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Chalk Art Activity – Play with Chalk to Make This Northern Lights Art

January 23, 2019 by Sarah White Leave a Comment

northern lights chalk art

I don’t know why I always associate the Northern Lights with winter. I guess because it is cold where you can see them? Whatever the reason, I think now is the perfect time to try this Northern Lights chalk art project from One Little Project.

(Maybe also because there’s not a lot of call for chalk in the winter so this is a great excuse to break it out.)

This is a pretty simple process art project, and while it uses chalk pastels you can break out the regular old sidewalk chalk for it as well if that’s all you have.

Check the link for all the details on how to make this pretty artwork for the classroom or the home!

[Photo: One Little Project.]

If you are looking for fun active games to get the kids moving, I highly recommend this Floor Is Lava Board Game

Sidewalk chalk is a great way to entertain the kids and you don’t need to buy it. It is so easy to make at home and inexpensive too. Sidewalk chalk is great for adults who like to draw or doodle too. Grab the kids and find some concrete sit down and have fun.

Looking for more sidewalk chalk crafts? Check out these articles we wrote featuring Sidewalk chalk tutorials, ideas and activities too.   We have a popular recipe over on our site too – DIY Sidewalk Chalk .

Making and using sidewalk chalk became very popular in 2020 as decorations and drawings were placed on the streets by children during the lockdown. If you are looking to make your own chalk check out this Sidewalk Chalk paint Kit it uses liquid chalk for squeezing and painting rather than hand drawing with solid sidewalk chalk.

Next Plan Idea:

  • Spring Activities to Get Kids Outside
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Have you read?

Teach the Teacher Activities and Lesson Plans That Put Students in Charge

There is something wonderfully humbling about handing the “teacher hat” over to the kids for a little while. Any parent of teenagers will tell you they already think they know everything, so we may as well harness that confidence and turn it into a proper learning moment, right?

Teach the Teacher activities are one of those classroom ideas that feel playful on the surface but are actually doing some very clever work underneath. Students have to organise their thoughts, explain a process, choose materials, speak clearly, answer questions, and think about what it feels like to guide someone else through learning. It is a little bit public speaking, a little bit project-based learning, and a whole lot of confidence-building.

These student-led lesson plans work beautifully for the beginning of the school year, the end of term, gifted learners, homeschool groups, classroom community-building, language arts presentations, reading response projects, and even simple craft-based demonstrations. A student might teach the teacher how to make an origami frog, braid a bracelet, draw a cartoon animal, solve a Rubik’s Cube, care for a pet, explain a favourite book, or demonstrate a simple science trick.

And honestly, I love this kind of activity because it reminds children that teaching is not just “standing at the front talking.” It is planning, practising, breaking something down into steps, checking that your audience understands, and being brave enough to share something you know. That is a big life skill tucked inside a very manageable classroom activity.

Teach the Teacher Activity Ideas and Student-Led Lesson Plan Resources

Teach the Teacher Activity – CraftGossip

This is the internal CraftGossip link I’d absolutely include because it is the closest match to the topic. The activity asks students to choose something they can teach their teacher, then plan and write out the steps. It is a lovely low-prep idea for kids who enjoy presentations, demonstrations, and showing off a little hidden talent.

Teach the Teacher Day Printable – More Than a Worksheet / CraftGossip PDF

This printable-style resource gives students space to plan their topic, materials, procedure, and even a quiz question. I like that it gives structure without making the project feel stiff, which is perfect for younger students or nervous presenters. It would work nicely as an end-of-year activity, a substitute lesson plan, or a “student expert” day.

Teach the Teacher – HundrED

This version is a bigger, more student-voice-focused approach where students lead conversations with teachers about school experience and improvement. It is a great link for older students, school leadership groups, student councils, or wellbeing programs. If you want the activity to move beyond “show and tell” and into meaningful classroom feedback, this is a strong one to include.

KS1 Teach the Teacher Template – Twinkl

This Teach the Teacher template is aimed at younger primary students and gives children a simple framework for explaining what they have learned. It would be especially handy for revision lessons, partner teaching, or letting children “be the expert” after a topic has wrapped up. Teachers could also adapt it for quick exit activities where students explain one thing they now understand.

