Teach kids how food goes from field to table with this hands-on activity using our FREE Farm Sequencing Cards for kids of all ages.
This From Farm To Table Cut And Paste Worksheet is suitable for Kindergarten - 1st Grade. In this food worksheet, learners investigate where favorite foods come from by examining drawings of 6 common food items. Students cut pictures of the source of the food and paste them to match.
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Farm to Table Activities will enable you to teach how food gets from the farm to table! Farm to Table Activities showcases several farms featured with informational text using real photos for you and your students to be able to research farms and farm animals with ease! This unit includes activities such as research pages for students to record their facts, phonics, alphabetic order, color by word, farm to table assessment and much more! See full list of farm to table activities below. Farm to Table Activities includes: *Cover *Terms of Use *Farm Animal Research *Fun Fact *Farm Facts Sheet *Dairy Farm Fact Sheet *Cattle Farm Fact Sheet *Pig Farm Fact Sheet *Poultry Farm Fact Sheet *Corn Farm Fact Sheet *Pumpkin Patch Fact Sheet *Apple Orchard Fact Sheet *Graph Your Favorite Animal Color 2 pages *Graph Your Favorite Animal B/W 2 pages *Beginning Sounds *Middle Sounds *Ending Sounds *Put Animals in Alphabet Order *Which Animals are on a Farm? *Connect the Animals *Connect the Food to the Animal *We Get Hamburgers from Cows *Bacon Comes from Pigs *Eggs come from a Chicken *We Get Popcorn from Corn *We Get Applesauce from Apples *We Get Pumpkin Pie from Pumpkins *Voice of Farm Animals *Adjectives for Cat *Adjectives for Cow *Adjectives for Hen *Adjectives for Pig *Adjectives for Dog *Adjectives for Sheep *Adjectives for Duck *Farm Animal or Plant? 2 pages *Farm to Table Game, Color and in B/W *Color by Word Cow *Color by Word Pig *Color by Word Hen *Corn Maze *Farm Test 4 pages *Farm Test Key 4 pages *Credits For more Farm to Table Activities, check out this PDF: More Farm to Table Activities by CAStateUniversity Reviews "This is very nice. I like how it shows that food doesn’t just appear, it comes from different sources (and does it in a non scary way) Very cute graphics. Thank you."
Farm activities for math, literacy, science, blocks, & stem activities that preschool, pre-k, and kindergarten students will LOVE (with FREEBIES)! #farmtheme #preschool #pre-k #preschoolcenters
Every child deserves to learn about real food and where it comes from. Visiting a farm and growing your own food is important and books can be used to support this hands-on-learning. We love books in
This week we had a little fun down on the farm in Tot School. This was such a fun theme with lots of engaging activities to explore! Here were our plans for Farm week: And here are the details of each activity: Our favorite farm books for the week were:Farm by Mary NovickMrs. Wishy Washy […]
It’s back to school season and families know there’s a lot of hustle and bustle as routines shift from summer fun and exploration to classroom learning. No one knows that better than teachers! Once the excitement of those first weeks starts to wear off, you might be craving some inspiration for lesson planning. Try featuring some farming and agriculture in your classroom! There are farming and agriculture topics for every learning level from kindergarten to 12th grade. The best news? Most of these have national learning standards built in to the lesson plans.
These Farm Animal activities are wonderful to use in conjunction during a unit lesson. This kit is fantastic for a classroom setting, a daycare or home school environment, or as an extension to your educational learning home. Great for a Montessori, Waldorf, or Reggio Emilia inspired environment. Children can explore with the grass tray and set up their own environment, practice sorting with a picture cards and a Feathers or Fur extension activity. Materials Included: - Wooden tray (8.5"x12") - Removable artificial turf inset - Woven basket - 10 Colorful & realistic looking farm animals - Barn, Fences, Pond, Gems, Feeding Trough - Laminated "Feathers OR Fur" sorting mat - Laminated animal cards Suggestions for use: - Place this work in a place for your child/children to easily access Important Information: - Recommended for children ages 3+ as there are small parts. If using with young children please keep a close eye on them. - Some of these materials are made with unfinished wood and may have some exposed wood splinters.
You've heard about the farm to table movement but have you introduced it to your kids? Try one or more of these fun farm to tale activities to get started.
