Create a treasure hunt out of word-puzzle clues hidden around the home or yard.
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 a variety of artifacts, mementos, and technologies, teens can create an electronic scrapbook of their most important moments in high school.
This activity can help teens create picture books that a teen caregiver can then share with children.
After reading a book or magazine, children and teens can choose a section and transform it into what's known as a "found poem."
Invite young adults to write letters to classmates, postcards from travels, and e-mails to family and friends.
Before seeing a film based on a book, classic or contemporary, children can learn about filmmaking and create their own scenes based on their favorite moments from the book.
Children can interview family members and make an illustrated timeline of the most important family events and memories.
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.
Motivate your middle school reader with books that include LGBTQ characters.
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.