Skip to content

It's Lit Teaching

Scaffolded High School English Resources

  • Home
  • Blog Posts for Teaching English
    • Literature
    • Creative Writing
    • Grammar
    • Writing
    • Teachers Pay Teachers Tips
  • Shop My Teaching Resources!
  • About
  • Home
  • Blog Posts for Teaching English
    • Literature
    • Creative Writing
    • Grammar
    • Writing
    • Teachers Pay Teachers Tips
  • Shop My Teaching Resources!
  • About
Seasonal Teaching Ideas

The Best Halloween Classroom Ideas for High School English

The Best Halloween Classroom Ideas for High School English

I don’t know about you, but I freakin’ love Halloween! In high school, however, incorporating the spooktacular spirit can be tricky. We don’t wear costumes (after all, we need those security cameras to be able to pick out faces!). Our snacks are highly policed. And anything that doesn’t enrich or supplement the mandated curriculum is frowned upon. But don’t worry! In this blog post, I’m going to share a few Halloween activities for high school students that any English teacher can use!

Halloween lessons might feel like they’re meant for young children, but I can assure you that even older English students can learn and have a lot of fun during the Halloween season.

If spooky season is your favorite time of year, keep reading. I guarantee you’ll find Halloween activities for high school students that you can implement regardless of your school’s policies.

Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links that earn me a small commission, at no additional cost to you. I only recommend products that I personally use and love, or think my readers will find useful.

Blog post Pinterest pin that reads, "The Best Halloween Classroom Ideas for High School English" over the image of a person in a ghost costume with sunglasses

Halloween Activities for High School Students: Know Your School’s Policies First!

Before you dive too deeply into any of these Halloween classroom ideas, it might be wise to evaluate your teaching scenario.

I think we’ve all encountered a student in our careers whose parents are against Halloween and don’t want their children involved in any Halloween celebrations. If you have one of these students in your class, you do need to respect those wishes and steer far away from any Halloween-specific activities.

But that doesn’t mean you can’t read creepy stories, study the horror genre, or embark on some creative writing!

Cover for Teachers Pay Teachers Product: Horror Genre Study Bundle

Some schools are also more strict about classroom parties. In my experience, parties are generally frowned upon in class, unless they’re tied directly to behavior rewards or curriculum content.

I highly encourage you to add in Halloween fun without having a party–there are plenty of fun ways to incorporate the October spirit while still teaching your students!

The end of this post will talk about some Halloween classroom ideas that are more fun than academic. If you want to do these, have your students write a reflection or use them as enrichment or rewards for students who are doing well!

Halloween Classroom Idea #1: Decorate

The ambiance is so important for getting your students into the Halloween spirit! 

Decorations don’t have to be expensive. For cheap and easy, grab a few bags of those cotton spider webs
 and string them around your classroom. 

If you want to avoid any trouble from parents or admin, focus your decor on fall and harvest themes, rather than spooky ones. You can pick up some mini pumpkins for less than a dollar, usually from your local grocery store or farmer’s market, and sprinkle them around your room. Opt for fall-themed bulletin board borders. 

If you want to push the horror decor, you could also focus on horror in literature.

You could do a literary bulletin board that highlights famous horror authors. Maybe you create a board around one specific story. (I’m picturing a black silhouette over a red, anatomically correct heart for Edgar Allan Poe’s The Tell-Tale Heart.) You could even create a bulletin board that reviews literary terms with horror examples.

If you really want to keep it cheap, just have students color Halloween coloring pages if they finish their work early. Then, you can hang these up around the room, on your door, or behind your desk. 

You can also project different spooky settings in your classroom. Just search for them on YouTube and let them play. (Some even have creepy music!)

While decor shopping, be careful. If you’re decorating a classroom for older students, you don’t want to choose any decor that looks too juvenile.

Blog post Pinterest pin that reads, "The Best Halloween Classroom Ideas for High School English" over the image of jack-o-lanterns

Halloween Classroom Idea #2: Incorporate Candy

It’s just not Halloween without candy, right?

