5 Great Photography Projects for Kids – 2020 Guide

Teaching your kid the art of photography is a process - it starts from explaining the basics of photography, followed up by some basic training on how to use the camera, and continues to actually practice it as much as possible. As you already know, any teaching which doesn't involve a practice session will be partially successful, and when it comes to teaching kids photography, one of the most energizing ways to do that is through a photography project.

Did you read our articles about teaching photography to your kids? you can find it here:

Basic Photography Terms For Kids and Beginners

Photography For Kids - How to Teach Your Kids the Basics

Teaching Photography to Kids: Selecting the Right Approach

How to Teach Kids Photography – 11 Tips

Photography Projects for Kids - Advantages

there are 3 main advantages to kicking off a photography project for your kid:

  • It gives a special context to the practice session. It's not just a point & shoot exercise. It has a meaning.
  • It creates a longer term motivation and commitment.
  • It's a great opportunity to spend some more time with your kids. Isn't it most important for us as parents?

Photography Projects for Kids - 5 Ideas

There are many great ideas for photography projects for kids. Some of them are listed below. But the first thing I'd do is ask my kid to think about it themselves and come up with a few ideas. It's a great exercise and an interesting opportunity for you to learn one more thing about your kid's inner world and about the glasses they see the world through.

Two additional comments before detailing 5 ideas for photography projects for kids:

It is a Project, so Consider it as Such 

it's a small journey that has a starting point and an end point, based on some kind of a plan... Discuss it with your kid. Be clear about what the project is about and about how you are going to get there. Don't forget that it's a great opportunity for your kid to be part of a process (with a few stages and which takes a longer time to finish) rather than be involved in a short, one time, act.

Give Feedback Along the Way

Discuss the outcome of your kid's art with them. And when I say feedback I mean also sentences like: “see how the light comes in through this angle”, etc., and not only: “oh, this is beautiful”, “I like this!”, and so on. This is the most beneficial way to improve your kid's photography skills. Read more here: Teaching Photography to Kids: Selecting the Right Approach

If you want to learn more about a photography project I did with my daughter - click here: Teaching Kids Photography - Operation Fish[/su_note]

So... here are the 5 project ideas:

Letters

if your kid is currently learning to read and write, this project will be of interest to them. You can either ask your child to take pictures of objects which look like one of the letters, or take pictures of objects that begin with A, B, C, etc.. The main idea here is to find a project that is linked to whatever your kid studies at school – it can be letters, numbers or any other subject.

Point, Shoot and Compare

agree with your kid on 10 objects you'd like to photograph. Then, both your kid and you will take pictures – your kid with his kids camera and you with yours. Then, compare the outcome, discuss differences in composition, light, sharpness and any other interesting aspect.

A Day in Life

document one full day – from wake up time to bed time. Ask your kid to take a picture every hour (you can use your smartphone as a reminder). The next day, go through the photos with your kid. It would be very interesting for them to review it in such a systematic way, be reminded of yesterday's events and discuss it with you. Another alternative in this "A Day in Life" idea is to document you, their brother or sister, their pet, etc., rather than documenting themselves.

Nature

we are always amazed by those brave National Geographic photographers who take close ups of lions or sharks… can't your kid do the same? No matter where you live, you probably have some "wildlife" around you – cats, dogs, birds, squirrels… ask your kid to take as many wildlife photos as they want and then select the ten best pictures to show you (by the way - National Geographic published a very nice photography book for kids, click here: National Geographic Kids Guide to Photographyfor more details).

Pick a Theme

it can be light and shadow, reflections, clouds, sunsets, colors. It can be taking the same picture (same object at the same place) every day for a few days in a row at the same hour (or same composition but in different hours…) – no matter which theme you picked, your kid can take great photos and you'll have lots to discuss with them.

As mentioned, these are only 5 ideas than you can adopt as is or further develop, don't forget that the main purpose here is improving the photography skills while enjoying some educational quality time together.

Does your kid already have their own camera? check our buyers' guides here:

Choose the Best Kids Camera

Kids Digital Cameras

Kids Polaroid Cameras

Toy Cameras

The Photography Project Last Step

At the end of the project, and after you conveyed your feedback, you should find a way to present the project's outcome – it can be collage, an exhibition on the refrigerator's door, a PowerPoint presentation or an album – whatever suites you and your kid. The quality of this endpoint matters, so pay attention to it and make sure that your kid's efforts are respected and getting the appropriate attention.

Have any other idea you'd like to share? Please write to us or reply to this post