot lesson pack hero image — Hebrew Homeschool Hub
What's inside

Everything you need to teach Sukkot — from building the sukkah to shaking the lulav.

  • English presentation deck — 14 slides, 16:9, with a full speaker script in the notes.
  • Hebrew vowelized deck — same 14 slides in Hebrew with full nikud, including the names of all four species.
  • Worksheet pack — 7 printable pages: "my sukkah," trace Sukkot vocabulary, count & circle, draw who comes to the sukkah, word match, Simchat Torah flag, reflection.
  • Teacher prep PDF — 14 pages; slide image on top, full Hebrew speaker notes below.
  • Parent guide — 11 pages including a 1-day & 7-day lesson plan, Hebrew pronunciation help, sukkah-building tips, calendar context, FAQ.
  • Scope & sequence — single-page curriculum overview.

All four species — each one its own slide

Slides 8–11 give each of the Arba Minim its own dedicated slide in full nikud, with what it looks like and what it teaches us:

  • Lulav · לוּלָב — the long palm branch (the tall one)
  • Etrog · אֶתְרוֹג — the special yellow fruit (smells like heaven)
  • Hadas · הֲדַס — the myrtle (small leaves, round-tipped)
  • Aravah · עֲרָבָה — the willow (smooth, long leaves)

Slide 12 then covers shaking the lulav in all six directions.

The arc

The sukkah, the four species, the finale.

We open with the sukkah itself — what it is, how a family builds one together, why kids' decorations matter. Then we slow down for each of the four species. Finally we land in the joy of the finale: Hoshana Rabbah, Shemini Atzeret, and dancing with the Torah on Simchat Torah.

Slides 1–6 · the sukkah

  • Title — Chag Sukkot
  • What is Sukkot? — five days after Yom Kippur, in Tishrei
  • The Sukkah — our home for a week
  • Building the Sukkah — a whole-family job
  • Decorating the Sukkah — the kids' favorite job
  • Living in the Sukkah — eat, learn, host, sleep

Slides 7–14 · the species & finale

  • The Arba Minim — four special plants
  • Lulav — the palm branch
  • Etrog — the special fruit
  • Hadas — the myrtle
  • Aravah — the willow
  • Shaking the Lulav — six directions
  • Hoshana Rabbah & Simchat Torah
  • Chag Sukkot Sameach!
Why parents love it

Built for early elementary learners (K–3, ages 5–9). Written for the parent organizing the holiday at home.

No Hebrew required

Every Hebrew word transliterated. Every speaker note in English. The parent guide includes a pronunciation cheat sheet for sukkah, lulav, etrog, hadas, aravah, and the rest of the Sukkot vocabulary.

Hands-on by design

Sukkot is a tactile holiday — building, decorating, holding plants. The pack pairs naturally with whatever you do at home, from a full sukkah build to a tabletop "sukkah" made of cereal boxes.

The four species, slowed down

Each of the Arba Minim gets its own slide — Hebrew name in nikud, photo, what it looks like, what it represents. Your child meets each plant one at a time, never as a confusing four-thing bundle.

FAQ

Questions parents ask about the Sukkot pack.

Do we need a real sukkah to teach this?

No. The deck shows photos and diagrams of sukkot; your child learns the parts whether or not your family builds one. Many homeschool families use the pack to plan their first sukkah — slide 4 walks through walls, schach (the roof covering), and decorations.

Are all four species covered individually?

Yes — slides 8–11 give the lulav, etrog, hadas, and aravah each their own dedicated slide with the Hebrew name in full nikud, what it looks like, and what it teaches us. Slide 12 covers shaking the lulav in six directions.

What about Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah?

Slide 13 introduces both as the big finish — Hoshana Rabbah on day 7, Shemini Atzeret, and dancing with the Torah for Simchat Torah. Worksheet page 6 is a Simchat Torah flag your child can color and wave.

Do I need to know Hebrew to teach this?

No. Every Hebrew word is transliterated, every speaker note is in English, and the parent guide has a pronunciation cheat sheet for every Hebrew word in the pack.

What if we don't have a lulav and etrog at home?

That's fine — the pack teaches the species visually and tells you what to look for when you see one. Many homeschool families teach the lesson first, then visit a community sukkah to actually hold the four species during chol hamoed.

Is this Sukkot or Sukkos?

Both pronunciations refer to the same holiday — סֻכּוֹת in Hebrew. We use "Sukkot" throughout the lesson (modern Hebrew); use whichever your family prefers when discussing it.

Pairs beautifully with

Other packs in the Jewish Calendar Series.

Sukkot and Tu B'Shvat both honor trees — the etrog is one of the Seven Species, and Tu B'Shvat is the new year for trees. Sukkot also pairs with Chanukah, since both holidays center on a mitzvah a child can touch.

Tu B'Shvat lesson pack

Tu B'Shvat חַג ט״וּ בִּשְׁבָט

The new year for trees — including the etrog tree, one of the Seven Species your child meets on Sukkot.

See the Tu B'Shvat pack →
Chanukah lesson pack

Chanukah חַג חֲנֻכָּה

Another hands-on holiday — lighting the chanukiah, hearing the brachot, every night for eight nights.

See the Chanukah pack →
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