Let’s be honest, profe… the end of the school year can feel like a lot. Energy is unpredictable. Schedules are messy. Testing is everywhere. And sometimes you’re just thinking:
“What should I do today?”
In episode 186 of Growing With Proficiency, I sat down with Allison Wienhold (Mis Clases Locas) to talk about real, practical activities for the last weeks of school that don’t require hours of prep and actually keep students engaged.
And here’s the best part: These ideas are simple, flexible, and rooted in what really matters: communication, connection, and celebrating growth.
Let’s break them down so you can use them tomorrow:
Start Here: What Do You Actually Need Right Now?
Before jumping into activities, Alison shared something powerful:
→ Not every end-of-year classroom looks the same.
→ Your energy matters.
→ Your students’ needs matter.
Sometimes you need low-prep or student-centered activities. Other times, you may need more movement or less teacher talk. And at times, we need something that works without overthinking.
So before deciding what to do every week, ask: “What do my students (and I) need right now?”
Having that in mind, let’s go over all the ideas for a much more balanced end-of-the-year season.
1. Conversation Cards + Movement (A Must-Do!)
This is one of the easiest and most effective activities you can do.
What it is:
You create question cards based on topics you’ve already covered:
- Favorite foods
- Family
- Past events
- A novel or story
- Future plans
Then add sentence starters for support so students stay in the target language:
- I like…
- I went..
- I am going to..
How to run it:
Establish the goal first. You can say, “today we are going to discover what we did last weekend”. Then,
- Post questions around the room (or outside!)
- Students walk with a partner
- They stop, read, and respond out loud. For accountability, you can have them record the answer on a piece of paper.
You can also:
- Color-code questions by level
- Let students choose their challenge level
Why it works:
- Builds confidence
- Encourages communication and collaboration
- Adds movement (so needed in these months!)
- Differentiates naturally
Simple. Powerful. No fancy prep needed.
2. Turn Any Worksheet into a Gallery Walk
You know that I love Gallery Walks, and they are perfect for the end-of-the year. The best part is that you can even use any worksheet you already have.
How to do it:
- Take comprehension or discussion questions
- Cut them into strips
- Post them around the room
- Students rotate and respond. They record the answers for accountability purposes or as a formative assessment.
Profe tip:
Take it outside Same activity → completely different energy
3. The “1-2-3 Jump” Game (Zero Prep, High Energy)
This one is FUN and takes almost no preparation.
How it works:
- Create two options:
- True / False
- Character A / Character B
- Past / Present
- Students stand in a line
- You read a statement
- Pause for processing…
- Say:
“Uno, dos, tres… ¡salta! (jump)”
- Students jump to the correct side
Why it works:
- Built-in comprehension check
- Physical movement = better engagement
- Great for quick review or brain breaks
4. The Marker Game (With a Twist!)
You might already play this—but here’s a powerful upgrade.
Traditional version:
Students grab a marker if the answer is correct. If the answer is incorrect, students don’t grab the marker, and if they do, they lose a point.
New twist:
Make it team-based
How:
- Two teams line up
- You play the game as mentioned before.
- Every student who answers correctly = 1 point for their team
- Count how many students in each team got it right
- Add those points to the team total
- Repeat for multiple rounds
- Keep a running score
- The team with the most total points wins
Why this matters:
- Builds classroom community
- Reduces pressure on individuals
- Keeps everyone invested
5. Turn Tech Games into Relay Races
Your students might be over:
- Quizlet Live
- Kahoot
- Blooket
So… don’t throw them out—just add movement.
How:
- Keep the game
- But make students run (or walk fast!) to answer
- Place the devices away from the students. Students sit or stand up with their teams. But when it’s time to answer, they run to the device to do so and the relay continues. One student per team goes at a time
6. A Meaningful Final Project: The Self-Portrait
If you want something more reflective and visible, this idea is beautiful.
Students create a self-portrait that represents who they are using the language they’ve learned.
What to include:
- Likes/dislikes
- Family or pets
- Favorite activities
- Clothing
- Personality
Add language support:
Provide sentence frames like:
- “Me gusta…”
- “Tengo…”
- “Soy…”
Then:
Turn it into a gallery walk or museum day
Students:
- Present in small groups
- Ask questions
- Celebrate each other
Why it works:
- Makes learning visible
- Builds confidence
- Feels like a celebration, not a test
And … some students will surprise you
7. Talk About the Future (Because They Care!)
End-of-year = perfect time for future plans
Topics:
- Summer plans
- Next school year
- Goals and dreams
Example prompts:
- This summer I will..
- Next year I want…
- My goal for next year is…
Activities:
- Conversation cards
- Partner interviews
- Goal-setting reflections
This connects language to their real lives which is always the goal.
8. Using Movies without the Stress
Using Movies Without the Stress Let’s talk about it… movies at the end of the year! You can watch a movie with your classes without creating a full unit.
Step 1: Introduce the movie
Spend a day on:
- Characters
- Setting
- Key vocabulary
- Trailer
Step 2: Watch and enjoy
You can watch the movie in the common language but discuss characters, events, etc, in the target language. Kara Jacobs shared with us many ways to do that.
Step 3: Keep it simple
After watching:
- Discuss what happened
- Do a quick write & discuss
- Ask comprehension questions
Great movie ideas mentioned:
- Ferdinand (Spain, fun + cultural)
- Chupa (Mexico, newer + engaging)
- Selena (classic + relatable)
9. Don’t Forget: This Is a Time to Celebrate
This might be the most important takeaway. End-of-year is not just about reviewing.
It’s about helping students see:
“Look how much I can understand.”
“Look how much I can say.”
“Wow… I actually learned a language.”
Because when students feel successful, they continue. And that’s the real goal.
Final Thoughts: Keep It Simple, Profe
If you take one thing from this post, let it be this:
→ You don’t need to reinvent everything
→ You don’t need perfect lessons
→ You just need what works—for you and your students
Reuse. Adapt. Simplify. And most importantly, end the year with connection, joy, and a little bit of fun.
And if you need some more inspiration for next school year, check out the Comprehensible Iowa Conference on June 12-13, 2026 in Des Moines, IA. Find more information here → https://comprehensibleiowa.wordpress.com/
Want More Support Like This?
If this gave you ideas, I’d love to hear from you What are you trying this week?
And if you want more practical strategies like these, come join me inside the Spanish Teacher Academy or connect with me on Instagram.
Resources:
End of the Year Activities Blog https://misclaseslocas.com/
Running out of Time EOY Blog
https://misclaseslocas.com/
Grab a Spanish Routine Freebie https://misclaseslocas.com/
For 7 Talk About future plans: https://misclaseslocas.