Students learn more about libraries as part of National Library Week.
As a class, students work in small groups to create a "100th Day" book.
Use the online Trading Card Creator tool to have children make cards describing their favorite characters from the books on their reading list.
Engage teens in this activity in which they use photographs to examine and write about courage on a blog.
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.
Help children use favorite photos to write a homemade memory book.
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.
Brainstorm popular expressions with friends and family, then explore their meanings through game play and writing/drawing/cut-and-paste activities.
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.