
The first weeks of school are full of fresh pencils, new faces—and lots of awkward silences. That’s where Back-to-School Charades comes in. Whether you’re a teacher, homeschool parent, or after-school coordinator, this simple game is a powerful, screen-free way to get kids moving, laughing, and connecting.
This version of Charades is built specifically for the classroom. It’s age-appropriate, curriculum-smart, and actually fun to play. Plus, you don’t need anything fancy—just a list of prompts and a little space.
Below, you’ll find 150+ school-themed Charades prompts organized by grade level, along with tips for using them as:
- Icebreakers
- Vocabulary boosters
- Subject review games
- Transitions between lessons
- Indoor recess alternatives
🧠 Why Teachers Love Charades for the Classroom
Charades works at every grade level, and here’s why:
- 🧍♂️ It gets kids up and moving—without being chaotic
- 😂 It helps shy students participate without pressure
- 🗣️ It builds communication, body language, and teamwork
- 🧠 It reinforces classroom routines and subject vocabulary
- ⏱ It’s flexible: 5 minutes or 25, you decide
And best of all? It requires no tech, no subscriptions, and no prep once you have a good prompt list.
🪄 How to Set Up Classroom Charades
You can play Charades as a full class, in small groups, or with just 2–3 students at a time. Here’s a basic setup:
Materials:
- Slips of paper with prompts OR a whiteboard and marker
- Timer (30–60 seconds per round)
- Optional: category cards or levels of difficulty
Rules:
- One student draws or receives a prompt.
- They act it out silently—no speaking or mouthing words.
- The rest of the class guesses.
- Whoever guesses correctly gets the next turn (or assign turns by order).
- Use teams if the group is large!
✅ Tip: For younger students, allow some sound effects or facial expressions to make it easier.
🧒 K–2 Charades Prompts: Movement, Play, and Routines
At this age, kids are learning to express themselves physically. Keep prompts familiar, short, and silly.
✏️ School Day Prompts
- Sharpening a pencil
- Sitting “criss-cross applesauce”
- Raising your hand
- Backpack too heavy
- Writing your name
- Putting on your jacket
- Washing your hands
- Getting a sticker
- Saying the Pledge
- Dropping your lunch
🐾 Animal-Themed Breaks
- Waddling like a duck
- Stretching like a cat
- Hopping like a frog
- Stomping like an elephant
- Flapping like a bird
- Galloping like a horse
- Buzzing like a bee
- Crawling like a snail
- Pretending to hibernate
- Dancing like a monkey
💡 Fun in the Classroom
- Gluing your fingers together
- Cutting paper (not your worksheet!)
- Finding your cubby
- Coloring carefully
- Losing your eraser
- Yawning during story time
- Sneezing loudly
- Giving a high five
- Cleaning up toys
- Doing the calendar routine
🧸 Tip for teachers: Use these after a sit-down task—kids get the wiggles out while practicing following directions.

🧒 3–5 Charades Prompts: School Life & Learning in Action
Older elementary students love slightly more complex ideas. These prompts mix school events, daily routines, and classroom humor.
📚 Classroom & School Life
- Teacher erasing the board
- Classmate who forgot their homework
- Waiting in line for lunch
- School fire drill
- Getting a library book
- Trying to whisper in class
- Slipping on the hallway floor
- Showing a hall pass
- Getting caught passing notes
- Dropping your pencil case
✍️ Learning in Motion
- Solving a math problem
- Typing on a Chromebook
- Acting out a spelling word
- Skipping a question on a test
- Drawing a diagram
- Making a graph
- Reading quietly
- Taking a pop quiz
- Pretending to study
- Playing a recorder
🎉 Recess & Field Trips
- Jumping rope
- Climbing a rock wall
- Losing your shoe at recess
- Eating a packed lunch
- Chasing someone during tag
- Riding the school bus
- Visiting the zoo
- Watching a science show
- Touring the fire station
- Petting a class animal
🧠 Learning extension: Use these to review routines or even vocab—ask students to come up with subject-specific prompts.
👦 6–8 Charades Prompts: Subjects, Social Life & Middle School Mayhem
Middle schoolers need movement, but they also love humor, pop culture, and light social awkwardness. These prompts mix core subjects with day-to-day drama.
🧪 Subject-Based Prompts
- Mixing chemicals in science
- Forgetting your locker combo
- Reading a graphic novel
- Giving a class presentation
- Making a pie chart
- Acting out a historical figure
- Walking into the wrong classroom
- Using a microscope
- Solving an algebra problem
- Failing your math quiz (oops)
🤷 Social & Emotional Moments
- Texting under your desk
- Rolling your eyes
- Asking someone to sit with you
- Being nervous before a test
- Laughing at the wrong moment
- Falling asleep in class
- Running late
- Checking your reflection in your laptop
- Forgetting it’s picture day
- Getting called out for chewing gum
🤸 Movement & Humor
- Spilling water all over your notes
- Doing jumping jacks in PE
- Slipping in the cafeteria
- Racing to catch the bus
- Playing dodgeball
- Losing your voice during debate
- Trying to stay awake in health class
- Throwing a paper airplane
- Doing an awkward group project
- Dancing at the school dance
📓 Tip for teachers: Let students submit anonymous prompt ideas to make them feel ownership of the game.
🧑🎓 9–12 Charades Prompts: Academic Pressure, Teen Life, and Inside Jokes
High schoolers will get more out of Charades that feels authentic—not babyish. These prompts add irony, stress, and shared experiences.
📖 High School Vibes
- Writing a five-paragraph essay
- Studying for finals at 1 a.m.
- Getting a college rejection letter
- Forgetting your locker combo
- Zoning out during a lecture
- Pretending to do the reading
- Finishing an essay 30 seconds before it’s due
- Giving a TED Talk
- Googling something during class
- Turning off your camera in Zoom class
🎭 Social Scenes
- Being asked to prom
- Faking confidence in gym class
- Trying to flirt
- Being ghosted
- Passing someone a note
- Staring at your crush in math
- Avoiding group work
- Waiting for your Uber
- Getting called out by a teacher
- Texting instead of paying attention
🎓 End of Year & Milestones
- Throwing your graduation cap
- Saying goodbye to friends
- Getting your yearbook signed
- Taking senior photos
- Crashing the graduation stage
- Falling asleep during the valedictorian speech
- Getting your schedule on day one
- Touring a college
- Cheering at a pep rally
- Winning “Most Likely to…”
🎤 Variation: Let students pair up to act scenes together for more complex prompts.

🧾 Printable Prompt Tips & Setup Ideas
For teachers who want structure, try one of these low-prep tools:
- Color-coded cards by grade or subject (e.g., red = science, green = routine)
- Printable slip sets for students to draw from
- Laminated decks for reuse all year
- Student-created cards for a review game
- Use difficulty tiers: ⭐ easy / ⭐⭐ moderate / ⭐⭐⭐ challenge!
🖍 Pro tip: Let students decorate the cards before you start the game. It builds ownership and excitement!
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