When I was a student activities coordinator, my days were spent scaling the paperwork mountains and fierce binder jungle that was my office and making sure I could stretch every cent of our activities budget.
After talking with many of my colleagues, we realized the best activities to host would be ones where students could have fun but also apply or gain critical life skills without even realizing it — activities that added more value than the typical drive-by pizza station.
According to The Hechinger Report, the amount being spent by institutions per student has dropped significantly over the past 25 years — so much so that nearly half of the cost of public education is being put on students in the form of tuition!
I’m incredibly thankful for the amazing education I received, but looking at my $1,100 monthly student loan payment doesn’t leave that same feeling for my bank account.
With the growing cost of higher education, it’s crucial to create events that won’t break the bank for students to participate in or for our institutions to host.
Below, we’ve created a list of programs and activities to help students stay engaged while saving you a few dollars off of your programming budget. If you want to go ahead and download the whole list, you can do so via the image below!
Most students have access to a microwave, so this is a great option for a late-night program. If you want to make this hall-specific, you can set-up bulletin boards where students can sign-up to bring their favorite microwaveable recipes.
Most folks like cake, and who doesn’t love a handwritten note? Check out this awesome tutorial by Sandra Denneler on how to achieve the best of both worlds. (Note: Don’t eat this cake, please.)
Ask the dining staff if you can borrow some waffle makers and set-up a waffle bar. This isn’t just a midnight breakfast event; you can do it during the first week of classes, during exam weeks, or any other time of year.
Battle homesickness with a fun way for students to share their favorite meals from home with their peers. You can use Presence forms to collect recipes, and once you’ve gathered them all, you can let students teach their peers how to make it.
Encourage students to bring their course work and chat over a spot of tea. To add another layer of fun to this laid-back event, you can suggest a fancy dress code.
Theatre, intrigue, and food? Heck yeah! This free option lets you throw in a little Harry Potter magic. This is a great opportunity to team up with your performing arts department and dazzle folks from both on- and off-campus.
Grilled cheese can be done one hundred different ways (but that’s another list). Invite students to show off their culinary skills in this Top Chef-style event. And make sure to have some dairy-free and gluten-free options as well!
We used to host an electricity-saving competition throughout all our residence halls, and at the end of the semester, we would throw a Ben & Jerry’s party for the winning hall.
Campus programming isn’t all fun and games. With employers looking more often toward students’ co-curricular experiences as an indicator of their job skills, we need to be offering skill-building programs as well. Life skills combined with unique talents set our students apart in the mad dash for jobs after graduation.
Get input from your literature department faculty and create a campus-wide book club! Establish a theme for each semester and have a roundtable discussion to bring the books together.
Essential skills developed: Critical thinking, synthesis, and discussion skills
While students learn how to compost, teach them about the benefits of composting and how they can compost on- and off-campus. If you have a community garden on campus, you can even get attendees involved in the care of it.
Essential skill developed: Project management
Rarely do students learn about the impact of student loans and how to save effectively while in college. Discuss potential on-campus job options for student employment and online jobs that allow students to make money from virtually anywhere, as well as budgeting tools that they can use to simplify it all. Pro-tip: Partner with your financial aid office on this one!
Essential skill developed: Money management
Organizing is one of my favorite things to do, although my desk could use some serious love. Here are some helpful and free tools to teach students how to better manage their time and busy schedules.
Essential skill developed: Organization
In 2015, Florida Atlantic University started offering academic advising to commuter students by meeting them in the on-campus parking lot. They called it “Drive-Up Advising.”
Essential skills developed: Interpersonal communication and project management
Host an educational program on language and provide these handouts afterward. It’s a great way to boost awareness in common areas and on campus.
Essential skill developed: Interpersonal communication, emotional intelligence
This is a great way to get students more involved in the local community. Invite non-profits to share their missions while recruiting students to volunteer their time.
Essential skills developed: Communication and planning
What does the day in the life of a __________ look like? Help your students get a handle on their career options with a series of workshops focused on specific roles or fields. These are especially helpful in the early months of the year when students are preparing to apply for jobs and internships.
Essential skill developed: Planning
Check out these Jeopardy templates to make your educational events more interactive.
