10 Halloween Ideas Shared by PTO and PTA Leaders

by PTO Today Editors

02/07/2016

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g class="size-full wp-image-7405 alignright" title="Halloween ideas" src="//images/ptoblog/2014/10/1014_halloweenideas_blog.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="300" />We’ve collected many fun Halloween ideas on both Facebook and Pinterest recently. If your PTO or PTA is planning a school event this year, check these out:

  1. Try a trunk-or-treat event and run a contest for the most creative display. There are some amazing trunk-or-treat examples on Pinterest.

  2. Hold a storybook parade. Children dress as their favorite character from a book.

  3. Sponsor a visit to local farm that sells pumpkins. Children can often visit the pumpkin patch, select a pumpkin, and bring it home with them.

  4. Host a scary story night with volunteer readers who love to dress up.

  5. Try a mix of activities for different age groups at your Halloween event. For instance, hold simple games for younger children in the school gym and host a haunted house in the auditorium for the older kids.

  6. Hold a movie-and-craft night. Show a Halloween movie in the cafeteria and set up several craft stations so kids can work on simple projects while viewing the movie. Include a bake sale or provide refreshments for the evening.

  7. Hold a schoolwide pumpkin decorating contest. Kids are encouraged to decorate, not carve, the pumpkins. Select a winning pumpkin from each grade and award the artist a small prize.

  8. Decorate classroom doors with Halloween colors and images of ghosts and pumpkins. Orange and black crepe paper will add a special touch.

  9. Try a series of different games at classroom parties like these: Halloween Bingo: Replace numbers with pictures of monsters, witches, bats, and black cats. Halloween Bowling: Use a small pumpkin as bowling ball and white paper towel rolls (decorated with black-construction-paper "eyes"to appear ghostlike) as pins. Pin-the-Tie-on-the-Skeleton: Using a life-size paper or cardboard skeleton, have children attempt to attach a colorful bow tie to it while blindfolded.

  10. Help students send Halloween grams with silly jokes in place of candy.

  11. This one's a bonus: Consider holding a school party on the weekend after Halloween. One group shared this idea noting that they purchase candy and supplies after the official holiday, saving a bundle because of sale prices.