Something I liked to do around that age was make "newspapers" for my parents - no need to buy or download anything (except paper and staples, I guess). Fold some paper in half a couple times, cut it, staple it together, until you have a booklet that's vaguely small-newspaper-shaped. Give it to her and let her imagination run wild writing whatever she feels like, reporting on recent activities at school, at home, could be the events of books she just read, whatever she knows about in your local community or even the country/world. If she wants to, let her do some research on the internet too, although that's not something I ever did (I don't think we had the internet yet even?). It's a creative writing project, a design project, potentially a research/analytical project. My own "newspapers" were always titled "Today's News" and while I always did them purely for fun, looking back I think they gave me a basic sense of graphic design/layout, helped my handwriting, improved creativity, were an early idea of how to design headlines/titles of articles that are clear to the reader, and other basic writing skills.<p>Obvious points based on my experience when I made these:<p>- This is for fun, don't like, grade her on it or anything<p>- Whatever she learns from it will be very tangential to the fun, but she probably will learn things from it<p>- If she wants to write made-up stories about imaginary friends and such, that's fine, it's a kind of make-believe play. I did that sort of thing too, it didn't mean I didn't know fact from fiction in the actual newspaper<p>- You <i>absolutely</i> must read every single edition. Multiple times.