1-2-3 Come Do Some Haunted House Activities With Me
I love Halloween. Some of my favorite childhood memories surround this holiday. Although I don't care for horror movies, some of the old classics like Abbott and Costello and the Haunted House are fun. There's nothing like the idea of a haunted house to get students excited about writing.
With that in mind, I designed some interesting haunted house-themed activities. I hope you find them spine tingling!
If you're looking for some Common Core lessons for Halloween, the Haunted House Activity Packet might be just the thing.
It includes alphabet activities, adjective practice, vocabulary building, plus writing prompts, which are great for Daily 5.
You can complete the Haunted Houses ARE and Haunted Houses HAVE worksheets as a whole group, or have students make up their own.
I've included finished samples for you to share. For more practice, students can look up the words that they don't know, or alphabetize my list.
I've also included upper and lowercase trace & write worksheets, as well as assessments for both, plus a "Spooky Letters" alphabet game.
Use the game as an independent center, or whole group game. Pass out a lowercase letter pumpkin card to each student.
Call for a letter. The child holding that card comes up and opens the matching uppercase "window".
You can also use this file folder game as a different and fun way to independently assess a student.
I've included upper and lowercase assessment recording sheets for this.
For more creative writing, I've also included the writing prompt: If I lived in a haunted house... Click on the link for the Haunted House Activity Packet.
Since the apple and pumpkin senses writing craftivities were such popular downloads, I thought your students would enjoy doing one for a haunted house.
This is a quick easy and fun way to review the 5 senses, as well as work on adjective usuage for more descriptive writing. I've included a completed sample for you to share, or make one up of your own.
Students color their haunted house, trim, and cut the roof off, which they attach to the top of their writing prompt. The base of the house goes on the bottom.
For that finishing touch, have students put their school photo peeking out a window.
To add to the fun of writing about haunted houses and get students in the mood, dim the lights and play some Halloween music or a soundtrack from a thunderstorm.
Completed projects look terrific as a border along a hallway wall, or hung back-to-back suspended from the ceiling. Click on the link for the Haunted House Writing Craftivity.
Well that's it. I'm trying to keep my blogs shorter, so the other two Haunted House-themed activities will be in tomorrow's article. Hope you can pop by to pick up those FREEBIES.
I'm off to pack for a little get-away time with my hubby. Wishing you simple pleasures and heartwarming moments this weekend.
"Never let a problem to be solved become more important than a person to be loved." -Thomas S. Monson
4 pages.
Review the 5 senses as well as adjectives, with this quick, easy and fun haunted house descriptive writing prompt.
Click the link to view the new, 38-page updated version: Trick or Treating at a Haunted House.