Essential skill developed: Critical thinking
Invite different department chairs to speak about their journeys during brief lunches at the dining hall. You can also encourage students to host lunch & learns on topics that they’re currently researching. It’s a great way to improve their public speaking skills while helping to prepare them to present their research at the end of the semester or at conferences.
Essential skill developed: Public speaking
Bring in your campus wellness team to share best practices and provide an outlet for questions.
Essential skills developed: Intrapersonal communication, self-care and boundary-building
Current events, recent movies, the new bike-sharing program student government wants to start — whatever the topic, bring students in and let them know their voices will be heard.
Essential skill developed: Interpersonal communication
Partner with local businesses, staff, faculty, and students and have them spend 3-5 minutes getting to know each other before sharing experiences with a new person.
Essential skill developed: Interpersonal communication
While RAs are doing their rounds, have them bring along tutors from the academic support center to help with late night study sessions.
Essential skills developed: Research and critical thinking
All you need are magazines, cardboard, a little glue, and a bunch of dreams.
Essential skills developed: Planning and creativity
Work with your wellness staff to enable students to learn peer mediation skills, build their conversational confidence, and provide them with a toolkit of how to navigate challenging interactions.
Essential skill developed: Interpersonal communication and conflict management
Wheel in one of those super cool TVs on a cart from middle school and stream current events. You can build a series of events around these during election time, bringing in local politicians for on-campus roundtables and hosting informational sessions and voter registration drives.
Essential skill developed: Critical thinking
Get outdated condoms donated and throw together your best sex-positive fall fashions.
Essential skill developed: Creativity
Invite students who’ve experienced study abroad opportunities to make small snacks and share their experience with prospective study abroad students.
Essential skills developed: Critical thinking and planning
You can set this up speed-dating style, bringing in local employers. Rather than having full interviews, format this so that students can learn about internships available to them and make smart decisions about where to apply.
Essential skills developed: Interpersonal communication and planning
Any sort of social media “live” contest is a great way to introduce staff and student leaders at any point during the year. And with HQ Live reaching more and more people each night, it’s the perfect time to throw in some of your own social media game flare.
Essential skill developed: Critical thinking and technology use
Pick up a few disposable cameras or borrow one from media services and encourage students to share what makes them most proud of themselves. Here are a few body positive shoots that shook up the world!
Essential skills developed: Empathy, intrapersonal communication, and creativity
Bring students together with games like Scrabble, Sorry, Checkers, Chutes and Ladders, Life, Battleships, Chess, Monopoly, and Twister. You can even create themed weeks and tournaments based on the board games you choose!
This is an awesome way to engage students with a childhood pastime and have a little messy fun. Painting helps students de-stress and focus on something other than classwork. Canvases can be found at local dollar stores or craft supply shops.
Have students bring old frames and share motivational quotes. You can combine this with the fingerpainting event to get some awesome handmade art. Then, hang up your motivational messages around your residence hall. The Muse has some great options to use as motivation.
Also referred to as a zen garden or Japanese rock garden, creating your own landscape with sand can be therapeutic. Check out this brief history and instructions for making your own here!
Udemy has a written example of how students can create caricatures. And for visual learners, eHow created a helpful video.
At my former institution, we used to have “Duck Days” during which our residence life staff would hide hundreds of rubber duckies across campus for students to find and redeem for small prizes and meal points on campus.
Set up a projector and utilize the tool Stellarium to view the night sky on a projector screen. You can also contact your astronomy faculty who may have access to telescopes and other cool instruments. If you have an observatory on campus, you can give this event a “Night at the Observatory” theme.
Pet rocks were cool in the ’80s and ’90s, so why not bring them back? Think about how much cooler your room will look with some colorful new pals.
Break out the Crayolas, run a few copies, and color the night away.
Encourage students to bring their pillowcases, sheets, old t-shirts, and whatever they want to make colorful art. This event could stand on its own, or it could be a precursor to a tournament-style event — just make sure that each team has its own color palette.
Provide hot glue guns, jewels, sequins, and other odds and ends to repurpose something old into something fierce again.
I’ll never get over my love for Harry Potter, so if you and your students are in the same boat, Slytherin over to this awesome tutorial on how to make your own wands with paper.