Now, I know that food restrictions have gotten tighter and tighter over the years. Some schools are more strict than others when it comes to treats, so always be sure to follow your school’s rules around food.

Cover for Teachers Pay Teachers product: Creative Writing Figurative Language Tasting Activity
This FREE lesson combines two of my favorite things: candy and creative writing! This is a lesson that students of all ages will love!

Also, remember that allergies are a very real thing. I never buy candy that includes peanuts for my kids and often opt for suckers and other candy that are usually allergen-free.

You can always just pass out candy to your students on Halloween. This is a sure way to earn some “Coolest Teacher Ever” points.

(It’s not “Halloween candy,” it’s a reward for being on-task!)

But you can also involve candy in a classroom activity or lesson. 

My favorite writing activity that involves treats is a Figurative Language Tasting.

Basically, you hand out different treats to students, and they use a variety of figurative language to write descriptively about each snack or piece of candy. It’s super fun and can lead to some great discussions amongst your students. 

You can get the full lesson plan and free worksheet for the Figurative Language Tasting right here!

Halloween Classroom Idea #3: Read Creepy Stories

What’s Halloween without some ghost stories, right? This October, share some creepy horror stories with your students for Halloween. Scary stories are the ultimate Halloween activities for high school students.

If a horror unit is already a required part of your curriculum, then October is a great time
 to schedule it, if you can.

Here are some of my favorite spooky stories:

  • “The Landlady” by Roald Dahl is a great short story for any secondary grade. There is a lot of foreshadowing to analyze, it’s a pretty easy read, and there’s no swearing or graphic scenes, so it’s a safe choice. 
  • If your students really love to be creeped out, though, I recommend incorporating the master: Stephen King. “Popsy” is one of his shorter stories, includes a twist ending, and forces students to practice their inferencing skills.
  • Another option is to let them read a horror webcomic. E. M. Carroll’s “Out of Skin” is an excellent online graphic short story. This one requires lots of inference skills as well. 

There are nearly endless possibilities for delightfully horrific short stories out there! Grab your favorite book and gather your students for a creepy read-aloud.

As students read or listen to these stories, be sure to dim the lights in your classroom!

Cover for Teachers Pay Teachers Product: "The Landlady" by Roald Dahl Horror Short Story Study
Read “The Landlady” by Roald Dahl with your students for a creepy foreshadowing review!
Cover for It's Lit Teaching Teachers Pay Teachers Product: "Popsy" by Stephen King Horror short Story study
After reading “Popsy” by Stephen King, students will have to argue who they think the REAL monster of the story is!
Cover for It's Lit Teaching Teachers Pay Teachers Product: "Out of Skin" by E. M. Carroll Horror short Story study
Offer your students something new with E. M. Carroll’s webcomic “Out of Skin!”

Halloween Classroom Idea #4: Watch Creepy Shorts

Don’t have the time to devote to horror stories? What about having your students watch and analyze horror short films? October is the perfect time to use film to analyze suspense in storytelling!

Cover for It's Lit Teaching Teachers Pay Teachers cover: Suspense Analysis Horror Shorts Video Activity
In this lesson, students will watch different horror shorts and analyze the suspense in each. This is a great activity to do as a whole class. I love watching the kids react and discuss!

One of my students’ favorite activities is to analyze horror shorts. I’ve collected a large list of age-appropriate horror shorts over the years, each under five minutes. We’ll watch a short and then discuss how the filmmaker was able to build up suspense in such a short amount of time. 

It’s definitely one of my favorite Halloween lesson plans
 to pull out year over year!

This ability to analyze suspense carries over into literature. I like to do this activity before reading a suspenseful story, but it’s also a great stand-alone enrichment activity. In fact, I’ve done this activity as a 45-minute reward choice activity for students before. 

