Food Waste AssemblyQuick View
howisthathowisthat

Food Waste Assembly

(1)
Whole school assembly introducing children to the concept of food waste., includes video links.
World Food Day - Eating sensibly and avoiding waste.Quick View
dandan8081dandan8081

World Food Day - Eating sensibly and avoiding waste.

(0)
This is a set of slides highlighting why we shouldn’t waste food and what it means to be malnourished. The first few slides show how much a certain food is wasted in the UK each year and what this is equivalent to in weight. It then goes on to explain why wasting food is bad. The rest of the slides explain what malnutrition is and what we can do to avoid waste and eat a healthy diet. There is also a final prayer slide if needed. The entire presentation invites pupils to contribute answers and get involved and includes some interesting facts and information. Perfect for world food day or simply highlighting the need for better diets and how to be a better citizen. NB - world food day date can be changed
Food Waste Orienteering - fun final week activity!Quick View
kathompsonkathompson

Food Waste Orienteering - fun final week activity!

(0)
This has been designed as an activity that can be played on the school field. This task is designed to build their knowledge of food waste. Students get in teams to find the clues. They then answer the questions from each card. The first team back win.
Mission:Explore Food Taster - Chapter 5, WASTEQuick View
GeographerGeographer

Mission:Explore Food Taster - Chapter 5, WASTE

(1)
Download this selection of mission-based learning challenges from the Waste chapter Mission:Explore Food. Each illustrated activity encourages students to think critically and creatively about a different aspect of waste. Use this chapter to inspire enquiries, issue homework or browse it to simply have a think and a giggle. Mission:Explore Food is supported by our interactive and free website. Visit http://www.missionexplore.net/reward/Waste to find out more.
Food Waste - Food Waste Action WeekQuick View
kathompsonkathompson

Food Waste - Food Waste Action Week

(0)
This assembly was written for Food Waste Action Week but it could be given at anytime of the year. It looks at the environmental impact of food waste. It then talks through solutions and makes links to portion sizes for Secondary school students. It has one youtube clip. It is 16 slides long. It can be edited and I hope that it saves you time
The School Food StandardsQuick View
SchoolFoodPlanSchoolFoodPlan

The School Food Standards

(2)
A practical guide for schools their cooks and caterers. The revised school food standards have been designed to make it easier for school cooks to create imaginative, flexible and nutritious menus.
Doorways to wasteQuick View
CoolAustraliaCoolAustralia

Doorways to waste

(2)
Students are to construct a piece of art that will show the changes in the way people used materials and disposed of their waste over the past 400 years. They will also be able to predict what life might be like and waste disposal methods in the year 2050.
Stop Food Waste Day 2022 Assembly, Tutor Time, PSHE, CitizenshipQuick View
sarahspikin68sarahspikin68

Stop Food Waste Day 2022 Assembly, Tutor Time, PSHE, Citizenship

(0)
This is a 15-20 minute assembly about food waste and specifically Stop Food Waste Day on 27th April 2022. It is suitable for KS3-KS5 (Ages 11-18, Years 7-13, Grades 6-12) and includes many discussion activities that could easily be lengthened as written activities if you wanted it to last for a 60-90 minute lesson instead. It was used as a Citizenship whole school tutor time session for the week of Stop Food Waste Day 2022. It includes: What is Stop Food Waste Day? A downloaded and clipped video which will never disappear about how we can solve the world’s food problem. -Why it is so important to stop food waste including figures and facts. Images that explain practical ways to stop food waste A downloaded and clipped video which will never disappear about the UN World Food Program’s campaign to stop food waste. Class debate around personal responsibility for food waste How this links to the British Value of Individual Liberty How this connects to the UN Rights of a Child Discussion and reflection point Links so students can watch or read about the issue further (excellent for online platforms) Quotes, pictures, dual coding, reference to other news stories of the week Ends with an online news quiz This is a narrated powerpoint but it can easily be changed by deleting the icon on each slide if you would prefer it not narrated. This session fits into the Citizenship and PSHE curriculum but also covers SMSC, Geography, Health Curriculum and Fundamental British Values. Students reacted very well to this resource and many interesting discussions came from it.
Food BundleQuick View
sarah277sarah277