Grab a few of those yellow cans of creativity from the dollar store and fidget your stresses away.
Gather up the leftover cardboard from toilet paper rolls and have students build a structurally sound bridge. Whoever’s bridge can hold the most weight without crumbling wins!
Typically, RAs make all of the door decorations for their hall. Instead, crowdsource ideas (and help!) with this event. Encourage students to help out your friendly neighborhood RA and make door decs for all the residents on your floor — you might even get some fresh new ideas in the mix.
I used to work with our campus shuttle, “Safe Ride,” and every month or so our campus activities board would host “Cash C.A.B.” to surprise unsuspecting students with trivia and prizes.
This is a good ole standard that can be spiced up with different themes — back to school, holiday break, homecoming, and more.
Remember that cool TV from #25? Bring that back, look up some YouTube lyric videos and sing your face off!
Encouraging students to invest in their own health and well-being is a big step to take with a lot of great payoffs. Create inspiring events that help your students feel supported in their own health journey and give them the opportunity to work with other students who share those passions.
Go get your Olivia Newton-John on with these activities:
Reach out to a local yoga studio or ask instructors from an on-campus gym or wellness office to help you plan an engaging (and relaxing) program.
Encourage students to incorporate healthy habits into their lives, though sleeping competitions or outdoor exercise challenges. Just be sure not to make students fell embarrassed by their differing physical capabilities and talents.
Have students decorate their bikes for awareness occasions or just for fun. If it’s around Halloween, you can make this a moonlit ghost tour of your campus.
Invite student-athletes or folks who really love to workout to be part of a peer fitness challenge. This is a great way to help students build connections and keep the motivation to stay healthy up.
Warm up your rec room paddles and let your inner Forrest Gump out.
Buy a few cans of whipped cream and some pie tins, and you’ll have a throwback to carnival days. Are you brave enough to join in the fun, SAPro?
MTWI was a staple of my orientation program, and this list is sure to be a hit with your students!
Remember to have students sign waivers before participating in this one. This is a great event to host on its own or after your local Color Run.
Sprinkle some lawn chalk or grass-safe paint on the ground and have as many students join as can fit. Right hand on fun!
In the words of Lady Gaga, “Just Dance!” (for as long as you possibly can).
Some beanbags, a few wooden boards, and lots of sunshine make for the perfect spring or early autumn activity.
Host a free swim in the campus pool and invite the campus radio station to feature their DJs for a splash of funk.
Bring your glow sticks and paint for a quick pick up game with a new twist. This works for any outdoor game, not just capture the flag.
Organize time for students to take a break from the hustle and bustle and walk through your beautiful campus. If you have a botany department, reach out to the faculty and see if they’d be interested in leading a guided tour.
Instead of just trashing your bulletin board, roll the remains into a ball and play some hallway bowling.
“If you can dodge a wrench, you can dodge a ball.” Don’t forget those tie-dye shirts you made earlier!
A leveled-up version of tag! Have your ghosts wear headbands made of scrap fabric and build a course with some rope.
When students feel like they belong on campus and are connected to the community, they’re more likely to stay at their institution. Plus, they become invested in making sure their fellow students stick around and have a stellar experience! Invest in your campus culture with these relationship-building programs:
On a nice day invite, students, staff, faculty, and administration to pack a lunch and enjoy the sun. This is a great opportunity to build a strong sense of community and create a space for casual conversation. You can even take a page from the 5-college consortium’s book and have the president of your institution declare a campus-wide day-off to celebrate great weather.
Drum circles are a simple way to bring people together. Drum circles can be engaging for the people participating and watching by communicating through nonverbal cues and feeling the dynamic rhythm of the group. Plus, you can make a drum out of just about anything.
Don’t bring your mattresses! That’d be a nightmare for the custodial staff and the RDs. Instead, bring a few blankets, pillows, and some scary ghost stories.
Have students come to a monthly event where they’re partnered up and get to make new friends.
Before breaks in the academic year, encourage students to clean out their closet and swap for new and exciting items.
When we’re overwhelmed with work, it’s hard to take time to practice gratitude. Set up a group event where people can honestly voice what they’re grateful for. You can also make this a passive event with a chalk wall or whiteboard.
