This year, I conducted “interviews” with my second grade class (ages 8-9). I gave them 5 simple questions to respond to. The questions were:
- What makes a teacher cool?
- What can kids do over the summer to not forget everything they learned that year?
- If you could change one thing about school, what would it be?
- What advice would you give to kids who will be in second grade next year?
- What do you think teachers do during the summer?
Here is the PDF version you can use for your class: End of the Year Interview. (Just change the fourth question to say whatever grade you will teach next year.)
Here are some of my favorite responses:
Question #1: What makes a teacher cool?
Question #2: What can kids do over the summer to not forget everything they learned that year?

Question #3: If you could change one thing about school, what would it be?
Obviously that’s why teachers don’t play on the playground themselves – it’s not clean enough? 😉
Question #4: What advice would you give to kids who will be in second grade next year?

True, fun is not optional.
Question #5: What do you think teachers do during the summer?

Nailed it!
I’ve decided to start learning more from other teachers around me. I’m eager to start conversations with other teachers to learn from them. I’ll be sharing what I learn in a series called “Teacher Chat!”







Teachers are always looking to motivate kids to continue reading throughout the summer. I was pondering this challenge, and the following idea just popped into my head.. so I ran with it. The intention is to have each kid choose a book they read that year and write a “recommendation report” about it. Then they can share their report with the class and try to persuade others to read the book. Hopefully a few kids will be inspired and read something over the summer. But at bare minimum, students can identify classmates who share their same taste in books.
I’m a firm believer in teaching kids to thank others and give compliments. This printable is intended to give kids a space to write a short friendship note to 3 classmates. You can do this activity for Valentine’s Day, the end of the year, or whenever your class needs some bonding. I recommend printing one page for each kid so they can write 3. You may even consider assigning one or all of the recipients to ensure everyone gets one. In addition, It may be a good idea to read them before they’re distributed just in case…
The end of the year can be such a fun time… testing is over and summer is near! Thank heavens! But how to keep your students learning when they’d rather be at the beach? Here are some of my favorite ideas: