Spook-tacular ELA Extensions Your Students Will Love!

October has a special kind of energy in the classroom.  The weather is cooler, pumpkins pop up on porches, and students are buzzing with Halloween excitement. By the time the 31st rolls around, your learners are already dreaming about costumes, candy, and haunted houses. Instead of trying to fight that spooky-season energy, why not harness it and make your ELA block extra engaging?

Halloween is the perfect time to sneak in meaningful practice with reading, writing, and vocabulary, but in a way that feels like play. Upper elementary students love when schoolwork takes a festive twist, and these activities strike that sweet spot between rigor and fun. Best of all? They’re simple to prep and can be used as quick finishers, small-group centers, or whole-class projects.

So grab your candy corn, put on your witch hat (metaphorical or not), and check out my brand new Halloween Stations and these 5 Halloween-themed ELA extension ideas that will make your classroom feel festive and keep the learning strong.

Bring Halloween excitement into your classroom while keeping literacy skills front and center! These Halloween ELA Centers are packed with engaging, standards-aligned activities that save you prep time and keep your students learning all October long. With differentiated reading passages (fiction & nonfiction), creative writing prompts, spooky vocabulary practice, parts of speech Mad Libs, and more—your students will strengthen comprehension, grammar, and writing skills while having FUN. Perfect for ELA centers, small groups, whole-class lessons, morning work, or sub plans—this resource is flexible, easy to implement, and guaranteed to capture student interest.

More Phenomenal Ideas:

1.  Synonym Spook-Fest

Start with plain words like big, dark, scary, loud, and run. Challenge students to swap them out for more vivid, spine-tingling synonyms. Suddenly, dark becomes shadowy and big becomes monstrous.

Extension: Have pairs “Halloween-ify” a boring sentence into one that drips with eerie atmosphere.

2.  If My Character Wore a Costume…

Ask: What would your favorite book character dress up as for Halloween? Students write a diary entry, narrative, or comic strip about their character showing up in costume.

Why it works: It blends reading comprehension with imagination, a win-win!

3. Pumpkin Persuasion Challenge

Pose a playful debate: Should pumpkins be eaten or just carved? Students pick a side, craft a persuasive paragraph, and back it up with at least three solid reasons.

Bonus: Hold a “Pumpkin Court” where students argue their case and classmates vote on the most convincing.

4. Frightful Figurative Language

Hand out a Halloween poem or short passage and let students hunt for similes, metaphors, alliteration, and personification. Then challenge them to create their own creepy examples.

Class project: Compile everyone’s work into a “Haunted Hall of Figurative Language” booklet or display.

5. Mystery Bag Story Starters

Fill bags with fun Halloween trinkets (plastic spider, glow stick, mini pumpkin, etc.). Students pull out 3–4 items and write a short, spooky story that includes them all.

Variation: Make it a timed “Flash Fiction Fright Fest” and share the stories aloud for a hilarious wrap-up.

Wrap-Up Magic

Halloween doesn’t have to derail your literacy block, it can actually supercharge it! These festive extension activities are low-prep, high-engagement, and full of October fun. Your students will be practicing serious ELA skills… all while thinking they’re just having a blast. 

Looking for more ways to build purpose during your literacy block? Check out this blog post. Don’t forget to see my October book list updated with the most recent and exciting read alouds for spooky season and the blog explaining some other Halloween ideas!

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