
We escaped the escape room!
As we left, we were already planning our next escape. And I became determined to find a way to create an escape room experience for my students.
The Appeal of Escape Rooms
Escape Rooms in Education
If they’re created carefully, escape room challenges offer a fresh and exciting way to introduce or review concepts, while encouraging teamwork and problem-solving. Kids become so engrossed in the escape, that they don’t view their tasks as “work.” They’re engaged in completing the task. It’s awesome!
I searched around for some escapes to do with my students, and I came up with a list of requirements for what I began to call The Perfect Classroom Escape.
Escape Room Requirements
1. It has to be based on our curriculum. I really can’t justify one that is purely fun, as our time together is so limited.

2. It can’t require expensive props. Many escapes and breakouts necessitate the purchase of locks and boxes with codes. I’m sure these can be a heck of a lot of fun, but I don’t want to spend money on locks. And I’ve heard stories about kids who change lock combinations, ruining the experience for others. So I need escapes that include everything I need, except basics, like paper or folders.3. It needs a variety of final solutions. I teach 5 classes, which almost guarantees that by the time 8th period comes around the solution would be blown. I need more than one possible ending.4. It has to be fairly quick and easy to put together. I don’t mind an initial set-up of 10-15 minutes, but I only have four minutes between classes to get ready for the next class’s escape. The set-up has to be lightning fast.5. It has to require critical thinking AND teamwork; not just kids working side by side pretending to be a team.6. It needs a compelling backstory and plot. The setting has to orient the players and the characters have to be engaging.7. It needs the wow factor. What is the wow factor? It’s the immersion part. The Disneyesque part. It’s what engages the kids so they’re excited to be in this strange situation while feeling an urgency to beat the clock and reap the rewards.
What I Found
Oh, I did find one escape on a party site, and it took me about 5 minutes after purchase to realize it only met about one of my requirements.
What I Did About It
I did what every teacher does when we can’t find what we need.
I complained about it. A lot. To a friend.
Fortunately, I complained to the right friend, Pam Kranz of Desktop Learning Adventures. Pam is an expert puzzle maker, so her suggestion was on point. We would create our own escape room challenges.
Bingo!
I suspect that Pam immediately began to regret her decision when I gave her my daunting list of requirements (I could swear I once heard her mutter “someone” was high maintenance…). But we soldiered through and came up with a plan.
Create an Escape Room Challenge
Step 1: Come up with a plan.
Step 2: Figure out how the kids can achieve the escape.
Step 3: Create that Disneyesque immersion experience to set the scene, lend atmosphere, and add urgency.
Another takes the players on a trip to visit relatives on a planet called Nonsensica. When a furry little pet named Sweetie chews up one of the only remaining maps back to Earth, the situation turns dire. (Don’t be fooled by the name Sweetie- this ain’t your grandma’s kitty.) Again, it is engaging and unique, which draws the kids in. This one can be found here.
Step 4: Incorporate real learning tasks.
As an ELA teacher, I will always require reading and writing tasks. I’m also not averse to including some tasks that require kids to work with numbers or combine a variety of skills. In the real world, kids will encounter problems requiring a multitude of skills to solve.
And kids do learn. A lot! Read about it HERE.
Step 5: Watch and enjoy!
By the way, did I mention where that last clue was for the zombie escape?
It may or may not have been on the seat of the chair I was sitting on.
I’ll never tell.
You can create an escape room or you can get some cool ready-made Escape Rooms below. Enjoy!









