Labor Day Activities for the School Counselor

As we approach Labor Day, we’re providing a set of ready-to-use, ASCA-aligned lesson and activity ideas for elementary, middle, and high school students, designed for school counselors to use around Labor Day. Each activity connects to student development, while also supporting teachers by reinforcing classroom learning.
🌼 Elementary School: “Community Helpers and the Value of Work”
Objective: Students will identify different types of work in their community and recognize the importance of their own classroom responsibilities.
Activity:
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Community Helper Match – Give students cards with pictures of workers (nurse, teacher, bus driver, mail carrier, farmer, etc.). Have them match jobs to tools or places (mail carrier → mailbox, nurse → stethoscope).
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Classroom Jobs Connection – Transition into discussing how students also have “jobs” in school (line leader, desk organizer, helper). Guide them to see how their “labor” contributes to the classroom community.
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Reflection Drawing – Have each student draw themselves doing their “school job” or a future job they dream of. Display them on a “Wall of Work.”
Counselor’s Role: Act as a school counselor coach and mentor, encouraging pride in responsibility and linking school effort to future success.
🌟 Middle School: “Work, Balance, and Team Effort”
Objective: Students will explore the meaning of hard work, teamwork, and balance between responsibilities and self-care.
Activity:
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Labor Day Word Cloud – Begin with students brainstorming words they associate with “work” and “Labor Day.” Create a word cloud (digital or poster).
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Team Challenge – Divide students into groups and give them a short collaborative challenge (e.g., build the tallest tower with limited supplies like cups, tape, and paper). Afterward, discuss:
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Who took the lead?
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How did the group share responsibility?
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What does this teach us about teamwork in school and beyond?
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Balance Conversation – Connect Labor Day to the importance of rest. Ask: How do you balance school, friends, family, and activities? Why is balance important to doing your best work?
Counselor’s Role: Provide school counseling consultant services by guiding reflection on work habits, collaboration, and healthy balance.
🎓 High School: “Labor, Career Paths, and Purpose”
Objective: Students will reflect on the dignity of work and how school effort connects to future career goals.
Activity:
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Labor Day Reflections – Share a brief history of Labor Day, emphasizing worker rights and the idea that all work has value.
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Career Connection Journaling – Have students write about:
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What career they’re interested in
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What skills or “labor” they’re putting in now (study habits, part-time jobs, leadership roles)
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How their current efforts prepare them for future opportunities
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Peer Coaching – Pair students to share one academic or career goal and brainstorm practical next steps.
Counselor’s Role: Step in as both educational consultant for school counselors and counselor educator by helping students link present actions to future purpose and resilience.
🏫 Schoolwide / Teacher Collaboration Ideas
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Staff Appreciation Notes – Have students write thank-you notes to teachers, custodians, bus drivers, and cafeteria staff to recognize their “labor.”
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Hallway Display – Create a schoolwide Labor Day bulletin board with student reflections/drawings on “Why Work Matters.”
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Faculty Support – Offer teachers a ready-made 10-minute Labor Day discussion starter so they can integrate meaning without extra prep (reducing their workload while increasing connection).
✨ By tailoring these activities to different grade levels, you help students celebrate work, responsibility, and balance while also reinforcing teachers’ efforts. This allows you, as a school counselor, to strengthen both classroom community and long-term career awareness.