I grew up in a small town, approximately 40 minutes North of Toronto, Ontario and happen to call it home today. Our town has grown but we are still surrounded
Learn how milk, chocolate, grape jam, orange juice, and bread go from field to table with these Farm Sequencing Worksheets for all ages!
Hello Friends, We are in our Farm unit - one of my favorite themes to teach! Since I am the wife of a farmer, I have pretty strong opinions about how this unit should be taught! First of all, most modern day farmers do NOT wear straw hats and wear overalls! My husband goes to work each morning in jeans and a button shirt and the only hat he wears is a ball cap when the sun is really strong! He also is a college graduate so he is a very smart man as well! Anyway............. I then start to discuss the concept of where our food comes from. When I asked this question last week "Who knows where our food comes from?", my kiddos said "The grocery store!" This, of course, IS true, but then I asked "Where did the grocery store get their food?" My kiddos really did not know and when I said "the farm", one of my little guys said "Not all our food, though." I asked him, "Hmmm, where else do you think it comes from?" He said, "The food in the boxes doesn't come from the farm." Okay........ we have some work to do here, I am thinking!! :) So............ last week we discussed the fact that not all farms have animals that live on them - some farms just grow crops. Here in central Illinois, we grow corn and soybeans and a few farms grow wheat. So we talked about the plants, how they grow, and what products are produced from the plants after they are processed. We have been using some big vocabulary words in this unit! We also discussed the differences between a tractor and a combine and their uses. This week we are discussing some of the animals that live on a farm and the products that they produce. I do not, however, discuss the use of animals for meat. Rather we discuss how we get milk products from dairy cattle, eggs from chickens, and wool from sheep. Last year, one of my wonderful co-teachers, Lisa, created a dairy cow from a saw horse. Here is a picture of it! She covered the legs with felt and made a felt head. She covered the saw horse with a plastic table cloth and glued on felt spots. To create the udder, she used latex gloves and inserted a pin into one of the fingers to make a small hole. Then she filled the gloves with water and attached to the bottom of the saw horse. We put a bucket under the udder and then asked our students to milk the cow! This picture shows one of my students milking our cow, Betsy! :) Fun! We haven't decided if we will be doing this project this year - it IS rather ambitious and we aren't sure if we are up for it this late in the school year! We hatch chicken eggs during our Farm unit.... My kiddos are thrilled when the eggs hatch into little balls of fluff! If you are interested in my Farm unit, click the photo below to take you to my TPT store. Until next time! Blessings,
These hands-on and engaging kindergarten farm activities are perfect for a spring thematic unit in your kindergarten classroom!
Teach kids how food goes from field to table with this hands-on activity using our FREE Farm Sequencing Cards for kids of all ages.
If you are looking for print and go science-based farm activities and printables for your farm unit then you will love Farm Worksheets for Kindergarten!
Farm Art activities, Farm Fine Motor Activities, & Farm Sensory Activities for preschool, pre-k, and kindergarten students
Inventive Harvest Sensory Bin as part of our Fall Sensory Series to get kids exploring farming and connecting with the food they eat.
Today we talked about what cows give have and are I used my cow again from when we talked about the food groups! Here is our pig: We sang these songs: No name on this file :(
Farm activities for math, literacy, science, blocks, & stem activities that preschool, pre-k, and kindergarten students will LOVE (with FREEBIES)! #farmtheme #preschool #pre-k #preschoolcenters
Ideas for a farm thematic unit with literacy, math, and science centers and activities for kindergarten and first grade classrooms. Learning through play.
Create a farm sensory bin with a corn silo that really loads a tractor! Fall (and spring) are such fun times to learn about farms. We have had fun this week doing a simple farm unit with Jonathan (2.5) and Owen (5). This plastic tub has been recycled into all sorts of play scenes. For […]
Over 220+pages in this Farm Lessons! Use the Kindergarten Farm Unit farm worksheets, social studies, science, and math & literacy activities.
These hands-on farm activities for preschoolers will be loved by toddlers kindergarteners too. Includes math and literacy activities.
Here are some ideas for a farm unit that teaches students where food comes from, why farms are important, and how kids can make healthy eating choices!
You've heard about the farm to table movement but have you introduced it to your kids? Try one or more of these fun farm to tale activities to get started.