Food Bundle

8 Resources
A food themed colouring activity to inspire students to think about the food we eat, the waste we produce, and where our food comes from. Ideal for primary school students, and students learning English as a foreign language.
Don't waste waterQuick View
choralsongsterchoralsongster

Don't waste water

(2)
An SSEHV (education through human values) lesson on not wasting water. 1. Quotation 2. Meditation on the water cycle 3. Story and discussion 4. Song 5. Activity - completing a personal water usage chart
Waste Limitation Management and Recycling DesignQuick View
NASAeducationNASAeducation

Waste Limitation Management and Recycling Design

(1)
The Waste Limitation Management and Recycling Design Challenge Educator Guide is a starting point for middle school students to research and answer the challenging questions of how to maintain human habitations on the moon and other planets in the solar system. The guide focuses specifically on the need for water recycling. The guide includes background information on topics relating to the moon, Earth’s water cycle and water recycling. Several basic classroom activities on water recycling are also included.
Food Studies - Donation Station PosterQuick View
louise-anne-baitsonlouise-anne-baitson

Food Studies - Donation Station Poster

(0)
A4 poster encouraging students to donate their left over ingredients during food studies practical sessions. During food studies lessons, there can be plenty of waste as some students prefer not to take opened ingredients home. Display this poster and place a tray below for students to leave their newly opened ingredients. Other than reducing waste, it also gives the school extra resources to aid students/families that can not afford to take part in these practicals lessons due to financial issues (Pupil Premium).
Farming in the UK & world food productionQuick View
nikkimarshnikkimarsh

