Late-night programming is a fantastic way to engage students in exciting and growth-oriented ways.
Whether your institution offers late-night activities almost every day or only during specific times of the year, these program ideas are for you.
Invite small teams of students to compete in a team-building Olympics. Check out this ultimate list of challenges to get started.
Build resilience and encourage relaxation through mindfulness worksheets, yoga sessions, DIY zen gardens, and massages offered to students and stressed-out staff. Check out Boston University’s wellness fair for inspiration.
Many institutions invite dogs, donkeys, llamas, and other animals to campus. Some schools will ask staff to bring in their leashed pets and others will invite certified therapy animals.
Encourage students to tap into their creative sides with a guided crafting session. Go a step further and talk about sustainability through trash or junk art, which involves turning items that would otherwise have been thrown away into art.
Here’s a list of questions that you can call out or supply to students in guiding their conversations.
Live action role-playing games are a fun way to reenact battles and scenes from students’ favorite shows and movies. Check out Worcester Polytechnic Institute’s annual LARP.
If your campus has a pool or lake, along with canoes and lifeguards, then consider mimicking the University of Vermont’s game of battleship wherein students try to stay afloat and sink each other using buckets and shields.
Salsas, pies, lasagnas — truly any dish can inspire a cooking contest theme, with university swag offered as prizes. Encourage bakers and chefs to avoid using ingredients containing common allergens and dietary restrictions.
Invite students to be a comedian for a night. Provide props, lighting, costumes, and comical sound effects too.
Let students take the mic individually or in groups to perform their favorite hits.
Host a show-and-tell for favorite skin care products or home remedies. Students could even DIY their own scrubs.
A speedrun is a play-through of a video game, performed with the intention of completing it as fast as possible. It could make for an easy and fun late-night competition for gamers.
Utilize your on-campus lounge space and encourage students to bring their favorite video games or board game to participate in friendly competition or a tournament-style battle.
Here’s a list of mocktails that you can customize using your institution’s colors and hand out in branded, reusable cups.
Improv is a form of live theatre in which the story and characters are made up in the moment. Students can sign up in advance to participate or enjoy laughs from the audience. Check out this list of 10 easy improv games for beginners.
All-night dance-a-thons are a tradition beloved by campuses as a way to raise money for charitable causes, often local children’s hospitals. In 2021, Pennsylvania State University’s Thon raised over $10 million for pediatric cancer patients!
This late-night activity might be most popular around Halloween but who says you can’t have a costume party in February? You could encourage different themes for your costume party — like pirates, superheroes, zombies, and much much more. But be sure to check out this resource from Dickinson College to avoid cultural appropriation.
Invite a beloved band, singer, or a student group to perform. You can even invite multiple performers for an extended music festival.
Bring the excitement with entertainers, rides, food, and live performances all week long. Virginia Tech has even brought a Ferris wheel to campus.
Encourage students to showcase their top talents.
Host a pageant show focused on school spirit. Check out this article on how the University of South Florida adjusted their pageant to be gender inclusive, avoiding the sexism inherent in many traditional pageants.
Encourage a student group to host a late-night event on its own or in collaboration with other orgs on campus. It might help them boost their membership and get students excited about their future events.
You can educate students about hydration, stress management, sleep, exercise, nutrition, sexual health, and other health topics through booths and interactive activities, like Boston University does for its wellness fair.
Invite a student group or performing arts class to perform a musical or play.
Look for local destinations that your students would be extra excited to visit after dark — such as a theme park, carnival, or comedy show.
Although this tends to be a finals week event, you could easily adapt it to any time of the year. After all, who doesn’t love breakfast food?
Hype students up with a speaker to motivate them on resilience, mental health, academic excellence, or another value in line with your institution’s mission or key learning outcomes.
Silent discos are like regular dance parties but with headphones for students to choose from different playlists to groove to. Colorado College even added a laser show.
Transform a campus gathering space into a haunted house for students to meander through.
Also known as “Oozeball”, many campuses, such as the University of Texas at Arlington, host volleyball tournaments in the mud, putting a challenging spin on the classic sport.
