

Pour them into a large tub lined with a trash bag. We also make 100th Day Stew! This is just a fun twist on the 100 snack idea…and it’s so much faster! So of course we have 100 snacks! We get 10 pieces of 10 different snacks so we’re practicing counting by 10s! You cannot have a celebration without food! Any good host or hostess knows this. I love seeing all of the things that the students collect and how the families display them! I mean, 100 pennies on a hat? Brilliant!īut my favorite 100th-day collection idea is water bottles! I send home an empty plastic water bottle with all students and ask them to fill it with 100 objects! It’s easy and keeps everything contained! The 100th-day of-school collections are a great way to engage families in our 100th-day celebrations! Again, this is something we’ve done in several different ways and I’ve finally found something that I like. Usually, we stumble on them a few weeks or months later! Last year was the FIRST YEAR EVER that we found all 100 Kisses! So, may the odds ever be in your favor. Every year we end up with 96 Kisses and the last few remain elusive. TRUE STORY! HIDE THE KISSES SO YOU CAN FIND THEM ALL. We continue until we find all 100 Kisses! They bring it to me, identify the number and place the Kiss on the correct number card. Put the stickers on the bottom of the Hershey Kisses. Who doesn’t like chocolate?! And a lot of chocolate?! Our math lesson for the 100th day of school involves 100 Hershey Kisses! True story.įirst I label 100 stickers with numbers 1-100.

Of course, if you’re going to write what about being 100 years old, you have to look the part! We use the Aging Booth app on our phones to make the kids look 100! Can we say adorable and HILARIOUS!? This is one of my favorite 100th-day-of-school activities! And then we write 10 words for each category!Īnother great idea is to have your grade level come up with 100 reasons why we love kindergarten (or your school!) We also write what we would buy with $100!įor our 100-word writing activity, we choose 10 categories. And we write what we would be like at 100 years old! We write what we want 100 of and what we don’t want 100 of. Of course, we are meeting standards during our day-long 100th-day-of-school celebration! We write 100 words. When they’re finished, we staple the strips to a sentence strip and have our 100th-day hats! They fill that strip up and move to the next station. At each station, the students pick a strip of cardstock with 10 boxes printed on it (included in our 100th-day resources). We set up 10 different stations featuring small objects such as stamps, stickers, and ink pads. You see, it’s the 100th day of school so this means we’re counting to 100! Our hats are great practice counting to 10 and counting to 100! Finally, I’ve found a plan that works so well and makes sure we all get 100 items on our hats. Over the years, we’ve tried lots of ways to make our hats. Our 100th day of school starts with our 100th-day hats! The fiesta has a fiesta theme while the 100th Day Of School is a generic theme with stars. NOTE: The content of these two resources is the same.

These 100th-day-of-school creations include everything you need for your 100th-day celebration! Hats, writing, chart labels, decorations, and more. The 100th Day Of School is always a highlight of our year! That day is a milestone for us because we’ve been learning and laughing for 100 days! In our classroom, we celebrate the entire day with nonstop 100th-day-of-school activities! That means lots of learning, meeting standards, dressing up, eating, and laughing!
