Fun Activities for Students
- Interview a family member. (Turn it into a biography with illustrations.)
- Measure the area and perimeter of each room in your home. Map it.
- Graph the types of birds that frequent your yard or windows.
- Be completely silent for 60 minutes, then write about the experience. How did you feel? Was it difficult? Could you go longer without talking and just listening?
- Write and mail a letter to your teacher, principal, family or friend. Address the envelope yourself.
- Build a “fable or folktale fort” out of blankets and chairs. Camp in it all day while you create stories to tell your family over dinner.
- Learn Morse Code or create your own code and use it to communicate with your siblings through walls and floors.
- Alphabetize the spices (or other food items) in your kitchen.
- Stay up late and stargaze. Also, check out the moon.
- Call a grandparent or older relative. Ask them to teach you the words to a song or their favorite book from their childhood days.
- Design and build puppets then perform a show about multiplication, a poem, a song or a favorite story.
- Construct a family tree. Ask your family for some help.
- Learn ten new big words. Write them in marker in fancy writing. Try using them in sentences.
- Draw a map of your home and neighborhood.
- Create a Venn Diagram that compares and contrasts two people connected to you.
- Learn, practice, and perform a magic trick.
- Learn, practice, and tell three new jokes. ( ex. What do birds give out on Halloween? Tweets ; Why are teddy bears never hungry? They’re always stuffed!; What does one volcano say to the other? I lava you!)
- Use household materials to make and play stringed, percussion, and wind instruments. Create a song.
- Collect leaves from ten different (non-harmful) plants. Sort them by size, color, and texture.
- Put your favorite book, toy, and keepsake on a small table in sunlight. Draw or paint a full color still life.
- If you have stairs, walk up and count them. Walk down and count by twos. Walk up and count by threes. Continue through tens.
- Write a poem on your sidewalk using chalk.
- Classify twenty everyday objects by shape, size, color, height, mass (weight), and material.
- Measure the length of your bed using five different nonstandard units. (toys, forks, boxes, etc…)
- Call a person who speaks a language you do not. Ask them to teach you five common words or phrases.
- Create and use a secret code for writing a message. Share it.
- Using one type of paper, build 3 different paper airplanes and test to see how far they fly. Have a contest with your family.
- Set a clock three hours and seven minutes ahead. Whenever someone needs to know the time, help them figure it out by subtracting. (or any special number)
- Write down every adjective you say for one full day.
30. Color in a map with every state you (or your family) ever visited. Use another color for places you would like to visit. (included) - Find ten rocks and sort them by size. Create a rock craft using paints.
- Create your own game to play with your family. (ex: Memory, Candyland, Go Fish, Bingo, etc…)
- Imagine, create, and fly a full size flag that tells the world about you. (use paper, a paper bag, cardboard, etc..)
- Create an edible science experiment.
Adapted from: Kim Jones McClelland website: Weareteachers.com dkn
Leave a Reply