Are you a teacher, parent, or student looking for a creative project idea? Â You should find this list of 62 project ideas to be a great resource for designing activities and projects.
When students create projects, they are the active agent in the learning process; Â the classroom is centered on the student rather than the teacher and the role of the instructor evolves to that of the facilitator. Â This list should give you great ideas to create projects for any topic of study. Â Leave a comment below to share how you’ve applied these ideas in your home or classroom.
Project Ideas
- Advertisements: create an advertising campaign to sell a product. Â The product can be real or imaginary. Â Try using this to teach persuasion, as an assignment for speech class, or to reinforce skills learned in a consumer class.
- Album Covers: create artwork for an album. Â The album may be connected to a skill (such a multiplication) and should demonstrate or explain how that skill is used. Â Or the album cover may be connected to a novel and the art work might present a relevant theme in the story. Â Another use would be to have students create natural disaster album covers in a science class where the cover would depict and explain the event.
- Autobiographies: write the story of your life.  This assignment may help you teach autobiography or reinforce a broad range of  writing skills.
- Awards: create awards to present to historical figures, scientists, mathematicians, authors, or characters from a novel.
- Banners: create an informational banner. Â Students could create time lines of the American civil war or the Spanish alphabet.
- Bar Graphs: create illustrated bar graphs. Â These may be used to explore data sets, use statistics to support a point, or illustrate a growth or change in a market.
- Biographies: write the life story of someone else. Â It could be a friend, family member, historical figure, or a fictional character.
- Blogs: create blogs for literary characters or historical figures. Â Create an actual blog for free at blogger.com or just have students write and organize articles on white printer paper if the internet is not available.
- Blueprints: create blueprints or floor plans of a scene described in a novel, an historic setting, or an earthquake proof bridge or structure.
- Boardgames: create boardgames where students review course concepts. Â Game play should be based around answering review questions correctly.
- Book Clubs: Students read either novels or selections from the text book and discuss the readings in small groups. Â Students might be required to take notes about the discussion or provide an audio recording of the discussion as the artifact to be evaluated. Â Students might also create discussion questions beforehand and have these approved by the instructor. Â This activity may be applied to reading selections in any subject.
- Booklets: create an informational booklet. Â In the past I’ve had students create booklets showing comma rules, narrator’s perspective, genre, figurative language, and more. Â Booklets can be applied to almost any unit of study and all they require to make are some blank white printer paper folded in half, one of my favorites.
- Bookmarks: create illustrated bookmarks with relevant information. Â A bookmark might summarize previous chapters or contain the definitions of challenging vocabulary words.
- Brochures: brochures can be made as either tri-fold or bi-folds. Students can create informational brochure’s about geographic locations, a story’s setting, or a natural event such as how a tidal wave is formed or how the food chain works.
- Calendars: create a calendar charting the dates of key events. Â This can be applied to an historical event (like a famous battle), a scientific event (such a the path of Hurricane Katrina), or the sequence of events in story.
- Casting Calls: select people (fictional, famous, or otherwise) to play the role in a movie version of story or historic event. Â Explain which character traits were considered in each selection.
- Cheers: create a cheer explaining a scientific or mathematical process. Â Alternately, a cheer could summarize the events of a novel or an historic episode.
- Classified Ads: create classified type ads as seen in newspapers. Â It could be a wanted ad or a M4F type ad depending on the age of your students. Â Update the concept and have students create Craigslist ads or Ebay listings. Â Example applications include covering vocabulary words, introducing multiple characters in a drama, examining figures in an historical event, or studying endangered and extinct plants and animals.
- Coat of Arms: create a family coat of arms for a character from a novel or a person from history. Â A good activity for teaching symbolism.
- Collages: create a collage or collection of images related to a topic. Â Images can be hand drawn, printed, or clipped from a magazine or newspaper. Â These work best with large thematic ideas that give students the ability to maneuver, like a collage representing slavery, the 1920s, Â or an entire story.
- Comic Strips or Books: create an illustrated comic strip or book representing events from history or a work of fiction.
- Crossword Puzzles: create a crossword puzzle to review definitions of challenging vocabulary words. Â Great for science, social studies, reading, and even math terms.
- Diary Entries: create a diary entries for a person from history or a fictional character who experienced an historic event. Â Can also be applied to characters in a story or survivors of a disaster.
- Dramas: create a play. Â Students might adapt an existing story or create original works and plays can be centered around any event in history.
- Editorials: provide an opinion about a hot topic in history or science. Â Should the space program be reduced? Â Is US military intervention in current conflicts appropriate? Â Is global warming a concern?
- Fables: create fables that teach a lesson. Â Students may create illustrated story boards of their original fables or even dramatic adaptations which they then perform. Â A good character building activity.
- Flags: create a flag representing either an actual county (like Libya) Â or fictitious place (like Narnia). Â This project should be accompanied by a brief report explaining what ideas the colors and images on the flags represent.
