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Free 100th Day of School Writing Prompt Printables

100th day of school writing prompts are a simple way to make this milestone feel fun without adding extra prep.

In our homeschool, these kinds of quick prompts were perfect for warm-ups. Just enough structure to get ideas flowing, but open-ended so kids could be creative.

Not sure when your class will reach the milestone? Use our 100th Day of School Time Calculator to quickly work out the exact date for your school year.

This little set of writing pages gives kids a mix of silly, thoughtful, and imaginative prompts to mark the day.

100th day of school discussion worksheet inspired by If the World Were a Village, showing questions about global population represented as 100 people, displayed beside the book.

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100th Day of School Activities

These free 100th day of school printables work well for a wide range of ages, especially younger students who enjoy simple, open-ended ideas.

There are ten writing prompt printables in total, each with plenty of room for kids to write and add their own illustrations.

All of the pages are available at the bottom of the post for personal or classroom use.

Writing Prompts for the 100th Day of School

Here are the prompts included in the set, some silly, some reflective, and all easy to use as a quick morning warm-up.

If I had $100โ€ฆ
Kids love this one. Mine immediately started listing snacks. Itโ€™s a fun way to see what they value or what they find exciting.

I wish I had 100โ€ฆ
A great imaginative prompt. Iโ€™ve seen everything from โ€œ100 puppiesโ€ to โ€œ100 snow days,โ€ and the explanations are usually hilarious.

What new skill will I learn in 100 days?
Simple planning prompt. Works well if you want to talk about goal-setting in a light way.

Three 100th day of school writing prompt pages, including โ€˜If I had $100,โ€™ โ€˜What new skill will you learn in 100 days?โ€™ and โ€˜I wish I had 100,โ€™ with colorful cartoon illustrations of kids, jobs, and a bookshelf.

Living 100 light years away
Always a hit with space-loving kids. Let them describe the planet, who lives there, and what daily life might look like.

If I were 100 years oldโ€ฆ
Kids tend to exaggerate in the funniest ways. Great for perspective taking.

The Earth in 100 years
Ideal for older elementary. Quick predictions about tech, nature, or daily life.

Three writing prompt pages for the 100th day of school featuring โ€˜In 100 years the Earth will look like,โ€™ โ€˜Describe what it would be like to live 100 light years away,โ€™ and โ€˜If I were one hundred years old,โ€™ with bright space and Earth illustrations.

Life 100 years ago
A short research prompt. Even one photo comparison can give kids something to write about.

The 100th President of the United States
A fun creative exercise where kids invent a future leader and describe their personality and accomplishments.

Two 100th day of school writing prompt pages showing โ€˜The 100th President of the United States will beโ€™ with cartoon presidents, and โ€˜Describe what life would be like if you lived 100 years agoโ€™ with historical character illustrations.

If you want an extra activity, the kids also enjoyed the 100 days of school crown printable.

If the World Were 100 People Activity

One of the pages in this set is inspired by the book If the World Were a Village, which shows the world as a group of 100 people so kids can picture big numbers more easily. It fits nicely with the 100th day theme and helps make โ€œ100โ€ feel more concrete.

When we used it, it sparked a great conversation. Kids made quick predictions about everyday things, languages, ages, access to basics, and then compared their guesses with the real numbers from the book.

It isnโ€™t a writing prompt on its own, but it works well as a warm-up. Kids can jot down answers or reflect with a simple question like โ€œWhat surprised you the most?โ€

A discussion worksheet based on If the World Were a Village, asking students to imagine global statistics as 100 people, shown beside the book cover.

More Fun Writing Prompts

If you like keeping a few seasonal writing choices on hand, these sets fit nicely into the rest of the school year.

Kids who enjoy themed journaling usually like working through my Valentineโ€™s Day writing prompts as February rolls in.

When March gets closer, these St. Patrickโ€™s Day writing prompts add a simple seasonal twist to your daily writing routine.

If you want one more imaginative option, the If I Were a Leprechaun worksheet always brings out funny, creative stories.

For spring, my Easter writing prompts work well as a quick warm-up on busy mornings.

And if you need something flexible for everyday use, the first grade writing prompts give younger writers an easy place to start.

You will also enjoy our 100th day of school color by number!

100th Day of School Books

If you like adding a quick read-aloud to the day, these books pair well with the writing prompts and keep the โ€œ100โ€ theme going:

Miss Bindergarten Celebrates the 100th Day of Kindergarten – A sweet, easy read that gets kids excited about the milestone. Great for younger learners who like spotting all the โ€œ100โ€ themed details on each page.

100th Day Worries – Kids relate to the main characterโ€™s struggle to find 100 of something to bring to school. It opens up a nice discussion before writing the โ€œI wish I had 100โ€ฆโ€ prompt.

If the World Were a Village – This one inspired one of the pages in the printable set. It helps kids understand big numbers in a simple, visual way and works beautifully as a warm-up for the discussion sheet.

Get Your Free 100th Day of School Printables Here!

Ready to grab your free printable? Just pop your name and email into the form below, and itโ€™s all yours!

Tip: Use a personal email address (like Gmail), school or work emails sometimes filter printable links.

Join Homeschool of 1 Membership with over 850 printables.

If you donโ€™t see the form below, click here to get the free writing prompts.

Last Updated on 14 November 2025 by Clare Brown

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