Tag Archives: New Year

Giorgi Samtchkuashvili – New Year’s Story

Christmas and New Year is one of the most special holidays in the world. At this time everyone forgets about the problems and starts preparing for the New Year. It was from London that such a tradition as sending cards came out. The first New Year greeting card was printed in1843 and leaving it unanswered is not an accepted behavior. In England, Christmas is considered to be a favorite holiday for everyone. However, with Big Ben in London. However, the British are flocking to the New Year to see the beautiful fireworks, which distinguishes London from a city with many traditions. Imagine the work of Jules Verne “Around the World In 80 Days’’. Mr. Fogg and his friend in the New Year. “80 days around the earth”. It is a Jules Verne adventure novel. The book was first published in 1873. The novel describes the journey of Mr. Fogg, his French servant John Passepourt, around the earth. Hitting a circle for the earth is considered impossible in 80 days. Majesty Queen Victoria even steamships can’t do that but punctual Phileas Fogg said it could orbit the earth in 80 days. Phileas Fogg is a wealthy English man who has no family. He has a friend-John Passepourt and he is French.

Phileas Fogg decided to call his friend to meet together in the New Year. Traditionally New Year was not celebrated as widely as Christmas. However, Phileas Fogg and his friend still visited the high clock tower called, “Big Ben’’. They also visited the restaurant, where they had a lot of fun. They tasted a traditional English goose dish and even performed a New Year’s song (Auld Lang Syne). They sang, danced and decorated the table with their toasts. They would have problems in the future as they got older but that did not stop them from continuing their activities. I celebrate The Georgian New Year in the traditional Georgian way. I put presents for my parents on the Christmas tree and I also receive presents from them. I don’t believe in Santa Claus because I know that parents leave gifts. Fun and merriment begin at twelve o’clock at night. May Georgia be united in 2022 and may all children have a happy and joyful life.

Elisabed Kveselava

I love reading newspapers. There are crosswords, stories, etc. I like traveling stories. BBC’s newspapers write that on New Year’s Day Phileas and Gulliver meet each other. It’s a wonderful news, isn’t it? I like both of them very much, because they are kindly intelligent people. 

As we know, Gulliver and Phileas Fogg love traveling and on New Year’s Day they met together in Paris. They decided to celebrate this wonderful day and went to the supermarket to buy presents and drinks, but they don’t know French. What can they do? Suddenly Philleas saw Passepartout, his old friend who knows French very well and he helped them.

They bought presents, drinks and some food. Passepartout asks them “What do you want in the New Year?”  “We are so tired that we need only sleep and rest”. Soon they were at home and cook supper. At 12 p.m. they congratulated one other and they were very happy.

I want to read many books, go traveling with my family, watch cartoons and of course I will end this pandemic.

Elene Gamkrelidze – New Year

Before a New Year, Phileas Fogg started to pack his baggage and to fly around the world and see many places. Phileas Fogg doesn’t want to go alone, he wants to see a friend. Two hours later Phileas Fogg chooses a man and his name is Jean Passepartout. In the morning Passepartout starts packing his baggage. When he ended, they went to the airport and flew the first plane. At first, they arrived at Cuesse. In Cuesse they saw a beautiful Christmas tree. Around the Christmas tree, people were selling Christmas toys and Gingbreades. After Cuesse they arrived in Tbilisi. In Tbilisi the whole city was illuminated, the streets were full of cars, to see the illuminated city. After they arrived in Callcuta. On the Christmas tree, there were Christmas letters and waited to the Santa Claus and their wish came true. It was fun. Then they arrived in Hong–Kong. In the city, there were many fireworks and beautiful laser shows. Suddenly the flight was canceled. He decided to stay in the hotel. Three days later Phileas Fogg gets ready to go to the airport. 

Make a New Year’s Resolution to Humanize Your Marketing for 2015

 prof-resolution

People do business with people they like. That adage rings will ring as true as ever in 2015. To improve your ROI on marketing, you will need to humanize your communications.

Humanizing your marketing means you think about people instead of the quantity of likes, fans and followers. Someone reading your branded content for 10 seconds is different than someone doing it for 10 minutes.

