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How To Help Harness Kids' Energy: Outdoor Activities That Blend Fun and Learning

5/10/2026

 
There’s something about those last few weeks of school. The weather turns, the sun lingers a little longer, and suddenly the classroom walls feel much smaller than they did in January. If you’ve ever watched your students glance longingly out the window while you’re trying to finish a lesson, you know exactly what I mean. Especially whlen other classes are outside and they can hear them.
how to take learning outdoors for kids
Over the years, I found that instead of fighting that restless energy, it works much better to lean into it. Taking learning outside doesn’t mean losing structure, it just means shifting it. Some of my most focused, engaged lessons actually happened on the playground, field, or even a patch of grass beside the school.
​
Here are a few outdoor activities that helped me keep learning going while giving students the movement and fresh air they were craving.

1. Turn Games Into Learning Opportunities

One of my favorite ways to combine academics with outdoor fun was adapting games the students already loved.

We often played kickball, but with an academic twist. Before students could kick the ball, they had to answer a question correctly. Depending on the class and subject we were working on, this could include:
  • Math equations
  • Fact families
  • Mental math questions
  • Vocabulary
  • Rhythms and note values when I was teaching elementary music
If a student answered incorrectly, it counted as a strike. If they answered correctly, they continued as usual by kicking the ball and running the bases.
​
The students became incredibly motivated to practice skills because they wanted their turn to play. It also kept everyone involved because teammates would quietly help each other think through answers while waiting.
What I liked most was that it never felt like “extra work” to the students. To them, it was simply part of the game.
playing ball game

2. Real-Life Measurement with Trundle Wheels

Another favorite activity involved taking out the trundle wheels and heading outdoors to measure the school grounds.
Students worked in groups to:
  • Measure the perimeter of the school building
  • Measure sections of the playground or field
  • Record distances carefully
  • Transfer their findings onto grid paper
From there, we practiced:
  • Scale drawing
  • Area and perimeter
  • Estimation
  • Problem-solving

This activity made measurement feel meaningful because students were working with spaces they saw every day. It also naturally encouraged teamwork and discussion as they figured out how to organize and record their data. Some groups became very competitive about accuracy, which always made me smile.
trundle measuring wheel

3. Use Community Spaces for Learning and Movement

My school was near a neighborhood park, and we took advantage of that whenever we could. During the last part of the school year, we would walk there and use the open space for:
  • Team-building games
  • Relay races
  • Math movement games
  • Cooperative activities
  • Outdoor centers

It became an easy way to incorporate daily physical activity, especially when the gym wasn’t available. I also noticed that students who sometimes struggled indoors often thrived in these activities. Having more room to move and interact changed the dynamic completely for some children.
running activities in park

4. Outdoor Reading And Writing: “See It, Hear It, Feel It”

I would often take my classes outside for silent reading and small reading group activities in the springtime. They enjoyed just lying around reading or discussing together while soaking in the sunshine.

Taking writing outside instantly made it more meaningful.
I’d have students sit quietly for a few minutes and really notice their surroundings:
  • What can you see?
  • What can you hear?
  • What can you feel?
From there, they could write:
  • Descriptive paragraphs
  • Short poems
  • Personal reflections

For students who struggled to get started indoors, this often unlocked ideas quickly. The environment did half the work for them.
reading and writing outdoors

5. Chalk Math and Word Work

Sidewalk chalk could turn almost any outdoor space into a learning station.
Some easy options:
  • Write and solve math problems on pavement
  • Create number lines students can physically jump on
  • Practice spelling or build sentences together
The physical movement combined with writing made it feel very different from paper-and-pencil work, even though the skills were the same.
chalk math

6. Nature-Based Learning Experiences

One of the most memorable end-of-year activities we did involved walking to a nearby seashore for a sealife scavenger hunt.

Students worked in small groups with magnifying glasses and buckets as they carefully searched the tidepools for different kinds of marine life. They were always fascinated by starfish, hermit crabs, and other living creatures they discovered along the shoreline.

For living creatures like starfish, students would usually call us over to show us where they had found them rather than disturbing or moving them. Other small items that were safe to collect temporarily could be brought over to be checked off on the scavenger hunt list before being carefully returned to the tidepools where they belonged. The activity naturally led to wonderful conversations about habitats, respecting living things, and observing nature without disturbing it.

What stood out to me every year was how engaged the students became. Even children who sometimes struggled to stay focused in the classroom were completely absorbed in the activity. Because they were so interested in what they were discovering, keeping them within the set boundaries and working cooperatively was surprisingly easy.

We often followed the scavenger hunt with a campfire and hot dog roast, inviting parents and younger siblings to join us. It became more than just a field trip or science activity; it felt like a celebration of the classroom community we had built throughout the year.

Those are the kinds of experiences students remember long after the school year ends.
sealife activities

Why Outdoor Learning Works So Well at the End of the Year

What I noticed over time was this: when students had a chance to move, talk, and interact with their environment, they were actually more focused during learning tasks, not less.

Outdoor learning helped:
  • Reduce restlessness
  • Improve cooperation
  • Keep routines going during an exciting time of year
  • Provide meaningful physical activity
  • Create authentic learning opportunities

And perhaps most importantly, it allowed students to end the school year feeling connected to each other, to their school community, and to learning itself.
outdoor lesson
The end of the year doesn’t have to feel like you’re simply trying to keep students occupied until summer break arrives. With a few simple adjustments, outdoor activities can become some of the richest learning opportunities of the entire year.

Many of the activities my students remembered most didn’t happen at desks. They happened outside, measuring the playground, solving equations before kicking a ball, exploring the shoreline, or laughing together during a game at the park.
learning outdoors can be educational
Sometimes the best way to keep learning strong at the end of the year is to take it outdoors.
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Talk soon. Thanks for stopping by. Charlene

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fun activities for year end review

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    About Me Charlene Sequeira

    I am a wife, mother of 4, grandmother of 9, and a retired primary and music teacher. I love working with kids and continue to volunteer at school and teach ukulele.

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