Teacher Tuesday | Class Reward Ideas
Encourage acts of kindness, good behavior, responsibility and dedication with these sugar-free, real-life rewards for students.
Homeworkopoly via Monarch Madness
Join school assignments with favorite board games to create the ultimate student reward. When your students complete and turn in their homework, give them a chance to roll the dice and land on spot, granting them a community lunch, homework pass or other custom prize they can use during the week.
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QR Codes via Teachers Pay Teachers
It’s time to face the music and embrace the unavoidable digital age in the modern classroom. This program allows teachers to print out QR codes on that correlate with a reward. When you want to tell your students “good job,” then have them randomly select a QR code and reveal their prize using technology.
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Student Coupons via Teachers Pay Teachers
Take the traditional route and create your own custom coupon cards students can redeem when they complete assignments, clean their area or don’t get in trouble for the week. Be as creative as you like and even let students swap roles with you as well.
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Blue Strip Rewards via Teacher 2 Teacher Help
Give your students something they can collect, such as blue strips they can accumulate to redeem for one big reward. From stickers to donuts to lunch on the teacher, your students will want to keep earning strips to go big or go home.
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Classroom Lottery via Simply 2nd Resources
Have your students test their luck by giving them a scratch off when they complete their homework assignments at the end of the week. Watch their excitement as they unveil a show-and-tell opportunity, new crayons on extra time on the class computer.
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Warm Fuzzy Jar via A Love for Teaching
Instill kindness in your classroom by rewarding your students specifically for acts of kindness. Every time your students commit a considerate deed, give them a fuzzy ball they can contribute to the class jar. When each student adds to the jar and it becomes full, reward the class with a party they’ll love.
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Build a Rainbow via Pinterest
Create a bulletin board in the classroom and give students a piece of a rainbow they can build on the board, as they show improvement in their behavior, practice sharing and keep their area clean. If students complete their rainbow by the end of the week, reward them with sticker book, a homework pass or let them read their favorite book to the class.