7 Resources For Using Star Wars In The Classroom



To celebrate Star Wars Reads Day this year, we’re sharing this collection of free printable Star Wars activity sheets that you can download and print out at home for your kids to enjoy. If you want even more Star Wars reading fun, check out our Star Wars Reads post where Z shows some of the books in video and you can entire to win a fantastic. I teach 3rd grade acceleration (3rd & 4th grade math together) and I do a zoo map for area and perimeter. They have to create buildings for different animals using rectangles (but they can add multiple rectangles together to make odd shaped buildings and then have to determine perimeter (pretty easy) and area by finding the area of each rectangle and then adding them together.

  1. 7 Resources For Using Star Wars In The Classroom Games
7 resources for using star wars in the classroom environment7 Resources For Using Star Wars In The Classroom
  • You see, I am an Advanced Placement (AP) World History teacher in Rocklin, CA, and although my classroom is littered with posters, toys and miscellaneous Star Wars gifts from students throughout the years, I questioned if I was qualified to write a post about Star Wars and my teaching.
  • What other resources can I use with these display stars? Use these editable display stars to keep track of birthdays in the classroom! Have your students write their names on a star each and put their star on their birthday month poster. You can also use these stars to keep track of rewards or write down the success criteria for your lesson.

Looking for some fun Star Wars™ activities for your young Jedi? You’ve come to the right side of the Force! From making your own finger puppets to fun trivia questions, we’ve got you covered for plenty of fun times in this galaxy … and the next!

Using7 resources for using star wars in the classroom game
  • Star Wars LEGO Coloring Page

    How will your LEGO Star Wars minifigures turn out? Pick up a crayon and find out!

    Ages 2 – 5

  • Star Wars Finger Puppets

    Create your own Star Wars stories with the help of these finger puppets.

    Ages 2 – 5

  • Star Wars Matching Activity

    Can you match each character to his shadow? Draw a line from the picture on the left to the corresponding picture on the right.

    Ages 2 – 5

  • Star Wars Maze Activity

    Solve the maze to help Luke rescue Princess Leia.

    Ages 2 – 5

  • Master Yoda Puppet Stick Craft

    Judge a puppet by its size, will you? Make up your own stories about the Jedi Master’s adventures with this fun Yoda puppet.

    Ages 3 – 6

  • Bith Band Spoon Puppets Craft

    The Mos Eisley Cantina may not be the safest hangout, but Figrin D’an and his Bith band—the Modal Nodes—sure make it hoppin’!

    Ages 3 – 6

  • Star Wars Battle of Yavin Maze

    Luke Skywalker has just joined the rebel fleet! He’s on a desperate mission to destory the Death Star. Help him fly through the maze to his target so he can win the battle!

    Ages 4 – 7

  • Star Wars LEGO Trivia

    Test your knowledge of LEGO Star Wars with these fun trivia questions. Answer them correctly and consider yourself a Jedi Master.

    Ages 4 – 7

  • A Glance into Yoda's Past Word Search

    More than 900 years old, Yoda has met many people and traveled to countless worlds in the Republic. Search the grid below to see if you can find just some of the people he’s met and places he’s seen over the years.

    Ages 7 – 12

  • Star Wars Creative Writing Prompts

    Inspire young Jedi to travel to a galaxy far, far away with these writing prompts created by the authors who’ve written Star Wars novels!

    Ages 12+

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7 Resources For Using Star Wars In The Classroom Games


Math Projects

Compiled By: Gotta Java
Math projects can be used as extension activities, student differentiation, and extra credit. Here are some examples.
Math Curse
Posted by:JudyW #142934

My students had a blast making a book by writing their own problems similar to those found in the book, The Math Curse. I read it to them and then asked them to think about how math was used in their daily lives. Some of them wrote really cute paragraphs and even did illustrations.
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Geometry Photography
Posted by:Lynne in VA #131497

If you have access to digital cameras, have your class hunt for plane shapes in the school, photograph them, and identify them. This can also work with line relationships...perpendicular lines in the corners and on cinder blocks and floor and ceiling tiles, parallel lines from the same places, and intersecting lines almost anywhere. Later you can add the three-D shapes to your display as well as angles found and identified.
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Geometry Map Project
Posted by:ejs #131498

This is an assignment I gave to my middle school students:
Geometry Map Project
Angles, Lines and Triangles
Your task is to design a map that includes several different kinds of lines, angles and triangles. Your map can be of a town, your neighborhood or a made up place. It must however include the following:
- Two sets of streets that are parallel
- Two sets of streets that are perpendicular
- One street that intersects another streets to form an obtuse angle
- One street intersects another to form an acute angle
- One street that is a line segment
- One street that is a line
- One street that is a ray
- An ice cream parlor in the shape of an equilateral triangle
- A Pool that is in the shape of a...
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Math Projects
Posted by:camp823 #142935

