Choose favorite rhyming songs or nursery rhymes then replace the rhyming words with seasonal themes.
Engage teens in this activity in which they use photographs to examine and write about courage on a blog.
Invite teens to explore issues that are important to them, and then write a script and film a video public service announcement.
Explore how music can have an emotional impact on a scene in a movie, then help teens write and film a scene of their own.
This activity invites children and teens to explore various careers and then write about what they might want to be when they grow up in a blog.
Explore fairy tales told in both old and new ways and use an online tool to help children create their own "fractured" version of a fairy tale.
Have children explore the different parts of mystery writing by making a puzzle about a favorite book. They can then invent and write their own mysteries using the online Mystery Cube tool.
While enjoying a book that features a journey, children write postcards from the perspective of the main character for each stop along the trip.
After reading If You Give a Moose a Muffin, have a "Muffin Party"! Children will write invitations, follow a recipe, and enjoy sharing their homemade muffins.
After reading about historical figures and other important people that have changed the world, children choose someone that they consider to be "amazing"—either someone they've heard about or someone they know—and create a book page that highlights this person.
Kids learn about weather sayings throughout history while writing and illustrating a book for younger children.
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 a variety of artifacts, mementos, and technologies, teens can create an electronic scrapbook of their most important moments in high school.
Students create a short, humorous story with at least one action character, and then use online tools to make a flipbook.
Students read a section from On the Road that deals with cross-country travel and reflects Kerouac's unique writing style. Students then attempt to write a narrative using Kerouac's stream-of-consciousness style.
The sun is shining, the birds are chirping, and you're surrounded by brilliant shades of green! Observe and collect sensory images from nature and use the sights, sounds, smells, and textures to create original nature poetry.
Children watch the nighttime sky come alive as the read a book about fascinating elements in the night and write a poem/story about the things they learn!