St Patrick's Day Mazes (PDF)
ELA, Language Development, Resources for Teachers, Vocabulary, Spelling, ESL, Holiday & Seasonal, St. Patrick's Day, Holidays
About This Product
Maze Series
This maze series is designed for students in grades 2–5. Each set features a clear, kid-friendly theme with scene-based mazes that students first navigate, then complete by drawing a few target words from a simple word list. Pages come in varied styles and graduated difficulty, with an optional “color it in” step—and some themes invite quick calculations to match the task.
These mazes are student-friendly, classroom-ready, and perfect for literacy warmups, seasonal units, fast-finisher bins, centers, sub plans, or home learning extensions. The playful, structured format builds problem-solving, attention to detail, and fine-motor control while reinforcing themed content in a motivating way.
Note: Unlike many themed products, not all word-list words appear on the maze pages. To support full vocabulary coverage, we’ve released a companion word list you can find in the links section.
St Patrick's Day Word List
1. Leprechaun's Treasure
Gold, Leprechaun, Rainbow, Coins, Hat, Clover, Sneaky, Chase
2. Lucky Charms
Shamrock, Horseshoe, Four-leaf, Charm, Wish, Lucky, Fortune, Gift
3. Irish Traditions
Ireland, Feast, Parade, Music, Dance, Festival, Holiday, Cheers
4. Green and Gold
Green, Gold, Hat, Jacket, Crown, Flag, Shiny, Bright
5. Magical Ireland
Castle, Cottage, Meadow, Hills, Whisper, Echo, Stone, Legend
6. Parade Fun
March, Drums, Horns, Float, Flag, Cheer, Banner, Clap
PDF Version
Other versions will appear here when available. Follow the store for the lastest on new products.
How to Use These Mazes
Perfect for:
Morning work or early-finisher bins
Literacy or STEM centers
Holiday/seasonal review lessons
Independent stations, sub plans, or take-home enrichment
More St Patrick's Day Themed Products
FULL CATALOG OF DOWNLOAD LINKS HERE
Themed Mazes Links
Addition
Animals
Around the Home
Birthday
Candy
Christmas
Cinco de Mayo
Clothes
Colors
Days and Months
Division
Earth Day
Easter
Easy Mazes
Fall
Father's Day
Food
Geography (Set 1)
Geography (Set 2)
Geography (Set 3)
Graduation
Health
History (Set 1)
History (Set 2)
History (Set 3)
Human Body
Kindness
Life Skills
Mother's Day
Multiplication
Science (Set 1)
Science (Set 2)
Science (Set 3)
Shapes
Social Skills
Spring
Sports
St. Patrick's Day
Subtraction
Summer
Thanksgiving
Transport
Valentine's Day
Winter
Mazes in Depth
Structure
Each maze is crafted around a focused sub-theme. Students navigate the maze, encountering branches and cul-de-sacs that build attention and planning. Most pages include a tiny follow-up box—students draw or label 2–3 target words from a small word box, add a quick count, or color in the scene—so the activity reinforces both content and skills in a highly engaging format.
Each completed set includes:
A themed maze page.
A simple student instruction strip.
An answer key showing the solved path for teacher support or self-checking
Themes Included
These mazes cover a wide range of fun, age-appropriate themes, including:
Seasons & Holidays (e.g., Halloween, Easter, Valentine’s Day)
Math-Lite Connections (e.g., quick counts, number words)
Everyday Topics (e.g., Animals, Weather, School)
Special Units (e.g., Health, Earth Day, Sports, Kindness)
Each topic reflects students’ real-life experiences and interests while strengthening problem-solving, visual scanning, and fine-motor control in a playful, highly visual way.
Easy extensions (optional):
Time it: solve once in pencil, then try to beat the time in pen
Retell the route using sequence words (first, next, then, finally)
Count intersections or turns and graph the results
Write a 1–2 sentence mini-story about the scene using the target words
Design a tiny maze in the corner for a partner to solve
Differentiation tips:
Offer a finger-trace pass before pencils for emerging learners
Highlight the borders of the correct region on first attempts
Use thicker-line versions or simpler pages to build confidence
Pair roles: “navigator” gives directions; “driver” traces the path