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SchoolKindergarten–Grade 5

End of School Year 2027

By ClassWeekly Teachers·

Taught in US schools

Kindergarten1st Grade2nd Grade3rd Grade4th Grade5th Grade
End of School Year, classroom illustration

Key Takeaways

  • End of School Year builds classroom community and gives students a meaningful moment to celebrate their progress
  • Creative activities for Kindergarten–Grade 5 make this event both joyful and academically enriching
  • Use games, collaborative projects, and reflection activities to make this milestone count

The Story Behind End of School Year

End of School Year emerged as an educational tradition that celebrates milestones in student learning. Wrap up the school year with reflection worksheets, memory activities, summer reading lists, and fun end-of-year math reviews. Schools across the country have adopted this observance as a way to mark meaningful moments in the school year calendar.

The tradition has grown organically, often starting with a single classroom celebration and spreading school-wide as teachers recognized its power to build motivation and community.

Today, End of School Year is observed by millions of students from PreK through Grade 5, creating a shared cultural touchstone that connects classrooms across the country.

Why End of School Year Deserves Its Place in the School Year

Classroom milestones build culture. When you take time to mark End of School Year with your students, you reinforce that learning is worth celebrating, and that the community you've built together matters.

Milestone events create natural moments for metacognition: what have we learned, how have we grown, and what are we still curious about? These conversations develop executive function, self-awareness, and growth mindset alongside content knowledge.

For students in Kindergarten–Grade 5, being seen and celebrated is more than a nice moment. It's a motivational anchor that carries them through harder stretches of the year.

How to Teach End of School Year by Grade Level

Kindergarten

For kindergarteners, make End of School Year concrete and sensory. Use picture books, puppets, songs, and simple art activities to introduce the key concept. Focus on one big idea, "we are all connected" or "the world is changing", and return to it throughout the day through different experiences.

Grade 1

First graders are ready for simple explanations and structured discussion. Anchor End of School Year with a shared read-aloud, then use sentence frames ("I notice… I wonder… This makes me think…") to guide responses. Drawing and labeling lets emergent writers participate fully.

Grade 2

Second graders thrive with short informational texts paired with graphic organizers. For End of School Year, have students identify the main idea and two supporting details, then share with a partner. A class anchor chart captures key vocabulary and builds shared knowledge.

Grade 3

Third graders can tackle research tasks connected to End of School Year. Set up a "learning station" with two or three curated sources. Students take notes, discuss findings in small groups, and synthesize information into a paragraph or poster. Introduce multiple perspectives where relevant.

Grade 4

Fourth graders are ready to explore complexity. For End of School Year, use a structured discussion protocol, Socratic seminar, four corners, or philosophical chairs, to examine different viewpoints. Assign a short written reflection that asks students to take and defend a position.

Grade 5

Fifth graders can engage with primary sources, data, and big-picture thinking around End of School Year. Assign an essay, multimedia presentation, or debate that asks: why does this matter? What are the different perspectives? What would you do? These questions build the critical thinking that defines college and career readiness.

End of School Year Classroom Activities

1

Growth Portfolio Celebration

Students select 3 pieces of work that show their growth and write a reflection: "I used to… Now I can…" They share their portfolios with a partner or in small groups, celebrating each other's progress.

Kindergarten–Grade 5
2

Class Time Capsule

Students contribute a drawing, photo, written reflection, or artifact to a class time capsule. Include: favorite book, current goal, one thing I'm proud of. Open it at the end of the year for a powerful reflection moment.

Kindergarten–Grade 5
3

Compliment Circle

Students sit in a circle and take turns giving one specific, genuine compliment to a classmate. Practicing specific compliments ("I noticed you always help people find their seat") builds social awareness and emotional intelligence.

Kindergarten–Grade 5
4

End of School Year Class Book

Each student contributes one page to a class book about the milestone event. Pages include a self-portrait, a fact about the event, and a personal connection. The finished book lives in the classroom library.

Kindergarten–Grade 5
5

Goal-Setting Bulletin Board

Students set one personal and one academic goal to pursue before the next milestone. They write their goals on a star or rocket shape for a class display, creating accountability and forward momentum.

Grades 1–5
End of School Year activities for students

End of School Year Games & Interactive Ideas

Memory Match Milestone

Create a memory match game featuring key learning moments from the school year, a book title, a math concept, a science topic, a class inside joke. Reviewing the year through a game is joyful and metacognitive.

Kindergarten–Grade 5

Classroom Olympics

Organize a mini "Olympics" of classroom challenges: mental math sprint, reading speed check, geography quiz, vocabulary relay. Students celebrate their academic skills in a playful, competitive format.

Kindergarten–Grade 5

The Compliment Game

Each student writes their name on a paper bag. Classmates drop in compliment slips throughout the day. At the end, students read their compliments aloud. Builds community, emotional safety, and positive self-concept.

Kindergarten–Grade 5

Quiz Bowl Showdown

Teams compete in a quiz bowl covering content from the entire year so far. Categories rotate by subject. Students review material, build confidence, and celebrate what they know, together.

Grades 2–5

Frequently Asked Questions

When is End of School Year in 2027?

End of School Year falls on June 7, 2027 in 2027.

How do I teach End of School Year to elementary students?

Start with a brief hook, a story, image, or question, that connects students to the topic personally. Then move into structured learning: discussion, research, or hands-on activity. Close with a reflection that asks students to connect what they learned to their own lives. Activities work best when differentiated by grade level for students in Kindergarten–Grade 5.

What are the best End of School Year activities for kids?

The most effective activities combine learning with engagement. For younger students: read-alouds, sensory explorations, simple art projects, and games. For older students: research projects, structured debates, STEM challenges, and writing tasks. The best activities always connect the event to real life and invite student voice.

Why is End of School Year important for students to learn about?

Wrap up the school year with reflection worksheets, memory activities, summer reading lists, and fun end-of-year math reviews. Teaching students about End of School Year builds cultural literacy, historical thinking, and empathy, skills that support learning across every subject and prepare students to be thoughtful, informed community members.

What grade levels is End of School Year appropriate for?

With the right scaffolding, End of School Year can be explored at every grade level from PreK through Grade 5. The content is the same; the depth, text complexity, and task demand shift by grade. ClassWeekly offers differentiated resources for Kindergarten–Grade 5.

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