In this unprecedented time of school closures, what resources are schools and organizations using to provide food literacy and food-based experiential learning?
The following list has come from of our Webinar on Food Literacy Opportunities for Children and Youth while schools are closed and other correspondence. Please let us know if you have any resources to contribute!
1. Get Growing
Activity | Description | Audience |
Growing Chefs! at home garden lessons: Garden Lesson and Talk 1: What is Soil? | Interactive video about soil and starting seeds; how to make a windowsill garden (13 min) | Elementary |
Ecosource’s Jardin de l’Éducation resource | Bilingual guide with many garden activities that can be teacher-led or assigned (e.g. story to read aloud and guide students through the motions of emerging from a seed; growing pea shoots; making seed paper; etc…) | Elementary |
Ecosource’s Grown in Mississauga Training Manual | This guide was developed by youth for youth. Teachers can pull out different sections to assign to students (covers both indoor and outdoor gardens). E.g. “selecting a garden space” (indoor or outdoor), “testing your soil”… | Middle / High School |
Loving Spoonful’s Grow Project – Module 1A: Seeds & Germination ; Module 2: GROWing Good Food ; Module 4: Garden Care | Made for this learning at home time period: Activities, videos and resources re: seed germination, growing peas and beans, pollination, garden care, and gardening at home | Grades 4-8 |
Little Green Thumbs’s resources | These resources offer tips to link gardening activities to the curriculum (Math, Science, Art, Language Arts). Resource: Seed Starting Log |
Elementary |
FoodShare Activity: Build a Bee Condo ; Build a Pop Bottle Planter | Guides you through how to make a bee condo with recycled materials Make a pop bottle planter to grow seeds |
Linked to Grades 4-6 Curriculum |
Forsythe Family Farms: Online Farm Education Video Packages | Curriculum-linked lessons from the Forsythe Family Farm (paid). Investigate the basic needs and characteristics of living things focusing on farm animals and plants; learn about honeybees and the eggs we eat; Dig deeper into sustainability. | Pre-School to Grade 4 |
For More Exploration | ||
Growing Up Organic (Ottawa): Curriculum linked garden based education | Planning the garden Seed Starting Direct Seeding Transplanting Seed Saving Soil and Compost |
Linked to grades 3-10 and possible to adapt from K-12.
French and English |
www.sgsonetwork.org/covid (School Garden Support in the US) | LOTS of garden resources from the US – e.g. Build a Newspaper Pot to Plant Seeds |
2. Get Cooking
Activity | Description | Audience |
Recipe cards with Local Ingredients: Foodland Ontario’s Kid Corner ; Equiterre local food recipe & activity cards | These food cards include facts about local fruits and vegetables and seasonal recipes | All |
FoodShare’s Tasting Graph – pages 11 and 12 | Use for taste tests to graph and compare different qualities in food (e.g. tartness, sweetness, crunchiness) | All |
Kid Food Nation | Contains a wide variety of lessons – Food Skills, Recipes, Tips, many developed by kids for kids: Knife Skills ; How to Read a Nutrition Label | All |
FoodShare Toronto’s Great Big Crunch Toolkits | Contains great apple/carrot -based activities ideas that could be assigned, e.g.: Worksheets to explore apples with your senses ; Apple fractions ; Apple literacy ; Exploring the importance of farmland by dissecting an apple | Elementary |
Project CHEF | Shares 65+ recipes including step-by-step photos to follow; 30+ cross-curriculuar lessons on growing, cooking, experimenting and sharing food; cooking skills videos including knife safety, and suggested books. | Elementary |
Pilot Light – the Food Education Centre (US) | Has some great family lesson plans (cooking along with writing / math activities etc…) E.g. Scrambled eggs & Common Core Writing | Elementary |
Loving Spoonful’s Grow Project – Module 5: Salad Celebration | Made for this learning at home time period: Activities, videos and resources re: harvesting spring vegetables and making a salad | Grades 4-8 |
3. Explore Your Food
Activity | Description | Audience |
Explore a Rainbow of Foods with Rainbow Plate | These 10-20 min videos guide students through exploring a rainbow of healthy foods using all our senses; invites students to become Rainbow Food Explorers. | Preschool & Elementary |
Reflecting on Food: Mindful Eating activity from the Edible Schoolyard | Provides a set of questions and a sound recording to guide students through mindful eating | All |
Mindful Eating Sound Recording | Guides you through a process of mindful eating | All |
Growing Chefs! at home garden lessons: Lesson 2: Become a Food Explorer! ; Lesson 3: What Vegetables Do for Us | Lesson 2 guides students through exploring their foods with all of their senses (6 min) Lesson 3 guides students through thinking about the vitamins and nutrients in food (9 min) |
Elementary |
Fresh Roots’ Veggie Printing Guide | Explore your food with your senses and make veggie prints | Elementary |
4. Compost & Manage Food Waste
Activity | Description | Audience |
FoodShare Activity: Build a Worm Bin | Linked to Grades 4-6 Curriculum | |
Food Matters Action Kit | Hands-on activities for ages 5-13 from rescuing food to composting – activities for students to take action on food waste. Activities that can be assigned include “create an ugly fruit or vegetable superhero comic”; food waste audit. | Elementary / Middle |
Loving Spoonful’s Grow Project: Module 3: Wondrous Worms | Made for this learning at home time period: Activities and videos re: worms and vermi-composting for beginners | Grades 4-8 |
5. Connect with your Neighbourhood and Planet
Loving Spoonful’s Grow Project – Module 1B: Climate Change- Some Smart Strategies | Made for home activities, videos and resources to explore the connection between soil and climate change. | Grades 7-8 |
Fresh Roots – Play Spring Bingo! | A bingo card to explore the signs of spring | Elementary |
Fresh Roots – Food and Farmworkers | Check out this Plant Money podcast to explore this complex topic | High School |
Captain Planet Foundation – Resources for Learning at Home (US) | Interactive websites that focus on the environment, some on food such as: Project Hero Pollinator Quest ; Project Hero Soil Quest | All |
Karen Washington’s Swiss Chard and White Beans | Presentation can spark conversations among students on themes of food justice, food security, etc..: | Middle / High School |
Understanding Food and Climate Change – An Interactive Guide | Great interactive resource teaching about the link between Food and Climate Change | Middle / High School |
iNaturalist Idenfication App | Kid-safe mobile app – point it at plants, bugs, birds, etc… to identify and learn all about it! | All |
Fresh Roots – Exploring Spring Traditions | Explore how you celebrate spring and where your traditions come from | All |
Other resources to explore:
FoodShare Toronto’s Educator Resources | |
Sustain Ontario’s Greenhouse (a collection of food-based lesson plans linked to the Ontario curriculum) | |
Growing Minds Day By Day (US) – has some great links to food-related books for elementary students read aloud on YouTube. | |
Edible Schoolyard Project – Edible Education for the Home Classroom site (US) – one of the best resources for food-related lesson plans out there | |
Whole Kids Foundation Kids Club https://www.wholekidsfoundation.org/kids-club |
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