For activities related to autumn and autumn holidays, see below. Looking for Back to School Activities? Use the button below.
Enjoy fall foliage and spooky trips in these fall virtual field trips.
Click on the embedded slide deck to scroll through and see the virtual field trips offered within each category. To explore further, click the linked resource title to open the preview. To get your own copy to use with students, click Use Template in the upper right of the preview window.
All links should be reviewed by the teacher before sharing with students. Due to terms of service and privacy policy, field trips marked with a red icon must be teacher led for elementary and middle school students.
Students explore fun and engaging Hispanic heritage topics including food, animals, geography and pop culture.
Students learn about Hispanic heritage while reviewing two dimensional shapes.
November is National Native American Heritage Month. This studio board lesson guides students through math, language, and history related to Native Americans.
Created by the Equity Office, this Google Slideshow allows students to understand Native history in Anne Arundel County and to reflect on their cultural contributions.
Students build background knowledge about pumpkins and why they are important.
Use this template from Wixie for students to record a weather report for fall.
Hear Peter Reynolds read his book "The Dot," and then complete activities based on the story.
Students use a passage from the classic story to write their own poem.
Students learn the history behind Labor Day.
Students choose one of four members of the Constitutional Convention to research and complete the trading card.
Students find images to help define words in the Constitution. Then, they rewrite the Preamble using student-friendly language.
Students design a costume for themselves, a book character, or famous person in history. They design the look and list items the costume includes as symbolism.
Students can use this board to choose a Halloween activity. Includes math, art, phonics, and writing. They simply select the picture to open a template and start working.
Students take a virtual field trip to a farm and then complete activities to show what they learned about types of pumpkins and a pumpkin life cycle.
Students listen to the story "Happy Howloween" and complete a series of activities about the story.
Students listen to the story "Halloween at the Zoo."
In this video, students discover the history of Halloween.
Students retell the story using this Wixie template.
Students use the given elements to design a Halloween monster and then write a story about it.
Students use stickers and text to compose a Halloween version of the 12 Days of Christmas.
Students write a story using the provided Halloween emojis.
Students complete a series of math activities using a bag of Skittles in this self-checking spreadsheet activity.
Students circle the pumpkin that best shows how they feel and then describe why.
What does one pumpkin say to the other? Students create a pumpkin comic with Talkies in this template from Wixie.
Can you get the ghost to the candy? Develop computational thinking skills with these algorithmic activities.
Over a dozen "Would You Rather" questions around Halloween. Use as a community builder!
Use the clues to figure out what costume each child wore and what treat bag belongs to them.
Students use text and images to compare these two fall holidays.
Students make predictions about the topic of the day using images and text clues. Then, they watch an introductory video.
Students complete the decorations on the calavera so that each side is a mirror of the other.
For Day of the Dead, students create an altar for a deceased loved one and then describe it.
Using these Studio activities, students learn about Veteran's Day.
Choose the appropriate slide deck for your students:
Choose the appropriate slide deck for your students:
Students will be able to describe key events and explain the impact of Thanksgiving.
Celebrate Thanksgiving's origins, establishment, and traditions.
Students learn how to describe the explain the impact of the pilgrims.
Students survey classmates and graph how they are showing gratitude.
Students choose from 6 different Thanksgiving themed activities to show their learning:
Students design their own balloon for the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade and then record a story about it using the microphone.
Students build a digital turkey where each feather displays a different thing they are thankful for.
Students think of 8 slices of life they are thankful for in this interactive Lumio activity.
In Lumio students learn about ways to foster gratitude in their lives and participate in sorting activities, word searches, journal prompts and more.
In this activity students reflect on what are the small things that are good in their lives.
Students reflect on the important relationships in their life and the impact that a person has had on their life.
What does the turkey think about Thanksgiving traditions? Students use this template to share their thoughts!
What does gratitude look, feel, sound, smell and taste like?
In Wixie, students interpret idioms and create literal intrepretations using the art tools.
In Wixie, students fill a cornucopia with images, video, or text on what they are thankful for. Then, they audio record themselves talking about why they are thankful for those items using a talkie.
Explore real life shopping experiences where students learn to calculate taxes and factor discounts to become smart shoppers!
In this interactive video from the Smithsonian Institution, students hear commentary about the origins of American Thanksgiving, by learning about the relationship between European settlers and Native Americans.