Farming in the UK & world food production

9 Resources
A grow your own topic - A topic has been written for parents who home school and teachers who would like a fun topic that offers opportunities for children and pupils to choose what fruit and vegetables they would like to grow in their home garden or school garden. Through research choose the vegetables they would like to eat later in the year. Parents and teachers can use the websites listed to help in their ’ grow your own ’ topic and through this, offers many opportunities to spend time outdoors preparing an area of the garden for growing crops. My two and half year old enjoyed placing the pea seeds in the seed trays indoors ready in a few weeks to plant the seedlings outdoors. All children will enjoy being involved in the sewing of the seeds, to eventually harvesting the crops to enjoy and eat. Additional activities for older children allows further research to be carried out online: To transfer the data collected onto maps produce posters on what is needed to be successful at growing vegetables or fruits, thinking about what tools are needed and the time of year the seeds will be planted. A storyboard/ time board activity to draw the process of preparing the veg patch, planting the seeds indoors, watering, planting out the seedlings outside to how long it takes the vegetables to grow. (Those children who love drawing can draw further detailed drawings of the vegetables) Enjoy and have fun spending time outdoors in this topic. L 1 Geography - Seasons - Understand and gain knowledge on impact of seasonality on food production around the world. By the end of the lesson children would be able to: summarise and give an explanation why foods are grown in seasons. Identify the climates and locations where food is grown, reared, caught and produced. To locate where food is exported in the world. L 1 & L 2 Farm to Fork lessons Include: lesson plans, PPP , resources and weblinks including an opportunity for Children to interview a local farmer as well as watch the BBC programme – Jimmy’s Farm Heroes 2008 (1 hour in length), making notes about what is affecting today’s farmers the most. Children in Lesson 1 will compose questions to ask a farmer and interpret his/her answers In Lesson 2 children will understand the link between land use and economic activity. By the end of lesson 1 children will be able to ask open ended questions. Interpret information from different sources and evaluate, from interviewing, that there are physical and human characteristics that affect farming. By the end of lesson 2 children will successfully identify land use; Identify the effect of land use on economic activity. As well as identify the distribution of food from its origin. Included is a photo of some notes the class teacher took when interviewing a local Cornish Farmer. L 3 Farm to Fork This Geography lesson follows on from \farm to Fork L1 & L2 and gives opportunities for researching different types of farming, expressing views and opinions on farming and how food ends up on our plates. Answering questions: do you know where our food comes from? As a nation should we be supporting our local farmers? There are links to a number of numeracy lessons on how far food travels from farms to end up on the supermarket shelves. Websites provide information on locations of locally sourced food products, and who these farmers sell their produce to. It is not just dairy, rearing animals, crop growing; fishermen are also farmers, catching fish to sell at markets and restaurants. This lesson provides opportunities for discussion on farming life and the produce that is sold to supermarkets and other sources for profit. L 4 Geography/History – Changes in our landscapes Topic day- Methods of farming and changing land use. This lesson entails using search technologies effectively, appreciate how results are selected and ranked and be discerning in evaluating digital content. To use technology safely, respectfully and responsibly. Q. How has methods of farming and land use changed over time? To gain an understanding of how land use and life has changed over time and recognise key topographical features using and reading OS maps identifying land use symbols and scales as well as locations and distances on all scales of maps, including national and world maps. This lesson is for upper KS2 and is an ideal lesson for a topic day where pupils would be looking into farming and land use seeing how much has changed over time. Pupils would use local maps of a county, regional and nationally from a local library - to see how land use has changed over a period of time in the history aspect of this lesson. With a focus on the different farming ways –studying beef, sheep, dairy, arable, mixed, pastoral and renewable energy using Google Earth as a source of information. The aim of the geography lesson is for pupils to consider the changes that can happen in an area and about the impact that these changes can have on both the environment and the people who live there. L 5 Opportunities to research where farms are locally; also finding out what produce is farmed and do these farms supply supermarkets? Pupils can also use the links provided to help them research crop and animal production from the different farms in the UK- Using the map pupils can work out the scale – distances in miles/km, then work out the time it would take to transport/deliver the produce to its destination, including counties/countries travelled through. The lesson gives pupils opportunities to research using the world wide web and ways of how they will present their findings from their research. L 6 This lesson has a scientific aspect, giving pupils a chance to understand and research what foods are consumed in the world and how they are consumed. What foods are produced for the fast food industry and how does overconsumption of certain foods increase obesity in the world? Pupils will have opportunities to research areas of the world where there is an obesity crisis; also by watching a bbc clip/you tube clip –‘The men who made us fat’. Will allow pupils to think about the foods we eat, seeing fast food restaurants everywhere, and advertisements. By researching the crops that are grown and farmed in the world have a huge impact on world population and world obesity. L 8 Food distribution is a current issue as is food production; this lesson is about both these issues. Children will consider both and investigate what foods are grown, produced and distributed in the UK; the impact farmers are facing with costs and profits when supplying their produce to supermarkets. Children will have opportunities in mapping food production and distribution in the Great Britain and around the world, and write a report on why there is so much food waste from vegetables grown as they don’t match the supermarkets criteria in size and shape. L 10 This lesson will give pupils an understanding of the concept of varying food prices across the supermarkets. As well as opportunities for research and give an explanation of varying food prices across the UK and world. When we do our food shopping, do you look at the prices between supermarkets on certain produce? Today’s lesson involves thinking about Q. Why does the cost of fruit and vegetables vary so much between the supermarkets? Many food produce, especially fruit and vegetables are imported from around the world. Q. How does this impact and influence the shopper on food prices? As a nation are we set in our ways in only buying from one supermarket, or only buying brand name produce? A research lesson where children will evaluate their findings, putting the data collected into a graph and writing an explanation of what has been found out.
Food for ThoughtQuick View
NASAeducationNASAeducation

