Five joyful May classroom activities to celebrate the spark

The final stretch of the school year often fills the calendar all at once. Field trips, testing windows, and big end-of-year feelings land in the same few weeks. You still want meaningful learning to happen, but planning time has never been tighter.
These May classroom activities are designed for the days when you need something ready in minutes. Each template works as a quick bell ringer, a short writing task, or a partner discussion. Use one template as a standalone activity, or build a simple weekly rhythm to keep your students focused.
How to use these May classroom activities
These May classroom resources are low-prep by design. Open, assign, and go. Most work as a five-minute warm-up or a longer writing block depending on your needs. Prompts support multiple entry points, including multilingual students, so everyone can participate without separate modifications. Because responses are captured in Kami, you gain formative insights without any extra steps.
A simple routine for May classroom activities
Use this four-step routine to make learning visible across all the May classroom activities below:
- Post the prompt and set a timer: Between five and 12 minutes works best to maintain momentum.
- Model the success criteria: Provide one example response. One sentence is enough to help students start faster and understand what “good” looks like.
- Offer choice: Give two ways to participate—students can write two to five sentences or join a partner discussion with one shared reflection.
- Collect evidence: Capture one piece of student thinking (a highlight, a sentence, or a reflection) so you can see who needs support in the moment.
Week 1: Cinco de Mayo
Cinco de Mayo is a good opportunity to build cultural awareness and practice respectful learning habits. This activity gives learners a structured way to read, respond, and reflect without reducing the day to stereotypes.
Teacher tip: Before starting, set one norm for respectful learning. “We learn with accuracy and care” works well as a quick anchor.
Open our newest Kami Template: Cinco de Mayo – The Battle that Broke the Myth
Explore the Kami Library: Cinco de Mayo Resources
Week 2: Mother’s Day
Mother’s Day can be meaningful for some learners and complicated for others. This template focuses on appreciation and gratitude while leaving room for each learner’s lived experience.
Try it as:
- A gratitude writing prompt
- A “someone who helps me” reflection
- An optional classroom community share-out
Use a new Kami template: Mother’s Day Multimedia Reflection Activity
Explore the Kami library: Mother’s Day classroom activity
Remix with Book Creator: Mother’s Day book (option 1) | Mother’s Day book (option 2)
Week 3: Teacher Appreciation Day
Teacher Appreciation Day is a simple moment to practice specific, evidence-based gratitude. Students can reflect on a time a teacher helped them feel confident or solve a problem.
Use a Kami template: Teacher Appreciation Day thank-you templates
Remix with Book Creator: Thank-you book templates
Week 4: Mental Health Awareness Month activities
Mental Health Awareness Month is a good time to build routines that help learners name feelings, reflect, and practice coping strategies. These activities work best when they feel consistent and low-pressure.
Wellbeing Journal (Book Creator): This journal is great for bi-weekly checkins, it just takes 10-15 minutes of class time.
Note: In your library settings make sure “Read other books” is turned off for student privacy.
Digital wellness (Kami): Just a 10-minute discussion around focus and online safety can help students navigate their online activity for summer.
Get the Kami Template: Digital Wellness Check-In: Screen Time and Mindfulness Activity
Anger iceberg worksheet (Kami): This activity helps students name what is underneath a strong emotion. For multilingual learners add to this by creating a comment with a word bank.
Use a Kami Template: Anger iceberg worksheet
Week 5: End-of-year reflection activities
The end of the year is a good moment to help learners look back, name growth, and carry lessons forward. These end-of-year reflection activities work across elementary and secondary classrooms.
Use the Kami templates:
- End-of-year reflection (secondary) — pink and blue
- End-of-year reflection (secondary) — green and orange
- End-of-year reflection activity (elementary)
Book Creator gives students a way to reflect on their learning in portfolio form, which works well as a final demonstration of growth.
How to use these templates in your class this week
Select one of these May classroom activities that match your students’ needs. Set a timer for five, 10, or 20 minutes. Model one example response so students know where to begin. Collect or discuss the work to turn student thinking into actionable formative insights.
If the first one goes well, repeat the routine next week with a new template. You’ll build a steady May rhythm and collect meaningful evidence of learning without adding to your workload.
We Want to Hear From You!
Have a brilliant idea for more May classroom activities? Or perhaps you’ve created a masterpiece in your own classroom that you’d like to feature?
- Request a Resource: Let us know what to build next!
- Contribute to the Library: Share your creations with our community here.
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