- Flash Cards: create cards helpful for study and review. Â Flash cards can be created for any subject and topic.
- Flowcharts: students create flowcharts analyzing and representing a mathematical process, a natural event, or an event in history or literature.
- Glossaries: If students need to understand a large array of vocabulary words, consider having them construct glossaries to help them study and review.
- Hieroglyphics: create pictures that represent vocabulary words. Â Alternately, students could retell the events of a story or historical episode in simple pictures.
- ID Badges: create identification cards for characters from a work of literature or for people involved in an historical event. Â Include relevant details on the badges.
- Illustrated Quotes: Have students choose a meaningful quote from a text that they are reading. Â They should explain why the quote interests them and then write the quote on a blank sheet of paper and draw related images.
- Instructions: write instructions on how to perform an operation or experiment, diagram a sentence, or start a World War.
- Inventions: create and illustrate your new invention that address a problem in nature or society. Â Address environmental or sociological issues.
- Limericks: write limericks about events from history or scientific discoveries such as, “There once was a man named Sir Newton…”
- Magazines: create magazines covering large units of study such as the Industrial Revolution or Darwin’s Theory of Evolution, that way many articles can be written. Â Images may also be drawn or printed and added to the publication.
- Maps: create maps based on actual geographic or national boundaries and landmarks or maps illustrating the setting of a story and the journey of a character.
- Merit Badges: create vocabulary merit badges where the term is defined in three or fewer words and a small image is drawn to represent the definition.
- Movie Adaptations: plan a movie version of a novel, scientific discovery, or historical event. Â Pick who will play what role, plan scenes, write dialog, even create a soundtrack.
- Murals: create a mural or a large drawing of many images related to a larger idea.  A mural about the Harlem Renaissance might contain images of Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, and W.E.B. DuBois.
- Myths: write creation myths to account for scientific or historic events or for a creative writing assignment.
- Newscasts: deliver important information from literature, history, science, or math in the form of a newscast. Â Newscast can be prerecorded or presented live.
- Pen-pals: write letters to and from important people from history or the characters in a story.
- Poems and Raps: write a poem or rap reviewing any topic.
- Postcards: similar to the pen-pals assignment above, but postcards have illustrations representing thematic concepts.
- Posters: create posters to review skills. Â As a bonus, many of these posters can often be displayed during state tests, so if your students create high quality posters, the posters may be a useful resource during the test.
- Questionnaires: create a questionnaire and survey students to gather an understanding about thematic issues from a text or social problems for a speech or presentation.
- Radio Broadcasts: create a script for a radio program covering any appropriate field of study.
- Reader’s Theater: silently act out the events of a story or text alone or with a group of people while someone reads the text aloud. Â Students should be given time to prepare their acting.
- Recipes: students can create recipes about how atoms combine to form molecules (H2O), or how to create events like the French Revolution or World War I (add one Arch Duke).
- Scrapbooks: create a scrapbook of your favorite poems or important events from a decade.
- Skits: create a short skit to bring an historical event to life.
- Slide Shows: if you have access to enough computers and a projector, I suggest having students create PowerPoint presentations. Â With just a little instruction, students should be able to create pretty flashy presentations, and you can combine this project with a research paper as a culminating activity.
- Soundtracks: create a soundtrack for a movie version of a novel or historical or natural event. Â Use actual songs or just describe the mood of each song if you do not know song titles. Â Explain why you feel that each song matches the event. Â A good activity to review mood.
- Stamps: students create commemorative stamps honoring people, depicting elements from the periodic table, or challenging vocabulary terms.
- Storyboards: create story boards summarize a short story or to plan a narrative, movie, or presentation.
- Tests: write a test to help you review unit goals and objectives. Â Questions can be multiple choice, matching, and true or false. Â Answer keys should be provided.
- Vocabulary Quilts: create quilts with badges representing the meanings of vocabulary terms. Â Badges should have an image and a few words.
- Websites: design websites that historical figures, scientists, mathematicians, authors, or characters from novels would have had. Â Also, student can create websites for historical movements, scientific theories, or literary concepts.
- Worksheets: create review worksheets. Â Worksheets can be applied to any subject and topic of study.
- Yearbooks: create yearbooks reviewing the characters and events from several stories that the class read or containing information about many important figures from history.
I hope this list of project ideas will prove to be a valuable resource in creating projects for your students or children. Â Feel free to share any of your ideas below in the comments and thank you for visiting.
Shrushti Mohadikar
/ August 22, 2022I have more ideas to decorate my class room
Ella
/ May 18, 2022Thanks so much! These are some great ideas!
