Home Mommy & ParentingDIY with Kids10 Engaging Screen-Free Activities for Tweens This Summer

10 Engaging Screen-Free Activities for Tweens This Summer

(No More "Mom, I'm Bored!")

by tinabasu
Two happy children engaged in screen-free summer crafting activities on a sunny wooden table, making a Summer Adventure Jar and painting small birdhouses.

TL;DR: Quick Summary for Busy Parents

Struggling with screen time during summer vacation? The key to engaging tweens (ages 9–12) is moving beyond basic crafts and offering independent, skill-based activities that keep them engaged longer.

Here are 10 practical indoor screen-free activities that reduce boredom while building real-world skills.

Save this list for those ‘I’m bored’ moments this summer.

What are the best screen-free activities for kids?

The best screen-free activities for kids focus on tactile, multi-step projects that stimulate dopamine naturally without a digital screen. For younger kids, this includes sensory bins, routine charts, and structured outdoor play. For older kids and tweens, activities must involve creative ownership, problem-solving, and independence to keep them engaged for more than 10 minutes at a time. (I know it’s a task! But still, believe me, it’s possible.)

I managed to do this with my 10-year-old this summer vacation – who loves Roblox and whatnot! If I can do it, so can you.

What are the best screen-free activities for teens?

Screen-free activities for teens and tweens require an advanced challenge level that honours their growing autonomy. Instead of passive toys, teens thrive on real-world creative outlets like stop-motion filmmaking, advanced kitchen skills, strategy board games, journal planning, and entrepreneurial or financial literacy projects.

10 Indoor Screen-Free Activities for Tweens and Teens

Two happy children engaged in screen-free summer crafting activities on a sunny wooden table, making a Summer Adventure Jar and painting small birdhouses pinterest

Here is a step-by-step guide to keeping older children productively occupied indoors when heatwaves make outdoor play impossible.

1. Financial Literacy – Teach Money Skills with a Simple Tracker (Free Printable)

Summer vacation is the perfect time to introduce real-world budgeting and money management.

How to teach kids and teens financial literacy?

  • Three-Jar System: Give them SaveSpend, and Give jars. Every time they earn money, they split it. Simple visual budgeting.
  • Small Budget, Real ChoicesHave them track real family budgets for weekly groceries. Take them grocery shopping, or let them have a look at your Amazon Fresh or Blinkit cart.  You can also hand them cash for a specific need (like school supplies/snacks). Let them plan and choose. Don’t bail them out if they overspend.

  • Summer Micro-Business: Lemonade stand, dog walking, selling crafts (fridge magnet, bookmarks). Help them calculate costs and profit. Earning builds respect for money faster than any lecture.

Make It Hands-On (and Surprisingly Fun)

Tweens don’t respond to instructions—but they do respond to systems they can see and use.

That’s why I created a simple, printable tracker they can fill in themselves. It helps them:

  • Track their pocket money or gifts
  • Set small saving goals (something they actually want)
  • Make mindful spending choices
  • And understand the idea of giving in a personal way

No pressure, no rules—just awareness building quietly in the background.

Try This With Your Tween This Summer

Print it out, keep it somewhere visible, and let them take the lead.

Most tweens start using this on their own within a few days—without reminders!

👇 Here’s what it looks like:

A simple way to teach tweens money habits this summer

Help them track, save, spend, and give—without it feeling like a lesson.

Tween Money Tracker Printable



Download Free Printable

Opens in a new tab. Tap 3 dots to download on mobile.

I’ll be creating more printable activity sheets like this. Let me know in a comment below, if you liked this.

2. Designing a Custom Graphic Novel

Move past basic coloring sheets and tap into their inner storyteller.

How to teach kids to design a custom graphic novel?

  • Fold 5–10 blank sheets of paper in half and staple them along the spine to create a blank book.

  • Instruct them to map out a protagonist, an anchor conflict, and sketch a multi-panel comic book or graphic novel across the pages.

You will be surprised by their imagination. My 10-year-old loves drawing comics! Sometimes his characters are really intense. All that Wimpy Kid and Calvin and Hobbes reading has turned into a comic drawing booster!

3. Brick-by-Brick Stop-Motion Animation

Instead of consuming digital content, let them create it using tech as an active tool. (So lil screen is involved in this activity). This is one of those activities that keeps them engaged for hours without you stepping in.

How to build brick-by-brick stop motion animation

  • Grab a pile of building bricks (legos, old building blocks), clay, or action figures.

  • Have your tween set up a stationary phone or camera and download a basic, free stop-motion app. You can use Stop Motion Studio/ Zing Studio, there are tons of  them available on App Store & Google Play.