If you’d like a list of shorts and a worksheet all ready-made for you, just check them out here. Even if you already have solid Halloween lesson plans, this will make a great addition to your syllabus.

Otherwise, you can search for “horror shorts” all over YouTube.

Blog post Pinterest pin that reads, "The Best Halloween Classroom Ideas for High School English" over the image of jack-o-lanterns

Halloween Classroom Idea #5: Write Creepy Stories

It just wouldn’t be Halloween in an English class if we didn’t write some good horror, right? But adding a fiction writing unit to your curriculum can be a lot if there’s not already a place for it. 

This FREE lesson can be used digitally too! Use Teachers Pay Teachers free tool to push this PDF out to your Google Classroom!

A great solution for this is the 2-sentence horror story. This activity is just what it sounds like: students write a horror story using only two sentences.

It’s not a new concept or lesson. I discuss them in-depth in this blog post. Netflix even has a whole series now of horror shorts based on these 2-sentence horror stories. 

I recommend giving your students a bunch of examples before letting them write their own.

I do this every year that I have time, and the biggest issue my students have is being too blunt. Remind your students to show a scary situation rather than tell the reader about it. 

Let students write about their own experiences, get in extra writing practice, and allow them to create suspense as they write a personal narrative–horror style!

You can grab the lesson plan, worksheet, and tips for this activity for FREE right here.

Have more time for writing?

You could also have students write about their own creepy experience! Try a horor-themed personal narrative!

Encourage students to use concrete details to convey the fear they felt during a scary time–the first day at a new school, a roller coaster ride, giving a speech to the class, etc.

Challenge them to create suspense in their storytelling.

Fear is so powerful that it makes for an especially juicy creative writing prompt!

Halloween Classroom Idea #6: Halloween Printables

Anything can be “for Halloween” if you just give it a seasonal twist! Whenever you’re working on your usual grammar skills, try finding a seasonal or Halloween printable for it!

This collection of Fall-themed Grammar Review Worksheets covers a variety of topics and makes for great sub plans!

Practicing analyzing non-fiction? Find an article on the origin of Halloween.

Do students need to practice their grammar? Find worksheets with Halloween examples, like these Fall Seasonal Grammar Review Worksheets. (I have a whole blog post on Halloween grammar activities right here!)

Regardless of the skill, you can incorporate Halloween, fall, or harvest examples and texts. Just use printables.

This is a great (and easy!) way to add seasonal fun without totally derailing your curriculum and lesson plan calendar!

Halloween Classroom Idea #7: Just-for-fun Enrichment Activities

In high school, there’s not a lot of time for “just-for-fun” activities, so these may or may not be possible for you. But these Halloween activities for high school students are so much fun that I hope you find the time.

In my school, we have a flex-time where students can be pulled for remediation. If they don’t need help in a class, however, they can choose a study hall or a fun activity. These classroom Halloween enrichment ideas are ones that I’ve offered during this rewarding flex time before. If you have time for fun Halloween activities, try these!

(Don’t forget, while you do these activities with your students, put on a great Halloween party mix or spooky music on in the background!)

Halloween Gingerbread Houses

The all-time favorite Halloween activity for students is to create a Halloween haunted gingerbread house. (I do the same activity in December, but without the Halloween spin.)

You need to provide students with graham crackers, frosting, and a variety of candy (or ask them to bring these things in). Then, students can use the sweet treats to assemble their own haunted house.

(HOT TIP: Find the chocolate graham crackers for instantly spooky haunted houses!)

This activity can be a little pricey if you’re paying out of pocket. If I do this, I will try to collaborate with another teacher so we can split costs. Any extra gets saved so we can create regular gingerbread houses again in the winter. 

It might sound a little juvenile, but I’ve never heard a high school student complain about being able to play with frosting. Plus, it’s awesome to see how proud they are of their haunted houses at the end. 

Need to add a literary or academic slant? After construction, have each student write a story using their own haunted house as the setting for a scary story!