How much time are people spending on average? Similarly, how many people get to the end of your article? To answer these types of questions, measure success with quality-centric metrics such as reading impact and read ratios. You could also measure live chat engagement.

It also means shifting the focus from purely volume and quantity into one that inherently involves more quality. Here’s how to humanize your marketing for the coming year.

 

Balance quality and quantity.

Naturally, you need to have an audience to share your content with. You can measure this through traditional metrics, such as the size of your email list or your Facebook audience, but approaching your audience purely as clicks, likes, or views can quickly alienate them. Worse yet, you won’t generate worthwhile results if your content doesn’t have a meaningful impact on your audience.

You should shift your mindset to gaging the reaction your audience is having to your content. This can be done by diving into analytics, reading comments and listening to social conversations your audience is having about what content you’re producing.

There some great publishers and companies doing this that you can look towards for guidance, like Upworthy and Medium, two publishers that churn out a ton of quality content and are now measuring the success of their content with attention minutes.

Publishing higher quality content of interest to your audience increases the likelihood your brand will stay top of mind. For example, Baileigh Industrial, a metalworking and woodworking machinery company, has a visually compelling Instagram account. Ty’ve taken the time to share images that better reflect the topics that matter to their customer base, while also highlighting customer success stories. Their competitors don’t even come close to this level of engagement and therefore, it’s much easier for them to come off as a more relatable, humanized business.

 

Don’t automate everything.

There are some very useful tools out there to automate aspects of your marketing efforts, like Buffer, Optimizely and HootSuite, but none of them provide the proverbial silver bullet to make your efforts successful. You have to balance your automation efforts with sensibility.

If you try to automate everything, your customer will notice your scripted messaging and the use of templates, which makes it far more likely that you’ll be ignored. At the same time, you won’t be targeting or segmenting your audience appropriately, which defeats the purpose of using some of these tools to save time, remain productive and reach your marketing goals.

Marketing tools like Marketo and Hubspot can help your business target select groups among your audience, understand their needs and pain points and cater your messaging accordingly.

To start, try better segmenting your email list to begin to see results. Automating a few different templates, each with a unique message to a few segments of your audience. This way you’re able to both automate your messaging without overdoing it and coming off as too robotic to your customer base.

 

Be honest about your intentions.

Lastly, be honest and open with your customers and admit when you mess up. Studio Neat, one of the first companies with a Kickstarter campaign that raised more than $100,000, follows this mantra by consistently updating their customers on their campaigns and blog when there are delays in production or expected problems with shipping.

Blogs like Farnam Street and Ramit Sethi’s I Will Teach You To Be Rich frequently tell their readers to unsubscribe if they’re not interested in receiving their emails, because they don’t want an audience that isn’t engaged or isn’t actively participating in the community.

Microsoft, on the other hand, asks their customers multiple times to opt-in to their promotional emails during check out, even if you’ve already said no. This isn’t an ideal experience for their customers and potential subscribers, instead it comes off as being too focused on growing an email list for the sake of growing it.

Today’s consumers have become much more intelligent with their buying habits, less loyal to the companies they frequent, therefore it’s important to be honest about your intentions and cater to the needs of your audience or you’re more likely to lose their interest.

With so many different ways to measure the impact of our marketing efforts, it’s easy to start perceiving customers as statistics like clicks and open rates, instead of people. In 2015, we should strive to humanize our messaging and marketing as a way of both delighting our audience and differentiating from the competition.

New Year Webquest

This New Year webquest by Gabrielle Jones includes activities designed to inform students about the history of New Year celebrations and the traditions which are practised today in a variety of cultures.

teacher-webquest

 

Note: The teacher’s notes for this webquest can be found at the bottom of the page by clicking the button marked “Teacher’s Notes”. We have also included a link to a student-facing page which does not have any links to the answers. You’ll find it by clicking the button marked “Student’s Page” at the bottom of this page. We suggest that you send students the link to the student page to prevent them from finding the answers too easily!

 

Warmer

New Year is an exciting time and many cultures celebrate it in a special way. This may include special foods and drinks, parties, religious festivals and other traditions. Answer these questions in pairs or small groups:

  1. How is New Year celebrated in your country?
  2. Do you know of any similarities or differences in New Year celebrations in other countries?
  3. How do you and your family celebrate New Year?