Teach the Teacher Phonics Lesson Plan – Mighty Writer

This is a sweet role-reversal phonics activity where children help the teacher identify letters and sounds. It is simple, active, and confidence-boosting, especially for early years and lower primary classrooms. I love this one because it lets children feel successful without needing a long prepared presentation.

Nine Back-to-School Activities and Resources – Facing History

This back-to-school resource includes the idea of a “teach the teacher” exit card, which is a clever little twist. Instead of students delivering a full lesson, they tell the teacher something important about themselves, their learning, or what helps them feel safe and successful in class. It is a gentle way to build student voice right from the start of the year.

Jigsaw Classroom Strategy – Reading Rockets

Jigsaw activities are a classic student-teaches-student format, and they fit beautifully under the Teach the Teacher umbrella. Students become “experts” on one part of a topic and then teach it back to their group. It is ideal for reading comprehension, science units, social studies, and any lesson where you want students doing more of the talking and thinking.

Using the Jigsaw Cooperative Learning Technique – ReadWriteThink

This is another helpful jigsaw teaching guide with more structure for setting up groups, goals, and student responsibilities. It is especially useful if a teacher wants to turn a Teach the Teacher idea into a full cooperative learning lesson rather than a one-off presentation. I’d use this one for upper primary, middle school, or mixed-ability classrooms.

Jigsaw Activities – The Bell Foundation

The Bell Foundation explains jigsaw activities as information-gap tasks where students become experts and then share what they know. This is especially useful for language learners because it gives students a reason to speak, listen, explain, and repeat key vocabulary. It would pair nicely with a Teach the Teacher lesson where each student group teaches a short section of a topic.

Role Reversal: Student as Teacher – Home Education Directory

This article looks at the benefits of letting children step into the teacher role, especially in homeschool or small-group settings. It is a lovely fit for families who want to use Teach the Teacher activities at home, not just in a classroom. The idea is simple: when children explain something to someone else, they often understand it more deeply themselves.

Free Lesson Plan Maker – Canva

For students who need a more polished planning page, Canva’s lesson plan maker can help them organise objectives, materials, steps, and activities. Older students could use it to design their own mini lesson plan before presenting to the class. It also gives visually creative children a chance to make their Teach the Teacher project look a little more “official.”

How to Write a Lesson Plan – Discovery Education

This is a useful support link for older students, new teachers, homeschool parents, or anyone who wants the Teach the Teacher activity to feel more like a real lesson. It breaks lesson planning into objectives, activities, assessment, and reflection, which makes it perfect for students preparing a more formal mini lesson. I’d use this as a planning guide for upper primary and secondary students.

Group Crafts – CraftBits

CraftBits has a handy collection of group craft activities that can easily become student-led demonstration lessons. Students could choose a simple craft, list the supplies, practise the steps, and then teach the teacher or classmates how to make it. This works especially well for art days, homeschool co-ops, scout groups, and end-of-term classroom fun.

Pretend Play Felt Salad – CraftBits

This CraftBits project would make a cute hands-on Teach the Teacher demonstration for younger students. A child could teach cutting, sorting, food vocabulary, colour names, healthy eating language, or pretend-play storytelling using the felt salad pieces. It is crafty, practical, and just the right level of simple for a mini classroom lesson.

Easy Teach the Teacher Mini Lesson Ideas

Students do not need to teach anything grand or complicated. In fact, the best Teach the Teacher lesson plans are often the tiny, practical ones children can explain clearly in five minutes.

They could teach how to draw a cartoon cat, fold a paper boat, make a friendship bracelet, tie a secure knot, do a simple dance step, pronounce words in another language, care for a pet, pack a sports bag, play a card trick, make a paper spinner, or explain the rules of a favourite playground game.

For older students, try turning it into a proper mini lesson with a title, learning goal, materials list, demonstration, quick practice task, and one reflection question. That way they are not just “showing” something — they are learning how to teach.

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