Paint Pumpkins

Earlier, I mentioned that you can buy mini-pumpkins cheaply from local grocery stores or farmers’ markets. I wait until it’s like 5 for a dollar and then buy a ton. Then, I let students paint their own jack-o-lanterns.

You’ll need to provide paper plates (for palettes), acrylic paint, and paintbrushes, in addition to the pumpkins. (Of course, if you have a handy PTA or students who will bring in supplies, then you can do that too!)

Then, let students get creative with how they decorate their pumpkins. Students can go the traditional jack-o-lantern route, but there’s also no reason to limit their creativity!

No way to use real pumpkins? Grab some blank pumpkin coloring pages. Then, hang up the results around your room!

Watch a Halloween Movie

Years and years ago, you could just put on a holiday movie all day and no one would care. Today, it’s a little harder to get away with.

If you’re working in an environment where you can, playing a movie can still be a great way to bring Halloween and some holiday fun into your high school classroom!

There are classics, of course, like The Nightmare Before Christmas, but lots of other more recent films that work well: Coraline, The Corpse Bride, Frankenweenie, etc.

If you need to make your admin happy, you could always whip up a worksheet for your students to fill out as they watch. You could also have them analyze plot, suspense, setting, or nearly any other literary term.

You could even play a movie in the background while having students do something more studious.

Blog post Pinterest pin that reads, "The Best Halloween Classroom Ideas for High School English" between an image of a skull and macabre book above and a collection of colorful pumpkins below

A Last Word on Halloween Activities for High School Students

Halloween can be tricky to incorporate into a high school English classroom. There’s a lot of curriculum to get through and never enough time. You might have parents or administration who don’t want Halloween in classrooms. 

But I think adding a little seasonal fun is important too. Halloween time is a fantastic inspiration for all kinds of language arts lessons and activities.

I’ve included some Halloween classroom ideas in this post that aren’t academic, but if you need to justify your holiday activities, stick to literature. Do a horror genre study. Read and write creepy stories. Look for foreshadowing, suspense, and spooky settings.

If students are reading, writing, and thinking they’re learning. If skeletons, vampires, and spiders are too much, just stick to fall themes–pumpkins, leaves, and corn stalks. Your students will appreciate the break from routine and you just might have some fun yourself! Happy Halloween!

SHARE THIS
About Heather

About Heather

I’m a full-time high school English teacher, caffeine addict, greyhound mom, and wife-to-be! Life keeps me busy but I LOVE helping other teachers!

Related Posts

Try These High School English Thanksgiving Activities This Year!
Try These High School English Thanksgiving Activities This Year!
This FREE “I Am” Poem is the Perfect Back-to-school Activity
This FREE “I Am” Poem is the Perfect Back-to-school Activity
National Poetry Month Activities: Everything You Need to Celebrate
National Poetry Month Activities: Everything You Need to Celebrate
Here Are Your High School Teacher Appreciation Week Letter Ideas!
Here Are Your High School Teacher Appreciation Week Letter Ideas!

Post navigation

5 End-of-the-School-Year Tips to Make Back-to-School Teaching Easier
The Best Teacher Gift Ideas for Christmas

Categories

  • Creative Writing
  • Grammar
  • Life Tips for Teachers
  • Lit Literature Reviews
  • Literature
  • Pedagogy and Teaching Strategies
  • Seasonal Teaching Ideas
  • Teachers Pay Teachers Tips
  • Uncategorized
  • Writing

Let’s Keep in Touch!

Meet me in The Lounge!

Signup for my newsletter The Lounge and be the first to hear about new teaching resources, blog posts, and oh, so much more!

Thank you!

You have successfully joined our subscriber list.

.

My Reading Picks!

Amazon Associates Disclosure

Heather Cianci is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com or myhabit.com.

Instagram

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Amazon Affiliate Disclosure
  • Shop It’s Lit Teaching Resources
Copyright © 2026 | All Rights Reserved | Site Designed by Little Theme Shop