Library Lady’s K-12 Edition – National Creativity Day

Library Lady’s K-12 Edition is a mostly weekly newsletter for K-12 school librarians. Today’s topic is — National Creativity Day.

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I am what libraries and librarians have made me. Heraclitus

🎨 Let Ideas Take Flight: Celebrating Creativity in the Library

National Creativity Day is a perfect chance to remind students that creativity isn’t just for artists—it shows up in how we think, solve problems, tell stories, and express ourselves. The school library is the ideal place for this because it naturally blends imagination, exploration, and discovery.

The goal is simple: give students permission to try, create, and think differently—without pressure to be perfect.


💡 Simple & Meaningful Ways to Celebrate

📚 1. Create a “Creativity Book Spotlight”

Pull books that highlight:

  • Imagination
  • Inventors and creators
  • Problem-solving

Add quick notes like:

  • “This book started with one small idea…”
  • “Creativity means trying something new.”

🎨 2. Set Up a Quick “Create Station”

Keep it simple and low-prep:

  • Paper + markers
  • Building materials (LEGO, recyclables)
  • Sticky notes

Add a sign: “Create anything you want—there’s no wrong answer.”


💡 3. Try a 5-Minute Creativity Challenge

Great for short library visits:

Examples:

  • Draw something using only circles
  • Invent a new animal
  • Write a 3-sentence story

Rotate daily or weekly.


🧠 4. Talk About Ideas (Short Discussion)

Ask:

  • “Where do ideas come from?”
  • “What do you do when something doesn’t work?”
  • “Can mistakes help us?”

Keep it light and encouraging.


✏️ 5. Encourage “Try Again” Thinking

Highlight:

  • Creativity takes practice
  • Mistakes are part of the process

You can say: “Every great idea starts with trying.”


🧩 6. Offer Choice

Let students choose:

  • Draw
  • Build
  • Write
  • Design

Choice = more engagement and ownership.


🖼️ 7. Display Student Work

Even simple work matters:

  • Quick sketches
  • Mini builds
  • Short writing pieces

This builds confidence quickly.


📚 Display Ideas (Easy + Engaging)

✨ “Creativity Starts Here”

  • Lightbulb or burst design
  • Students add ideas on paper “sparks”

🎨 “Mistakes Are Masterpieces”

  • Show scribbles turned into art
  • Add student examples

💡 “What Can You Create?”

  • Display random shapes/materials
  • Students imagine what they could become

🌈 “Our Creative Community”

  • Each student adds a decorated square
  • Combine into a large display

🎭 “Think Outside the Book”

  • Books “open” into imaginative scenes
  • Students add story extensions

📚 “Paws for Creativity” (fun crossover idea)

  • Pair creativity + animals or other themes
  • Great if you’re blending May topics

✨ Simple Display Enhancers

  • Bright, bold colors
  • Mixed textures (paper, cardboard, fabric)
  • “Librarian Challenge of the Week” sign
  • Student creations featured front and center

💡 Easy Activity Tie-In

“Creativity Challenge Cards”

  • Draw something new from a scribble
  • Invent a tool to solve a problem
  • Create a new ending to a story

Quick, repeatable, and perfect for library time.


Celebrating National Creativity Day doesn’t require elaborate plans—just a space where ideas are welcome and students feel free to try. A few simple materials, a handful of prompts, and a willingness to embrace “messy” thinking can go a long way.

Because in the end, creativity isn’t about getting it right—it’s about getting started. 🎨✨

I have a Creativity Celebration Printable Pack in my TpT shop.

Books to Celebrate Creativity

Creativity Bulletin Board Ideas

Space Pioneer Stories Book List

Books to Pair with Sherlock Holmes

Books to Celebrate World Turtle Day

World Turtle Day Bulletin Board Ideas

Stories to Pair with The Wizard of Oz

Older Americans Month Bulletin Board Ideas

Books to Celebrate Older Americans Month

Books to Pair with Peter Pan

 Be Kind to Animals Book List

Be Kind to Animals Bulletin Board Ideas

Need to raise funds for your library? Here are some posts on my blog that describe my fundraising camps. 
DateNameKnown ForContent Ideas
May 2Louisa May AlcottLittle WomenClassic lit displays, strong female characters
May 4Audrey HepburnFilm icon, literacy advocateTie-in: biographies, elegance & kindness themes
May 5Søren KierkegaardPhilosophyOlder students: thought-provoking reads
May 7Robert BrowningPoetryPoetry spotlight or writing activity
May 9J.M. BarriePeter PanFantasy book lists, imagination themes
May 13Daphne du MaurierRebeccaMystery/suspense book lists
May 15L. Frank BaumOz seriesFantasy displays, classic adaptations
May 19Lorraine HansberryA Raisin in the SunDiversity, civil rights themes
May 21Dante AlighieriThe Divine ComedyEpic poetry, classics (middle/high school)
May 22Arthur Conan DoyleMystery/detective fictionMystery book lists, detective themes
May 25Ralph Waldo EmersonEssays, transcendentalismQuotes, nature writing tie-ins
May 26Sally RideSTEM + children’s booksSTEM displays, women in science
May 27Julia Ward HowePoetry, historyPatriotic and historical themes
May 31Walt WhitmanLeaves of GrassPoetry month extension, free verse writing

Family Reading Ideas for the Summer

Why Parents Should Monitor Their Children’s Reading

End-of-Year Priorities for School Librarians

Adult Review – Chase the Light

YYA Spotlight – Frogman Puck Origins: The Rising Tides

MS Review – Oscar and the Mystery of the Glowing Orbs – middle school

Kid Review – The Unwinding Path – picture book

Kid Spotlight – Hadley the Hippo is What She Eats

Kid Review – Big Thoughts for Tiny Tots

Cute animals with books – stickers, shirts and more in my Redbubble Shop

Cultivating Creativity

Inspire creativity with library arts and crafts programs

Some things that might interest you

As librarians, we’re always looking for creative ways to engage students and enhance programming. These tools are easy to use. Explore them today and see how they might fit into your toolkit.

If you have a little time this summer to learn a new skill and are interested in GPTs, I recommend this “How to Build Your Own GPT” workshop.

Or, if you’d like a GPT to help you create worksheets for your students, I suggest this custom GPT – Imagination Station: New GPTs Create Kids Activity Sheets

I’d like to add a couple of features to my blog in the coming months and would appreciate your help. I am looking for school librarians interested in being interviewed on the blog. I am also looking for librarians and children’s or young adult authors to do guest posts on the blog. Click on the links below to fill out a survey.

Is there a way I can help you? Drop a note in the comments or shoot me an email. I’d love to help.

See you next week.

Jane (Library Lady)

Miss an Edition of K-12 Edition – find them here.

Read more Creativity Posts here.

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