  • They write a 3-scene mini-script – it can be anything random according to their imagination (from superhero to IPL, anything)
  • take sequential photos frame-by-frame,
  • stitch them together into a short movie in the app.

Tween creating stop motion animation using LEGO and smartphone – creative screen-free summer activity for kids

This one works especially well for screen-addicted kids.

4. Master a Traditional Indian Strategy Board Game

Step away from video games and introduce deep-thinking tactical analogue games.

  • How to do it: Dust off classic boards or buy traditional Indian games like Carrom, Chess, or Chaupar. You can try strategy games like Catan or Scotland Yard (great for older kids who enjoy planning and problem-solving).

  • The Task: Dedicate the high-heat hours of the afternoon (2:00 PM to 4:00 PM) to a family tournament bracket.

Ludo, Snakes and Ladders are still favourites for my son and me. He hates the snake at 98!

5. The 90s “Nani’s House” Nostalgia Interview

Connect generations while practising linguistic and creative writing skills.

  • How to do it: Hand your child a notebook and a pen.

  • The Task: Have them act as a journalist and interview a grandparent or parent over a phone call or in person.

  • Questions they can ask: “What did your summer vacations look like in the 1970s without smartphones?” or “Which has been your favourite travel adeventure?“, and compile it into a short biography story.

    This one works especially well for screen-addicted kids. They love to get on their budding journalist lenses!

6. DIY Leaf and Flower Pressing Journal

A beautiful, slow-paced botanical art project that teaches patience.

  • How to do it: Collect fallen summer blossoms, bougainvillaea/hibiscus, or unique leaves from the balcony garden.

  • The Task: Sandwich the leaves between sheets of parchment paper inside the heaviest encyclopedias or textbooks they own. Leave them for 2 weeks to create gorgeous pressed elements for bookmarks or greeting cards.

DIY leaf and flower pressing journal for kids using books and parchment paper – slow-paced botanical summer activity

If your child loves craft, this is the activity for them.

7. Room Redesign & Minimalist Decluttering

Empower your tween to take full ownership of their personal living environment. Tweens love control over their space more than we realise.

  • How to do it: Give them complete creative control over rearranging their desk, bookshelves, or bed layout.

  • The Task: Challenge them to sort through old schoolbooks and games, dividing them into clean “Keep,” “Donate,” and “Recycle” piles.

8. The 3-Ingredient Safe Kitchen Challenge

Build confidence and culinary independence without relying on a gas stove or open flames.

  • How to do it: Provide a designated set of ingredients like fresh summer mangoes, thick yogurt, and honey.

  • The Task: Challenge them to design, measure, and blend their own signature summer popsicles or assemble layered fruit parfaits for the family.

Some of the easy no-effort summer dessert recipes they can make safely are 2-ingredient Watermelon Sorbet or 2 minute microwave mug cake brownie.

9. The “Analogue Bag” Travel Challenge

Keep teens engaged during summer road trips or long flights without using an iPad.

  • How to do it: Dedicate a small backpack specifically for non-digital travel gear.

  • The Task: Fill the bag with a minimalist card deck, a Rubik’s cube, a sketchpad, and non-smudge fine-liner pens to pull out during long wait times. You can get card games like Uno, Taboo that they can play during the flight and not be stuck on a screen.

10. The Gratitude Jar of Positivity

A fantastic mental wellness tool to wrap up a calm evening routine before bed.

  • How to do it: Clean out an empty glass mason jar and decorate the outside with burlap string or colorful paper.

  • The Task: Have them write down one positive thing that happened during their day on a colored strip of paper, fold it up, and drop it inside.

🎁 Free Bonus Download: Want to make your own happiness jar? Check out my step-by-step guide and download my [Free DIY Jar of Positivity Printable Quotes Sheet] to get a full year’s worth of pre-made daily affirmations!

You don’t need to eliminate screens completely—just replace a few hours with something that actually builds them.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) About Screen-Free Summers

How can I reduce my child’s screen time during summer vacation?

Set up a predictable “Low-Stimulation Evening Routine” and switch to a structured routine chart where screen time is treated as a limited utility rather than a default cure for boredom. Replace passive digital scrolling with high-engagement, independent tactile projects like stop-motion animation or building models.

What are some good indoor activities when it is too hot outside?

When afternoon temperatures peak, focus on quiet, low-energy indoor activities like traditional board games (Carrom or Chess), creating graphic novels, flower pressing, or setting up family reading hours.

How do I stop my tween from saying “I’m bored” without tech?

Allow your child to experience a few minutes of boredom. Boredom is the precise psychological trigger that forces the human brain to activate creative problem-solving. Provide them with basic raw materials (paper, tools, kitchen ingredients) rather than finished entertainment products, and let their imaginations do the heavy lifting.

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