I have done the million dollar project (they have to spend $1 million on things in catalogs, newspapers etc.)- helps with subtraction and decimals (if you don't round the numbers).
Cafeteria Surveys (they come up with 5 questions to ask 50 people about what food, decorations, schedules they would like to see in the cafeteria. They graph their results.
Geometry project (they find 20 geometric figures in the 'real world' from either magazines, newspapers, or they can take photographs. They have to put them on a poster. The objects cannot be drawn and have to be real object.
Newspaper Scavenger hunt (the kids find items like decimals, fractions, percents, ordinal numbers etc. in the newspaper, cut them out and make an original design of all of their findings.) I have had kids make a poster, but some are more creative and...
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Zoo Map
Posted by:a_chan #142936

I teach 3rd grade acceleration (3rd & 4th grade math together) and I do a zoo map for area and perimeter. They have to create buildings for different animals using rectangles (but they can add multiple rectangles together to make odd shaped buildings and then have to determine perimeter (pretty easy) and area by finding the area of each rectangle and then adding them together.
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Math Projects
Posted by:camp823 #142940

There is the always popular Million dollar project. The kids have to buy items worth a million dollars. This helps with subtracting across zeros and/or adding decimals.
For geometry I have the kids find geometric shapes in the environment. They can take pictures or cut them out of a magazine. I usually give them a list of 20 geometric terms.
You could read 'The Greedy Triangle' to the class and have them create their own book based on geometric shapes. At the end of 'the greedy triangle' they have activities to do with younger kids. I make my students include an activity to do with a kinder kid. We set aside a day where my students will read to the kinder class.
For proportions I have the kids recreate their bedroom on a smaller scale. (example:1 foot=1 inch). They can do this...
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Stock Market Project
Posted by:teacher333 #142941

We are currently doing a Stock project, where the students pick a stock they want to follow, such as McDonald's, Toys R Us, Great Adventure, etc. They make a brochure for prospective investors during their computer class time with the computer instructor; they graph the sales f the stock over a 6 week period; figure out the amount of stock they could buy with X amount of money; learn when a stock splits what it means. This incorporates a lot, such as math, reading, newspaper in the classroom, watching the stock reports on TV, comparing and contrasting, etc.
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Geometric Town
Posted by:bokajosu #142944

I had my fifth grade class create a town for our geometry unit. They had to come up with a theme for the town and everything had to relate to that team (names of buildings, streets, etc.). They had a set of requirements for their map - so many parallel streets, perpendicular streets, intersecting streets, use 10 geometric shapes for the builings, have a park with a circular sandbox, triangular swingset, and a rectangular pool. All the dimensions were given. They used rulers, protractors, and a compass. There was a sheet with all the requirements and a score sheet to give a grade. They got very creative and really did a nice job with it. Sorry I can't give exact details. My papers are all in school. I did get it somewhere online. We worked on the project at the end of the classs periods if we finished up early.
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Restaurant Menu Project
Posted by:luv2teachkids #142945

You could have the kids design a menu for a themed restaurant. You could set the criteria for how many of each type of item (appetizers, beverages, main dishes, etc.) they have to have. Then they could write word problems using their menu. It could be very basic, just adding prices of different items, to more complex problems, like figuring the cost of a meal for you and a friend plus tax or figuring the cost of the meal for your grandma with her senior discount of 10%.
When I did this with middle school students, they really got into the theme, and I saw everything from Star Wars themed diners to Italian restaurants to a Math Cafe.
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Fraction Mosaic
Posted by:1956BD #142946

For fractions they could create a mosaic using exactly 100 pieces. These could be seeds, different colored squares of construction paper, ... Then write the fractions and maybe percentages of each color or seed on the back to evaluate mathematically.
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Design Your Dream House
Posted by:Tex #142947

I have a project called 'Design Your Dream House.'
In a nutshell, the kids draw a 2D version of what the front of their house will look like. They must include at least 4 windows, and two doors. All lines must be drawn with a ruler and must be in CMs. Students must then determine the perimeter and area of each window and door. they must also do the same for the front of the house...perimeter and area. They must then convert these measurements to MMs. Eash dimension must be noted in typical drafting fasion. Houses must be neatly colored and students may add addtional features. As enrichment, I have my high students draw room layouts.
The kids have fun with it...especially the shape of the houses. I then have the kids grade their own papers using a rubric, they staple it to the...
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