October 25, 2023
With costumes filling stores and a chill in the air, Halloween is right around the corner. Celebrate the spooky season with these fun and creative Halloween classroom activities for elementary school students. You'll find various activities, from Halloween party games and crafts to educational activities like writing prompts and STEM challenges. Each of these delightfully fun activities requires minimal materials and is sure to get your students in a spooky mood for the holiday.
1. Scary Stories
Reading scary stories is the quintessential Halloween activity. Make the event as spooky as possible by following these steps:- Hand out a reading worksheet that involves predicting the story.
- Tell the students not to read in advance.
- Turn off the lights to set the tone for the story.
- Play creepy and suspenseful music.
- Show a static image of a haunted house or dark woods on your projector.
- Tell the students to imagine that this is where the story happened.
2. Rock Painting
Going for a walk is a great way to get your students moving and experience the benefits of nature. Head outside to the playground for a nature walk and have students collect rocks along the way. Then, go back inside and have everyone paint their chosen rock, creating monsters, ghosts, jack-o-lanterns, zombies or whatever spooky character they desire.3. Candy Corn Jar Guess
An easy but fun game involves filling a large jar with Halloween candy and having students guess how many are inside. You might include candies like eyeballs, candy corn, pumpkins and other spooky treats to celebrate the holiday.4. Halloween Guess the Word
Guess the Word is an engaging game your students will love playing with you. To play it, write a Halloween-related word on a card and hold it above your head. Have each student take turns guessing the word on the card or provide a one-word clue to help them. You might hand out Halloween snacks while playing this game, as it'll get your students' brains moving as they eat.5. Build a Skeleton
Make your own paper skeleton with detachable body parts, or find a printable one online to play this fun vocab game. Build your skeleton from the skull to the feet, pinning each part on your whiteboard or chalkboard to easily display it. As you build it, talk about each basic body vocabulary word, such as the skull, ribs and femur. Once you're done, move the parts around and have each student come up to build the skeleton and name each body part.6. Halloween Mystery Box
Decorate a cardboard box with Halloween colors and cut a hole at the top. Place different items in your box each week and have students reach in to feel the object and make a guess. They'll try to become familiar with each item without seeing it, encouraging them to use all senses to imagine what might be in the box. You might consider adding things like:- A piece of fruit, such as a grape or banana
- A utensil, such as a spoon or fork
- Craft items like a cotton ball or feather
- A small toy, like a slinky or slime
7. Whooooo Am I?
Another fun but simple game involves blindfolding one student and having the rest of the class stand in a circle around them. Spin the blindfolded student and stop them before one person in the circle. The student in the circle will say, “Whooooo am I?” like a ghost. The blindfolded student must guess who the student is and call out their name.8. Creative Story Writing
For a spooky creative writing activity, prepare 10 of each main element of a story — a character, place, time and basic premise. Have students select four numbers corresponding to each story element, from one to 10. The first number will be the character their story focuses on, such as a witch, a scarecrow, a mummy or another Halloween character. The second will focus on the setting of the story, and so on. Have your students write their numbers in their notebooks and tell them they cannot change them afterward. Then, project your list of story elements on the wall they will need to use for their own. Students can add characters or settings, but their chosen elements should be the focus. This fun activity promotes creativity in the classroom and can help jumpstart the spooky season.9. Pin the Tail on the Black Cat
Instead of pin the tail on the donkey, play pin the tail on the black cat this Halloween season. Place a giant cardboard cut-out of a black cat on the wall. Blindfold your students, spin them around and see if they can pin the tail in the right place. The student with the nearest tail wins a prize or a turn at the Halloween mystery box of prizes or candies.10. Word Find
Word Find is an easy game involving only a timer, paper and pens. Here's how to play it with your students:- Divide students into teams.
- Give each group a Halloween-related word like “Dracula” or “Frankenstein.”
- Have students find as many words as possible using the letters of that word.
- Give a time limit, such as two minutes.
11. Spider Webs
Teach students about spiders and their abilities as master engineers. For this activity, all you need is yarn. Teach your students about these amazing creatures, their silk and geometrical webs before having your students create their own web designs with the thread. Encourage your students to be inventive and creative since no two spider webs are the same.12. Handprint Ghosts
Among the most fun Halloween classroom activities, handprint ghosts might be the easiest. Have your students paint their hands white and press them onto black construction paper. After the papers dry, they can turn them upside down and add ghostly faces and other spooky designs. You might hang these ghosts around the classroom as decorations or have students take them home.13. Coloring Cut-Outs
Another fun Halloween craft involves creating or coloring in a cardboard cut-out. Each student should choose a spooky character, such as a pumpkin, black cat, spider or witch, color it in, and add fun designs. Have scissors at the ready and instruct your students to cut their character out. Then, you can add tape to the back and use them as window displays or for other fun activities.14. Whisper Down the Alley
Whisper Down the Alley, or Telephone, is a game involving passing one message between a group of people. Start by coming up with a spooky phrase and then whispering it to one student. That student must then whisper the message to the person next to them. The phrase will pass from person to person until the last student must share it out loud. The goal is to get the message to pass through the group without error, but this rarely happens, often concluding with laughter. You might consider trickier, spooky messages like:- The fiery jack-o-lantern was displayed on Halloween night.
- The spooky skeleton ate soup for supper.
- The witch brewed a potion in her giant black cauldron.
15. Flying Bats
Similar to designing cut-outs, this craft involves creating and cutting out cardboard bats. Have your students color in their bats with any colors of their choosing. They might also add glitter or glow-in-the-dark paint to spice things up. Then, attach strings to each bat and hang them around the classroom as a spooky decoration.16. Pumpkin Investigation
Introduce the basics of scientific observation with a pumpkin investigation. Fill a tub with water and have students conduct experiments to test whether a pumpkin will sink or float. This activity will challenge your students to make predictions, graph and discover density and buoyancy. After the investigation, carve the pumpkin together and enjoy an afternoon of other fall festivities.17. Frankenworms
Another spooky science experiment involves testing the reaction between vinegar and baking soda. When combined, they form carbon dioxide gas. You'll need the following materials to conduct this spooky experiment:- Gummy worms
- 3 tablespoons of baking soda
- 1 cup of warm water
- Two clear beakers
- Vinegar
18. Paper Pumpkin
Making paper pumpkins is a classic Halloween activity. Follow these steps to craft the perfect pumpkin:- Have your students stuff crumpled newspaper into a plain brown paper lunch bag.
- Instruct students to paint their bags with orange paint.
- Tie the bags with thick green yarn.