If your school is celebrating, that’s great! Start to prepare for your Halloween celebration. If your school isn’t celebrating, you can request for the school to celebrate it in a persuasive essay.

You can wear themed costumes with your friends! You guys could be characters from a popular movie, fairytale, or book. You and your pals could also dress up as groups of items, like crayons, mummies, milk cartons, breakfast items, school supplies, etc.

If Halloween’s on a Monday, plan to decorate the week before, on Friday, or on the weekend. Decorate the classroom with Halloween colors- orange, black, green, and purple. Hang Halloween garlands around the bulletin boards and/or whiteboard/s of the classroom, and add some Halloween decorations like mini pumpkins, skulls, or ghost figures to shelves and tables. You can also add Halloween-themed lights if your school allows it.

Decide with the other members of the student council- the president, vice president, secretary, the treasurer, and the class representatives. Then, show your plan for the principal to approve. If you’re planning a costume contest, come up with a few categories. “Best Dressed”, “Most Creative”, “Most Interesting”, or “Most Relatable” would be suitable categories. Then, decide on the judges of the costumes. The student council could vote on the costumes, the students could vote, parents and relatives of students, or the school’s faculty are good choices.

If you do have a long test coming up, you should go home early to study instead of going home late at night (at 7-9 PM). You can buy some candy from the store and share it with your friends. Or, you and your friends can buy candy for each other. This way, you won’t miss out on the delicious candy!

If it will be chilly or rainy on Halloween, bring a jacket and put it on over your Halloween costume. If your costume has a jacket or cloak already, check to see if it’s too thin. If it’s too thin, take off the costume’s jacket and wear a regular one instead. If it will be rainy, make sure you won’t be doing PE/gym or running around the playground on the wet grass. These can mess up your costume and make your clothing, accessories, and shoes wet and muddy. Plus, wearing a huge costume during PE will be uncomfortable, and you will find it hard to move around. If you’re doing any of these activities on wet grass (where there will be mud), you should wear your regular clothes/your uniform instead and change out of it later, like when the party will start.

Find a clean bathroom stall to change in or go to the locker room to change. If you’re going into the bathroom to change, see if there is a larger bathroom stall. These are usually for people with disabilities to use. If no one uses that stall, you can change in that one. Cramped, small stalls are harder to change in, as there’s nowhere to put your clothes, and you’ll have to sit on the toilet to change (it’s difficult to change standing up, and you could fall). If you’re on your period on Halloween, be extra careful about leaks. Wear absorbent pads or larger tampons. You could also wear a menstrual cup, as they stay in all day (and you don’t have to worry about changing them while you’re wearing your costume- blood from your sanitary product could drip onto your costume while you’re changing). Leaks could ruin your Halloween costume! Some costumes are very delicate, so they cannot be washed too often.

You should get one serving of food only, as there may not be extras for everyone. Get a few cookies, crackers, and fruit. You should also get a drink, whether that’s plain water, soda, milk, or juice.

If you are unsure of what your classmate/friend is dressed as, you can ask them during the party. You won’t make them offended that you don’t know what they’re dressed as - they might be excited to tell you all about their character. Don’t worry if no one is dressed as your character. You may feel as if no one cares or knows about who you’re dressing as. If no one is wearing the same costume as you, know the fact that it makes you unique during the party! Parents or other people won’t get another kid mixed up with you at school. If someone thinks your costume is silly or childish, ignore them. Your costume is unique in its own way, and there’s no reason to listen to haters or bullies. You should also tell a teacher about the situation.

Play Halloween musical chairs. Set up chairs in a circle, and leave one less chair than there are players. The players have to walk around the circle when the music is playing. When the music stops, the players have to scramble to sit on a chair. The person who doesn’t sit on a chair is eliminated, and another chair is taken out. This repeats until there is only one player left, who is the winner. Play Halloween-themed bingo. This is basically the same as bingo, except the Bingo chips passed out have Halloween characters such as mummies, pumpkins, ghosts, and witches on them. The Bingo card will also be Halloween-themed, with colors and symbols representing the spooky holiday. Pin the tail on the donkey. If your teacher bought a Halloween version of it, that’s even better! Play an online Halloween trivia game. You can search for a premade game or you can make one yourself using sites like Gimkit, Blooket, or Quizizz.

Play “Dead Man”. An optional piece of equipment is a trampoline. Usually, kids get on the trampoline and one kid lies down. The kids around the kid lying down chant, “Dead man, dead man, come alive! Come alive at the count of 5! 1, 2, 3, 4. . . 5!” After they count to 5, the kid lying down has to close their eyes and try to tag another kid to make the kid the new “Dead Man”. If you don’t have a trampoline, play this game on a field where you won’t bump into dangerous objects while having your eyes closed. [1] X Research source Help set up a Halloween candy hunt to find candy at school. Hide the candy on the school’s field, get buckets for each participating student, and start to find the candy! If you’re helping, it may not be as fun, as you know where most of the candy is already. Play hide-and-seek. It would be ideal to play this during sunset, when it’s darker outside (since it fits the Halloween vibe). But if you’re not going to extended care/study hall from 4 to 6, the sun’s not going to go down fast enough. So, play this in the sun at first. You can use the shade to hide in interesting spots, like behind a tree, staying at the basketball court, lying down on the grass, or on top of a play structure.

You can play freeze dance while you’re dancing. If the music is paused, freeze in position! If someone moves, they are eliminated from the game. Do this until there is only 1 person left. Songs like This Is Halloween (from Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas (1994)), Ghostbusters, Michael Jackson’s Thriller, and Monster Mash are perfect for Halloween! Search up Halloween playlists on YouTube to have a full-on Halloween dance party. Dance to these songs. Dance with your friends, and don’t worry about anything! There is no right or wrong way to dance, so stop worrying about whether or not you look out of place. If your friends have had dance classes before, ask them to teach you some radical dance moves! Sing these songs if you know them. If your classmates are talking too loudly, you may not be able to sing. If the room is quiet, you can sing. It’s ok if you’ve never had singing classes before- just sing as best as you can. This isn’t a singing competition- it’s just for fun, so do not focus on being an expert at it.

Be sure to alert the teacher (and/or your parents if they are there at the party) that you’re temporarily leaving. They could start searching for you all over the school, and this causes unnecessary worry and wastes time.

If you’re in elementary school, don’t run with your costume on if you’re going to play on the playground. The dirt, tanbark, and other things on the playground could dirty up your costume. You could also trip and fall on your costume if it’s long. Walk on the playground instead. If you’re in middle or high school, stop by the lockers and hang out. You could also run around the campus if you really want to act like a kid and your school allows it.

If you’re trick-or-treating in a mall, obtain some Halloween baskets and buy some candy and small gifts for yourselves/each other. You could also go into candy stores in the mall and see if they have people there offering candy, as some do this every Halloween. If you’re trick-or-treating in a neighborhood, plan to knock on houses with lights on. If they have their lights off or do not have candy outside, this could mean that they don’t celebrate Halloween, do not have any treats to offer, or are uninterested in the festivity. If this is the case, skip to the next house. Knock on the door or press the doorbell and say, “Trick or treat! Trick or treat! Give me something good to eat!” If you have younger siblings, bring them along too. Make sure they don’t wander around the store or the neighborhood, as they could get lost. Wandering around in a neighborhood is less safe than an enclosed space like a store, as they could potentially run into criminals. They could also get hit by a vehicle if they run into the street. So, monitor your siblings closely and tell everyone to bring flashlights if it gets dark outside.