Everyone loves getting a greeting card, especially if it's homemade. Make a funny or thoughtful greeting card or invitation with pictures and a poem, joke, or riddle.
Children incorporate materials from outdoors with paints or crayons to create pieces of art to display on their clotheslines, fences, or porches for a neighborhood art show.
Using published comics and cartoons as examples, children can create their own while playing with images and language.
Sort through your junk mail and talk about what you find for a fun literacy activity before recycling it!
Children can interview family members and make an illustrated timeline of the most important family events and memories.
Plan a visit to a library to discover more about this magical place.
Playing board games or card games can be a fun activity, so why not make your own?
Children will draw on their knowledge of story structure and fairy tales to write their own.
These activities will have children reading signs, logos, brand names, and other words all over their home and community.
Work together, create a bingo board that can be played while walking around town, going to the zoo or a museum, or traveling on a vacation.
In this activity, children go on a hunt for places where they can read and enjoy books: on a family road trip, at the pool, at the doctor's office.
In this activity, children write short everyday notes, to remind, plan, request, or compliment others.
Students create a short, humorous story with at least one action character, and then use online tools to make a flipbook.