First Week of School Activities for Secondary ELA

First week of school activities for middle and high school featuring icebreakers, SEL games, and reflection activities.

The first days of school set the tone for the entire year. Taking time to build relationships, establish a positive classroom culture, and help students feel comfortable is essential.

If you’re looking for engaging, low-prep activities for middle or high school students, here are some of my favorites.

1. Break the Ice with a Fast-Paced Game

Nothing gets students talking faster than a game.

A 5 Second Game is a fun way to encourage participation without putting too much pressure on students. They have just five seconds to answer lighthearted prompts, making it perfect for the first day of school.

It’s easy to set up, requires almost no preparation, and works well as a whole-class activity.

Recommended resource:

High-contrast cover for a digital game titled "5 Second Game: Back-to-School Edition." Displays a grid of four colorful digital game slides with prompt examples like "Name 3 school subjects" and "Name 3 punctuation marks." Includes badges reading "100 Editable Prompts" and "Great for First Week!".

ELA Editable Back to School Game | First Day Activity (5 Second Game)

2. Help Students Get to Know One Another

Building classroom community starts with meaningful conversations.

A Find Someone Who… activity gets students moving around the room while discovering shared interests, experiences, and goals. It’s an excellent way to encourage interaction, especially in classes where students don’t know each other yet.

Recommended resource:

Product cover for a middle and high school get-to-know-each-other activity titled "Find Someone Who." Features a preview of a structured worksheet grid containing social prompts and a prominent yellow ribbon banner graphic that says "Back-to-School Favorite."

Find Someone Who Back to School SEL Icebreaker

3. Start with Reflection

The beginning of the school year is the perfect time for students to think about their goals, strengths, challenges, and hopes for the months ahead.

Reflection activities help students develop self-awareness while giving teachers valuable insight into their classes.

The best part? You can start with a free activity.

Recommended resource:

Resource cover for free middle and high school back-to-school reflection activities. Displays three printable worksheet pages highlighting student activities like a classroom playlist, "If you really knew me" prompts, and a six-word memoir task, with a bright yellow starburst sticker reading "FREE."

FREE Back to School Reflection Activities

4. Go Deeper with a Reflective One-Pager

Once students have completed some initial reflection, invite them to organize their ideas creatively with a one-pager.

This type of project encourages students to combine writing, visuals, and personal reflection into one engaging assignment. It also gives teachers valuable insight into their students at the beginning of the year.

Black and green Teachers Pay Teachers resource cover for a secondary ELA Back to School One-Pager project. The cover shows printable graphic organizer templates and instructions over a chalkboard background with a hand holding a piece of chalk. Text reads "Back to School One-pager" and "Middle & High School."

Recommended resource:

Back to School Reflective One-Pager Project

5. Let Students Introduce Themselves Creatively

“All About Me” activities aren’t just for elementary school.

Older students also enjoy sharing their interests, favorite books, hobbies, goals, and experiences—especially when the activity feels age-appropriate.

It’s a great way for classmates—and teachers—to learn more about each other.

Recommended resource:

Product listing cover for a secondary classroom icebreaker titled "Back to School: Getting to know you." Features a student interest survey worksheet template covering academic and personal categories on a green chalkboard background.

All About Me SEL Activity

6. Keep the Energy High with a This or That Game

Students love sharing opinions.

A simple This or That game gets everyone involved while helping students discover common interests. Questions like “Beach or Mountains?” or “Books or Movies?” naturally spark conversation and laughter.

It’s an easy transition activity, brain break, or icebreaker throughout the first week.

Recommended resource:

Cover image for a digital "This or That" back-to-school game designed for secondary middle and high school classrooms. Features previews of three stylized digital slides displaying low-stakes debate prompts: "Excited or Nervous?", "Art or Science?", and "Books or Netflix?".

This or That Back to School Game

7. Get Students Moving with Stand on the Line If…

Movement-based activities are perfect for building community.

In a Stand on the Line If… activity, students respond to different prompts by stepping forward or moving to a designated area. They quickly realize how much they have in common with their classmates, helping create a more inclusive classroom environment.

This activity works especially well for middle and high school students because it encourages participation without requiring students to speak in front of the whole class.

Recommended resource:

Back-to-school activity cover for "Stand on the line if..." icebreaker game for middle and high school. The green chalkboard background features an image of a person's feet standing on a double yellow asphalt road line to illustrate the classroom movement layout.

Personal Reflection Activity for SEL (Stand on the Line If)

Why Icebreakers Matter in Secondary Classrooms

The first week of school sets the tone for the entire semester. By prioritizing community, low-stakes movement, and genuine self-reflection over rigid rule-reading, you tell your students right away: Your voice matters in this room.

Best of all? Every single one of these resources is print-and-go or project-and-play. Go grab your coffee, enjoy the last few days of summer, and let these activities handle your first week of lesson plans!

For more on Classroom Community Building: ➡️Click here

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