Suzan
/ May 7, 2022Sooo good thanks expecting more for primary students specially for english
Swarupa
/ April 3, 2022Im so very glad to have come across this page. Can’t thank you enough for this great treasure of resources. Much gratitude and blessings to you.
jada
/ October 21, 2020thank you
put some more up there
Hlompho Sick
/ September 10, 2020Thank you so much for such great ideas
ALIZAY
/ February 25, 2020These are very useful and creative ideas for students I really like it thank you so much
Emily
/ February 24, 2020Thanks!!!!!
Emily
/ February 24, 2020I like the website.
Vivian
/ January 17, 2020Thank you very much for your valuable suggestions!
Carito
/ January 16, 2020It is really interesting I like me to use with my students.Thanks a lot for sharing your knowledges.
adriana
/ October 17, 2019Thank You Kanye, Very Cool!
Prashanthi
/ September 1, 2019Very use full details for students. Thank you so much
francis kunda
/ July 27, 2019There are great ideas that must applied in learning to acquire great skills.
Stacy Buss
/ July 9, 2019These are some great ideas. I can’t wait for school to start to implement them!
Hilal Haruna
/ June 29, 2019I want write a project, can you help me?
Jamie 45
/ May 20, 2019Outside the box ideas
Charlie23
/ May 20, 2019I am working on a project on The fall of ancient Rome I need some ideas for a extra credit project
Shermila
/ May 15, 2019This was very helpful for me. Thank u so much.
someone
/ April 24, 2019Geeeeeeeee, thanks! Eheh ehe heh. Thanks for all you help……….
Anna
/ April 16, 2019what about a news paper/Brochure?
Josefina signer
/ March 23, 2019The best web that I even see.
I’m an elementary school teacher. This is amazing to me.
Googgoo
/ March 4, 2019what are some 3D ideas
Mr. Morton
/ March 6, 2019What do you mean by 3D ideas?
ZIYAD
/ February 26, 2019I THINK YOU SHOULD MAKE AN IMAGINARY COUNTRY WITH YOUR OWN LAWS AND FLAGS I TRIED IT AND IT WAS AMAZING
ubaidullah
/ February 13, 2019thanks you so much.
Ambreen mohsin
/ February 10, 2019Very informative and useful stuff for teachers..
billy
/ January 8, 2019do you have enyother ideas
ITeach
/ January 4, 2019Thank you so much! I teach intellectually gifted children, and I want to broaden their feedback options in every unit. You gave me 6 new ideas for the unit we’re finishing now, and I think my students will love them!
Mr. Morton
/ January 4, 2019I’m happy to hear it. Come back and let me know how it goes!
Andres Garanzo
/ May 17, 2019My condolences. The “gifted” students are the worst to teach (and their parents).
chahd
/ November 1, 2018Thank’s a lot
Thanks to you I will present a good project work
Irene
/ November 1, 2018We would like to do a project about outstanding people of the USA and Pussia together with any US secondary school students. Hope to hear from those who gets interested!
blake
/ October 9, 2018this was good
Ganesh Shinde
/ September 29, 2018Very creative ideas for self development .I recommend all who wish to make our child creative just follow the site.
allyu
/ September 3, 2018nice
lenox ochieng
/ July 18, 2018can you help me with a project that deals with environmental conservation
Seeta limbu
/ July 13, 2018I’m in search of project work in english for class 2 with four skills .if you have ideas plz do share with me?
Phoebe
/ July 1, 2018Thank you so much for these projects. We are working with severally disengaged year 9/10 students who find projects that last more than a few hours “BORING”.
I am so excited about some of these projects and can’t wait to see how our students respond.
shanta
/ June 18, 2018hi can someone give me some ideas on history projects on Industrial revolution year 8
bob
/ June 4, 2018these are good
Mrs. says hi
/ April 29, 2018I couldn’t find an idea that was very creative and didn’t take a lot of time, but I still like the website.
rileynat k
/ March 15, 2018such great ideas thank you
Edward kehoe
/ November 28, 2017this was really helpful thank you.
Kimberly Jones
/ September 11, 2017As an entry level ELA teacher I am so very thankful for these resources and quick print helpers.
MEERA
/ September 2, 2017these ideas never sparked in my mind !
thanks a lot! this would be favourable for turning my project into success!!!
Lauren Isobel Bockstar (believe it or not that is my real name!!!!!)
/ August 12, 2017What about creating a family tree?!?!?!?!?!
😀
Jhon
/ July 23, 2017My gosh i think that these are great!!!
Rahaman
/ July 1, 2017It was very use full . thank u
H
/ March 29, 2017my teachers have used some of these ideas I think
The information master
/ March 13, 2017You could do a pop up book
Eliana
/ March 1, 2017I am doing a presentation on the Roman king Tarquinius Priscus and I need to do a slideshow but there also needs to be a creativity aspect. There are some great options here but I was wondering if anyone had any more ideas!? Let me know!
Madeline Deeps
/ February 27, 2017Thanks for your ideas!