If your Earth Day plans need a little spark, this is the blog for you. With a few easy, low-prep ideas, you can bring in collaboration, creativity, and just plain fun.
I’ve put together three ready-to-use Earth Day activities that work across multiple grade levels and can easily fit into your day as a bellringer, station, brain break, or even a full-class challenge. Each one taps into a different type of thinking, from problem-solving to wordplay to content connections.
1. Earth Day Digital Breakout

In this digital breakout, students work their way through clues hidden in images, text, and links to solve a series of locks. It’s not a traditional question-and-answer activity. Instead, students must think critically, look for patterns, and collaborate to figure out each solution.
This type of activity builds:
- Problem-solving skills
- Teamwork and communication
- Persistence (because yes, they will get stuck at some point)
If your class is new to breakouts, consider modeling how to approach the first lock together. Once they get the idea, they take off quickly. Don’t forget if you need the answers, email me at preimers@tcea.org or check out my Breakouts 101 blog for more information.
💡 Extra Tip: Have students work in pairs or small groups and encourage them to write down combinations they’ve already tried.
2. Cracking the Code of 22

Earth Day falls on April 22, which makes the number 22 the perfect thread for a classroom challenge.
In this activity, students answer a series of multiple-choice questions where every correct answer connects back to the number 22 in some way.
From identifying the 22nd state to recognizing that soccer and football have 22 players on the field, students begin to see patterns and connections across content areas.
What I love about this activity:
- It blends trivia, math, and real-world connections
- It encourages students to look for patterns
- It works as an individual or group challenge
đź’ˇ Extra Tip: Let students pick a number and come up with five clues for it. Then swap with another group and see if they can figure them out.
3. It’s All About the Green

In this word-based activity, students are given clues that all lead to phrases containing the word “green” (with one fun exception).
From Green Thumb to Green Energy to Green Room, students connect vocabulary to real-world meanings while picking up on patterns along the way.
Why it works so well:
- It builds vocabulary in a fun, low-pressure way
- It sparks great discussions (hello, green-eyed monster)
- It’s easy to adapt for different grade levels
💡 Extra Tip: If this one doesn’t make it into your Earth Day plans, save it for St. Patrick’s Day.
Bonus
Free Earth Day Posters to Grab and Go
The National Environmental Education Foundation
More Earth Day Ideas to Explore from TCEA
We’re all about taking care of our planet, and over the years, that’s led to a variety of Earth Day posts from across the TCEA team. From Macee to Emily to Peggy, each brings a different set of ideas and inspiration to the table.
2023 Six Resources for Earth Day
2024 Earth Day Ideas to Inspire Young Eco-Heroes
2025 Resource Roundup: Earth Day Activity Ideas
Have a question or want to share how it went? Feel free to reach out to me at preimers@tcea.org.
Happy Earth Day 2026!


