Nature Scavenger Hunt to Learn English πŸ›πŸŒΏπŸŒΌ

Children learn naturally when they move, explore, and connect language with real-life experiences. A Nature Scavenger Hunt is a playful way to help young learners build vocabulary while discovering the outdoors. Some people call this activity a nature treasure hunt, but both names describe the same idea. children search for items in nature and use English words to name what they find.

This activity began during our regular outdoor walks, simple moments where my child explored leaves, stones, flowers, and little natural treasures with curiosity. I soon noticed that he remembered English words much faster when he could touch and see the objects, rather than only looking at pictures or learning through a book. What started as a casual walk became a joyful learning routine, filled with excitement every time he found something new. Seeing how naturally this supported his vocabulary growth, I began reading and researching similar activities used by educators around the world. The idea of a nature scavenger hunt matched perfectly with what I was already observing. That inspired me to adapt the activity for our little ones and share it here, hoping other parents and teachers can experience the same meaningful and playful approach to learning English outdoors. 

πŸ‘‰ To try this activity, take your child outside , whether it is the home garden, school garden, or a safe natural space. Create a small checklist with simple vocabulary such as ,

leaf , flower, stone, stick, bird, cloud, tree, grass, soil, shell..ect

We can use printable worksheets or hand drawn worksheets πŸ‘‡





As children search πŸ‘€ , gently encourage them to speak, πŸŽ€

πŸ“’ "I found a stone."

πŸ“’ "This is a leaf."


Once they finish collecting items, invite them to share their discoveries. A simple sentence structure such as "I found…" , "This is..." , helps children feel confident speaking English in a relaxed way.

Children in Sri Lanka are naturally surrounded by nature such as gardens, beaches, villages, paddy fields. When English becomes part of these familiar surroundings, language feels useful and meaningful, not just as a school subject.


πŸŽ₯ Watch this short video to see how a Nature Scavenger Hunt works:

(https://youtu.be/ldeXQ2oMWcQ?feature=shared)



You can also try a few extension activities to make learning even more fun and meaningful:


πŸ‘‰ Draw the items and label them in English

πŸ‘‰Take photographs and turn them into a little scrapbook

πŸ‘‰ Paste pictures or magazine cut-outs of the items you found


These extra steps help children review vocabulary in a playful, creative way. So, give this activity a try with your little explorers, and don’t forget to share your ideas or photos with us! πŸ“·


πŸ¦• Come on little dinos… let’s learn, explore, and ROAR together! 🌼🐾 πŸŒΏπŸ’š

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