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My Favourite Halloween Themed Centres for Kindergarten

I love planning fun Halloween activities because our students are typically so excited for Halloween and the themed activities make literacy and math centres extra engaging for them🧡

New to K or just looking for some fresh new ideas? Then keep reading for some of my favourite Halloween themed centre activities for Kindergarten!

1. Give Frankie a Haircut! (Fine Motor)

Even my non-scissors loving kiddos loved picking up a pair of scissors and giving Frankie a “hair cut”! Students can choose a Frankie with lines or use the blank template to give him a unique hair cut 🙂

*All of the activities shown in this pack can be found in my “Kindergarten Halloween Centres: Literacy, Math, Fine Motor & More!” pack here: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Kindergarten-Halloween-Centres-Literacy-Math-Fine-Motor-More-12268795

2. Halloween Themed Writing Activities

Themed activities are an easy way to get students excited about doing the same activity again and with a skill like printing, Kindergarten students need lots of practice and repetition to master it! So I always pop in a themed tracing uppercase tracing sheet and lowercase tracing sheet into the dry erase/writing centre when October hits!

Another holiday staple are my word charts and mini books! I simply pop the word chart on a stand in the writing centre for students to use as a resource and copy, slice and staple these Halloween mini books and offer them at the writing centre too!

There are 3 levels for the mini book so all of your learners can be successful/challenged! The easiest version is to trace the word, the harder version is to trace the word and then print it on their own and the third version is to simply copy/spell it on their own!

3. Dab & Read It

Kindergarten students typically needs lots of practice with letter formation, so this one is another staple and you’ll see it in many of my seasonal and holiday packs!

I use the black and white version with bingo dabbers and the colour version with magnetic chips and wands! There is also a decodable sentence at the bottom so students can practice beginning reading strategies, like tracking print and reading left to right.

I’m always asked where I get my bingo dabbers and magnetic wands + chips so I’ll link them here:

4. Halloween Build & Trace

Here’s a hands-on centre using a manipulative you hopefully already have in your classroom.. snap cubes! The students always really love snap cubes and it’s a great way for them to work on building their finger muscles too!

5. Counting Spider Eyes

This is a simple activity to work on 1:1 correspondance! My own little guy (3.5 years old at the time) loved adding the eyes to these little spiders! I happened to already have this plate in my Halloween bin (you’ll see it again in a patterning activity a little bit further down) so I used it as a placemat. I got if from Michales!

6. Witch’s Brew Counting

Out of all of the Halloween activities my little guy tried, this one was by far his favourite! He loved choosing new cards and making various brews! A common question on Instagram when I posted about this activity was where I got all of the loose parts so here is the source list:

  • Candy Corn: Michaels last year, I didn’t see them this year
  • Witch Fingers: Michales
  • Eye Balls: Wal-Mart
  • Bones, Bats, Spiders: Dollarama

I purposely made multiple options so if you don’t have all of these things you can just choose 3 or 4 of the loose parts you do have and just print the cards for those!

7. Trace/Draw a Jack-o’-Lantern Face

Another skill Kindergarten students need a lot of practice with at the beginning of the year is drawing shapes! Drawing shapes is foundational for both printing and drawing pictures so I try to provide centres that practice this skill as often as I can!

The book, “It’s Pumpkin Day, Mouse!” by Laura Numeroff goes well with this activity as mouse paints a variety of different faces on his pumpkins!

8. Sorting “Spiders”

This is a fun way to practice sorting by colour and working on fine motor skills at the same time! I love these tweezers, I have had them for years and not only are they sturdy they have a great amount of resistance that makes you feel like you are really working on developing those hand muscles! I bought them from Amazon here: https://amzn.to/3Nr42Q5

9. My Halloween Patterning Mini Book

My classes always love mini books so I decided to make a patterning version for Halloween! There are a bunch of different versions, so you can differentiate and print the pages that best fit your group/class!

All of the printables shown in this post can be found in my “Kindergarten Halloween Centres: Literacy, Math, Fine Motor & More!” on TPT by clicking here or on the image below:

10. Spider Ring Patterns (Freebie!)

Here is a fun, hands on way to practice patterning! I stuck a paper straw into a small pot of play dough (you could also just make a ball and squish it a bit so it stays upright) and then offered the patterning cards. My boys loved following the cards and building these spider ring patterns!

The straws are old (I think from Michaels but years ago) and the plates and spiders are from Michaels (this year).

Want to try this? Click on the button below to download it for free from Google Drive:

Hope you were able to find a few ideas to make planning for October a bit easier!

  • Yukari