Bring on the competition via a race. Requiring students to wear neon attire and glow sticks will make it safe (and extra fun) at night.
Give students a taste of local foods by inviting food trucks to campus. Encourage truck owners to give a portion of the proceeds to a charity that students have voted upon. Trucks could also use the event to test out new foods; students will surely be willing to offer honest feedback.
Take Back The Night events are held annually in over a thousand communities around the world. They often entail evening marches, walks, runs, or bike rides. All involve raising funds toward preventing and educating the community about sexual assault.
You could bring students to the beach or bring the beach to your campus! Landlocked Springfield College built their own beach on the campus green and had events every weekend on their DIY island.
Bring on the friendly competition through a student tournament of soccer, volleyball, kickball, or any other sport your students adore.
This is like soccer but with plastic bubble orbs. West Texas A&M University brought the bubbles to their campus in 2015, and it was a hit.
Project a movie in an outdoor space for students to enjoy. Bonus points if you poll for movie preference via social media.
Pause for reflection by posing these guided questions around a campfire. Don’t forget the s’mores, including gluten-free graham crackers and vegan marshmallows!
Goats, bunnies, and ducks are all aww-worthy and can help stressed students take a step back to appreciate nature.
Invite students to sleep on the campus lawn to raise awareness and funds toward homelessness. Columbia College Chicago’s Student Veteran Association hosts an annual sleep-out in which participants gather in solidarity with the homeless veteran population for 24 hours, braving the elements of Chicago winter.
Each year, the University of Connecticut invites students to fill up buckets and other containers with as much ice cream as they want out of a (you guessed it) one ton pile of ice cream. Remember to include dairy-free and vegan options.
Encourage students to take a guided meditation or reflection walk around campus. For safety, pair everyone into groups of at least two participants. You could even add a friending portion of the walk with students randomly paired with someone they haven’t met before.
Give students a list of specific locations around campus to take selfies. Offer prizes for the fastest finishers or most creative photos.
Is your campus sprinkled with historical facts, myths, or legends? Host a guided tour that students will remember into their alumni years. You could even make this a spooky ghost tour, perhaps best suited to Halloween.
A beloved camp favorite, Capture the Flag can be played indoors or outdoors in groups small or large.
Did you know that escape rooms can be played virtually? Check out these escape challenges that will require students to work together online.
Guide students to tap into their creative sides with these free paint night tutorials. Check out UNC Chapel Hill’s paint night for inspiration.
In-person or virtual workout classes get students moving and grooving. Check out Hagerstown Community College’s Zumbathon.
Students could win swag by garnering the most likes from a dance or song contest. Gauge competitors live based on the number of likes, reshares, and/or comments using a hashtag that’s unique to your competition.
Host a web call and randomly assign students to rooms for a few minutes in hopes of making new friends.
Challenge students to take selfies with items around their home or local area. This could work well in teams or individually.
Pick a book that speaks to challenges commonly faced by students, such as finding motivation, overcoming loneliness, or tackling transitions. Here are 19 books to start you off.
Host a watch party followed by a discussion.
Encourage students to tap into their creative sides with a guided crafting session. One of my favorites is no-sew tie blankets, which can be donated to local homeless shelters.
Use Kahoot to design an interactive game with trivia facts unique to your institution.
Create a competition for students who enjoy e-Sports games either individually or in teams.
Livestream a beloved campus chef teaching students how to make their favorite dining hall dishes at home.
Bring the fun and competition with this classic game, which is consistently one of Shawnee State’s most popular events.
Let students gather around a virtual campfire. Tell ghost stories, host ice breakers, or even a student performer. Bonus points if anyone is seen roasting marshmallows over the stove.
Facilitate a coffee and tea tasting experience. A week or so before your event, mail or invite students to pick up different varieties of coffee beans and tea bags. Make sure to mark each envelope as “do not open” so that the flavors will remain a surprise.
Have an amazing idea that’s not here? Share it with us on Twitter @themoderncampus.