 

Activity 1: The history of New Year celebrations

Visit http://www.history.com/topics/new-years and read the sections titled ‘Early New Year’s Celebrations’ and ‘January 1 becomes New Year’s day’. Look for the answers to these questions:

  1. When were the earliest New Year celebrations and where did they take place?
  2. What name was given to the religious festivity, and where did the name come from?
  3. How long did the original celebration last?
  4. When people began to develop their own calendars, to what events did they tie the beginning of a new year?
  5. What event marked the beginning of the New Year in Egypt?
  6. When was the city of Rome established?
  7. Who included the first two months of the year to the calendar, and what were the names of the first two months?
  8. Who introduced January 1 as the start of the New Year?
  9. What changes did Christian leaders make in the middle ages?
  10. When was January 1 reintroduced as the beginning of the calendar year?

When you’ve finished, discuss what you found out with your partner.

Discussion:

Discuss one other significant festival in your country – do you know how long it has been celebrated, and why it became important?

Activity 2: New Year’s Traditions

Now go to http://www.history.com/topics/new-years and read the final section of the page titled ‘New Year’s Traditions’. Answer the following questions and then compare your answers with your partner.

  1. What do Spanish people eat 12 of at midnight on New Year’s Eve and what do they symbolize?
  2. Which countries eat legumes and what do they represent?
  3. What do pigs represent in some cultures and where is pork eaten?
  4. Which countries eat ring-shaped cakes and why?
  5. What is hidden inside the rice pudding eaten in Sweden and Norway at New Year? What will happen to the person who finds it?
  6. Which people first made New Year’s resolutions?
  7. What did they promise to do?
  8. What’s the most famous symbol of the beginning of the New Year in America?
  9. How long has the event taken place?
  10. What alternative objects are dropped in other American cities?

 

Activity 3: New Year celebrations around the world

New Year is celebrated on different dates in different places, and often involves very different traditions. In this activity you and a partner will find out all about two countries and their New Year celebrations.

Student 1 – Scottish New Year

Before you look at the weblink, decide whether the following statements are true or false:

  1. ‘Hogmanay’ means the first day of the year.
  2. Scottish people used to celebrate Hogmanay more than Christmas.
  3. Strangers are not allowed inside people’s houses during Hogmanay.
  4. It is considered very unlucky to enter a household without any gifts.
  5. A lump of coal is a traditional gift.

Now visit http://www.scotland.org/features/hogmanay-top-facts/ to check your answers.

 

Student 2 – Jewish New Year

Before you look at the weblink, decide whether the following statements are true or false:

  1. Jewish New Year is a celebration of the creation of the world.
  2. The celebration lasts a whole week.
  3. Jews believe that God will decide what the next year will be like for someone.
  4. A special song called the ‘Shofar’ is sung in the synagogue.
  5. A round loaf is eaten to symbolize the circle of life.

Now visit http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/religion/judaism/rosh_hashanah.shtml to check your answers.

Compare your answers with your partner. Then together, copy the table below and fill it in using the information on the websites:

 

Scottish New Year

Jewish New Year

Name of celebration
Customs
Food eaten

Activity 4: Quiz: International New Year’s Eve customs

Use the following website to access this quiz based on New Year’s Eve customs around the world. In pairs, discuss each question and decide which option you think is correct. When you have finished, you can check your answers on the screen.

http://www.topics-mag.com/internatl/holidays/new-year/quiz/new-years.htm

Post-quiz discussion:

How many of the customs are also practised in your own country?

Activity 5: Round-up task

Imagine that you have friends from another country coming to celebrate New Year with you and your family. In pairs, plan the evening, considering the following points:

  • What kind of food are you going to serve?
  • Which local traditions are you going to show them?
  • Will you visit any special people or places?
  • What are you going to do at midnight?
  • Will you make any resolutions?

When you have finished, compare the plans you have made with another pair.

Optional activity

Make your own list of New Year’s resolutions. Compare your list to your classmates to see if any are similar.

 

We wish you a happy New Year!

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