Free, flexible ideas to keep military kids engaged this summer

Learning doesn't end when the final bell of the school year rings.
Summer Reading Program
Enrolling your children in a summer reading program is a great way to keep them engaged while they are out of school. (U.S. Air Force)

 Summer looks a little different for every military family.

Some families spend the season surrounded by moving boxes and permanent change-of-station (PCS) checklists. Meanwhile, others settle into a new duty station and try to plan summer routines, camps, road trips, and moments of rest for their children. No matter what season of military life you are in, most parents try to find the balance between letting kids enjoy summer break while still keeping some sense of structure.

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Because let’s be honest, the “summer slide” is real. Military families already navigate enough transitions throughout the year, and summer can feel completely chaotic. Summer also is an opportunity to keep kids curious, engaged, and learning in ways that feel flexible and realistic.

One of the greatest parts of being a military kid is that learning opportunities are already woven into this lifestyle. Summer can become a season where families encourage creativity, emotional growth, confidence, and curiosity together. And no, learning does not have to look like worksheets or a traditional classroom setting to be meaningful.

Where to Get Started?

STEM summer camp
A student at a STEM summer camp in Leonardtown, Md., on July 31, 2010, examines her robot before releasing it for a test. (U.S. Navy)

Who doesn’t love a free resource? And yes, you have probably heard about the library a million times, but honestly, local libraries are filled with programs created with community in mind.

From free craft days, teen book clubs, STEM events, and summer reading programs to audiobooks and hiking kits families can borrow, libraries offer so much more than books. You can visit your local library for in-person activities or explore the DoD MWR Library for digital resources available to military families. Kids can even sign up for a library card and build excitement around borrowing books and audiobooks throughout the summer.

If you are looking for learning opportunities connected to military life and history, national parks and museums are another great resource. Current service members, dependents, Gold Star families, and veterans can receive free annual or lifetime passes covering entrance fees to national parks, wildlife refuges, national forests, and other federal recreation areas through Recreation.gov Passes.

This can be especially helpful during a summer PCS road trip. Families can stop at historical sites along the way, visit aviation museums, and participate in programs like the Junior Ranger Program. Military families can also take advantage of the Blue Star Museums Program, which offers free admission to participating museums across the country. Learning happens naturally through the places military kids experience, whether during a move or at their current duty station.

Flexibility in learning can also mean using modern tools to keep everyone engaged. From free STEM websites to NASA activities, interactive online resources can help families break away from rigid learning schedules. After all, it is summer, and depending on where you live, that could mean long sunny days or an entire week of thunderstorms.

Learning While Traveling

Yellowstone National Park
Visit a national park during the summer, and you might see some interesting wildlife, such as this elk at Yellowstone National Park that was spotted on July 5, 2015. (U.S. Air Force/Lan Kim)

Some great free resources families can enjoy together include PBS Kids, Code.org for coding games and STEM activities, and virtual museum tours through the Smithsonian Institution. Educational podcasts, documentaries, and audiobook road-trip sessions can also turn quiet moments into learning opportunities without adding pressure.

If your family is PCSing this summer, your kids can learn while traveling by helping map PCS routes, tracking landmarks along the way, comparing climates between duty stations, learning state flags, and discussing the history of their new area. Military children learn in ways that often go unnoticed. This lifestyle exposes them to geography, culture, resilience, and adaptability constantly. From living overseas to exploring different parts of the United States, military kids learn through every experience and transition.

Learning can also happen through service and play. Families can volunteer together at local food pantries or organizations such as the Stronghold Food Pantry. Community events such as touch-a-truck days, outdoor movie nights, historical reenactments, farmers markets, and free concerts also create opportunities for learning and connection. Even simple activities at home, like Lego building competitions, scavenger hunts, backyard nature walks, or cooking recipes inspired by past duty stations, can become meaningful experiences for military kids.

As parents, we already carry a lot, and the summer months do not necessarily slow life down. Especially for active duty families, there is rarely such a thing as a true “summer break.” Giving yourself permission to approach learning in flexible ways can remove the pressure of creating a picture-perfect summer. Children can continue learning meaningfully through play, exploration, conversation, and free resources already available to military families.

Long after summer turns into autumn and winter, military children will not remember worksheets or perfectly planned schedules. They will remember the adventures, the laughter, the hands-on learning— and, most importantly, the time spent together as a military family.

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Daniella Horne is a U.S Army Veteran and Navy Spouse. She was born in Peru and lived in South Florida
before joining the Military. She is a freelancer and lifestyle blogger, currently stationed in Southern
California with her spouse and two children. She is currently a full-time student, Dean’s list awardee
and working to obtain her degree in English with a concentration in creative writing. Daniella finds joy in
creating a safe space for Military families through volunteering in her community. She was recognized as
the 2022 Armed Forces Insurance Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam Spouse of the year for her
volunteering and community work. She is Co-Chair of Secure Families Initiative’s Hispanic Caucus, a PTA
board member for her children’s school, volunteers with Bluestar Families, Military Hearts Matter and
she shares resources and advocates for military families and Veterans through her platform
@mommaandsprouts


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