Food for Thought

(1)
The 'Food for Thought' teacher guide is a collection of NASA activities and resources on space food and nutrition.
Food Practical rulesQuick View
janharperjanharper

Food Practical rules

(8)
Aimed at Year 7's, but useful for all ages, and new staff. A list of rules for a practical lesson basically telling them how to keep me happy by working in an organised and hygienic way. From what to do with your ingredients first thing in the morning, how to wash up, to when to collect their products etc GTP's NQT,s ITT students and Summer School teachers have all found it useful.
Food infoQuick View
erica_c_hansonerica_c_hanson

Food info

(20)
Basic info - different food sheets very basic I have re-uploaded the file 8-10-10 in 2003-2007 format - this may correct the problem that some of you have had down laoding it, if you still have the problem please email me, thanks Erica
Very Helpful Activities For Your School's Cost Of Living CrisesQuick View
msterry21msterry21

Very Helpful Activities For Your School's Cost Of Living Crises

(0)
Here is a quote from a recent buyer of these resources: "Our school saved £50,000 and brought in £20,000 extra income in the first term after using this resource. Fantastic, practical, simple and rewarding. Is this the best £5 we have ever spent? Absolutely ". Got money to burn? Want to save money? Want to generate more income? Here is a collection of things for you to try, for you to work with others on, and to use as starting points in discussions and actions. Such as establishing a no food wasted at this school champion in each class, positive action against water waste, against food wasted, against electricity wasted, exercises, reading buddies in the library, renting out rooms, labs, lecture theatres, and sports halls, learning to mend that bike… Beneath each heading are some visuals to act as stimulants for debate, discussion and action: a variety of things are there for you to attend to and do. These resources and ideas are inclusive, diverse, and engaging. Collection of practical things to do inside and around the school, inside and around your home, inside and around your community to help with the cost of living crises. Suitable for all ages and abilities, these resources can be used for individuals, pairs, teams, whole classes and at whole school level.
Big Spellings spelling lists  KS2  whole schoolQuick View
ellieteacherellieteacher

Big Spellings spelling lists KS2 whole school

(11)
These are differentiated spelling lists for a junior or primary school, and there is a file here which explains exactly how it could work in your school. It means each child has exactly the right spelling list for them regardless of age. This was a very popular resource with over 100 ratings and 5 stars. Lots of schools have adopted it and I’ve had very positive feedback from teachers, but took me all summer to make and so I thought I’d start to charge for it. It encourages independence as the children test each other at the end of the week. There are enough spelling lists on one A4 sheet to last a term. The lists start with cvc words and phonic sounds, progressing to very challenging words. They also contain all the High Frequency Words. There are free assessment sheets in another resource to work out which sheet each child starts at. See my other resources to see how to learn the Government statutory lists along side this.Also hold Spelling Bees (see my free resources for this!
Space Food and Nutrition Teacher GuideQuick View
NASAeducationNASAeducation

Space Food and Nutrition Teacher Guide

(4)
Space food research meets the challenge of providing food that tastes good and travels well in space. The activities in this NASA educator guide for grades K-8 emphasize hands-on and cooperative involvement of students as they explore the unique problems of keeping astronauts happy and healthy in space.
Cwbl Naturiol - FoodQuick View
NGfLCymruNGfLCymru

Cwbl Naturiol - Food

(0)
Mae pob pecyn yn cynnwys nodiadau athrawon, gweithgareddau i'w defnyddio yn yr ystafell ddosbarth, cardiau gwybodaeth a phosteri i helpu athrawon i gyflwyno ac astudio cysyniad ffynonellau egni adnewyddadwy. Ymwelwch â www.berr.gov.uk/energy/sources/renewables/schools/index.html i ddod o hyd i astudiaethau achos a chysylltau i wefannau defnyddiol eraill – yn enwedig ar gyfer y rhaglen ddaearyddiaeth.