#SpreadTheLove and fun with these cool works of awesomeness around campus.
Make it an evening for students to share their creative side in a judgment-free arena of fearlessness!
Set-up a stand or table to hand out donuts, lemonade, hot chocolate — whatever is appropriate for the season. Create a chance for students to connect with the college president or other administrative staff who could use more time “on-the-ground” with students. Offer a suggestion box to allow students’ voices to be heard.
You can write letters to folx listed on this site under “Letter Requests,” or you can host your own for other students on campus who need a pick-me-up.
Celebrate various gender expressions with a drag show! Amateur performers in the area who are looking to help campuses get started typically don’t mind performing for free, but if you want more experienced people, it will be more expensive. Or, you can even encourage your students to participate. It can be as a charity event, with partial proceeds donated to Campus Pride.
Housing selection is stressful enough as it is. Use this event to allow students can get to know each other over refreshments.
Once every few weeks, invite students and community members to perform for a live audience.
This can include some big prizes or a stellar trophy that gets displayed in the student center.
Start a random act of kindness chain with a token or coin, have students “pay it forward,” and record the journey of good deeds via social media.
Find a super charismatic person on campus to be the MC for monthly quiz bowls.
Have students vote on who they believe best showcased school pride that month. If your institution is particularly large, you can restrict this to particular colleges or residence halls.
Every Monday, invite students to talk about their goals for the week and how they plan to achieve them.
My former college President used to say, “Make a change here so you can go out and make a change in the world.” Once a student feels ownership of their role on campus, it’s part of our responsibility to support them in sharing their talents with the surrounding communities. With these easy-to-coordinate events, you enable them to flourish in a new place and gain crucial skills for when they leave.
Have students vote for an alum to come back and speak on campus.
Find out if your city (or one nearby) offers a Free Museum Day to locals. And if you have a museum on campus that’s free to students, set up an evening event to encourage students to visit!
Organize times to volunteer with meal service, visiting hours, or even tech workshops.
During our orientation, we would work with local businesses and homeowners and have student groups clean up their lawns to give back to the community.
Offer a few campus vehicles to bring students to various opportunities in the community.
Whether it’s the holiday season or any other time of the year, set up a letter writing station to send thanks.
Organize a valentine creativity station where folks can write cards, poems, or hand out those chalky candy hearts.
If you have a local farm nearby whose pumpkins are close to going bad, ask if they’d be willing to donate them and have an impromptu carving contest.
Everyone in the 2000s wanted to be Glen Coco. You could probably still make “fetch” happen with this event.
Hide small things like trinkets, vouchers for the cafe or bookstore, or even better, candy!
Bring it back to fourth-grade art class and whip up a Model Magic holiday ornament to rule them all.
After the dining hall hosts its awesome Thanksgiving dinner, encourage students to take a trot around the block. If your community is hosting a Thanksgiving Turkey Trot, organize a group of students, faculty, and staff members to participate.
This was my favorite event every year! Our theater department would team up with folks in our fine arts center and put on the best scare on campus (and for a really cheap price).
This mom has the right idea: no slush, no frozen fingers, just lots of fun.
Once again, moms know how to throw a party! Get your luau on with these cool tips and games.
Growing up in New Hampshire, I quickly realized pretty much anything can be turned into a sled with enough creativity – just add a snowy hill.
Build and eat!
BONUS:
To be completely honest, I didn’t really know the “correct” way to do laundry in college my first year. Basically, I owned enough clothes to last a month and then would go home with it all. Last year was the first year I filed my taxes completely on my own, and now I’m my coworker A.J.’s personal seamstress, thanks to my costume classes.
Help your students out a bit with a Life 101: Back to Basics workshop series.
Thanks to the fierce folks of our campus outreach team, a few of my former colleagues (Allie, Bre, and Chelsea) and the super cool people of the internet for helping me curate this list!
I’d love to hear what some of your favorite low-budget or no-budget programs have been and which ones on this list you’re looking forward to implementing. Continue the conversation with me via Twitter @MegAHakey and @themoderncampus!
And to help student organizations stay on budget, we have a blog post all about that, too!