Ramadan Activities for the Classroom: A Teacher's Guide
A practical guide for teachers on how to celebrate and explore Ramadan in the classroom. Includes activity ideas, worksheet suggestions, and tips for creating an inclusive learning environment.
Ramadan is observed by millions of Muslim pupils across UK schools every year. As a teacher, supporting your Muslim pupils during Ramadan — and helping all children in your class understand its significance — is both a pastoral responsibility and a wonderful cross-curricular opportunity.
This guide offers practical advice and classroom activity ideas to help you make the most of Ramadan in your school setting, regardless of whether you teach in a faith school or a mainstream setting.
**Why Ramadan Matters in the Classroom**
For Muslim pupils, Ramadan can be a tiring and emotionally significant time. Many will be fasting, including some as young as ten or eleven years old, and many will be attending Taraweeh prayers at the mosque late into the evening. Understanding this context helps teachers offer appropriate support — whether that means being mindful of PE sessions for fasting pupils, allowing quiet rest time, or simply acknowledging the month with warmth and respect.
For non-Muslim pupils, learning about Ramadan builds religious literacy, cultural understanding, and empathy. The PSHE and RE curricula in England both encourage exploration of different faiths and their practices — Ramadan activities fit naturally into both.
**Cross-Curricular Ramadan Activity Ideas**
Ramadan lends itself beautifully to activities across multiple subjects.
In English and Literacy, you might ask pupils to write a diary entry from the perspective of a child observing their first Ramadan, create an information text about the Five Pillars of Islam, or write a descriptive piece about an Iftar meal. Reflection and journal worksheets prompt personal writing that is meaningful and authentic.
In Maths, Ramadan offers real-world contexts for problem-solving. Pupils could calculate what time Suhoor and Iftar would occur on different days using sunrise and sunset data, work out how many days of Ramadan remain given the start date, or plan the quantities of food needed for a large Iftar gathering.
In Art and DT, pupils might design and make Ramadan lanterns, create crescent moon and star decorations, or design their own Ramadan card to give to a classmate.
In RE and PSHE, structured discussion activities, sequencing worksheets, and quiz sheets about the Five Pillars, the story of Ramadan, and the significance of Eid al-Fitr are all highly effective.
In Computing and Media, older pupils could research and present information about how Ramadan is celebrated differently across different countries and cultures.
**Word Search and Puzzle Worksheets for Ramadan**
Puzzle-based worksheets are particularly popular during Ramadan because they are engaging, low-pressure, and easy to differentiate. A Ramadan word search — featuring vocabulary like MOSQUE, SUHOOR, IFTAR, PRAYER, FASTING, and EID — is suitable for children from Year 2 upwards. Word scramble activities, fill-in-the-blank sentences, and quiz sheets can all be pitched at different ability levels.
These activities work well as starter activities, early finisher tasks, or form-time activities during the month of Ramadan.
**Tips for an Inclusive Classroom During Ramadan**
Be aware that fasting pupils may have lower energy levels, particularly in the afternoon. Consider where possible adjusting the timing of demanding tasks.
Display Ramadan-related vocabulary in the classroom to normalise the terminology and help all pupils engage with it confidently.
Celebrate Eid al-Fitr at the end of Ramadan with a class activity — making cards, sharing foods from different cultures, or creating an Eid display together.
Invite Muslim pupils to share their own Ramadan experiences if they feel comfortable doing so — this peer-to-peer learning is often the most powerful.
**Creating Ramadan Worksheets Quickly**
Worksheets Generator allows teachers to create bespoke Ramadan worksheets in seconds. Simply select the Activity tab, choose your puzzle type — Word Search, Fun Quiz, Fill in the Blanks, Sequencing, or Reflection and Writing — enter "Ramadan" as the theme, select the appropriate age group, and click Create.
Each worksheet is fully themed around Ramadan, age-appropriate, and comes with an answer key. You can generate as many different worksheets as you need, differentiated for different ability groups in your class, completely free of charge.