Mirar sitio en español
Share
Contents
  • Introduction: A Project about Gardens
  • Launching the Investigation of Gardens: The Teacher’s Role
    • Considering Children’s Potential Interest
    • Locating Resources for the Project
    • Looking at Gardens before the Project Begins
    • Making the Teacher’s Topic Web
    • Gathering Reference Materials
    • Planning for Documentation throughout the Project
  • Phase 1: Getting Started  
    • Collecting Data Outside of School
    • Recalling Prior Experiences Related to Gardens
    • Posing Provocative Questions
    • Making Preliminary Observations of Gardens with Children
    • Creating a Topic Web with the Children
    • Helping Children Ask Questions and Make Predictions
    • Forming Subtopic Groups
    • Involving Families during Phase 1
  • Phase 2: Fieldwork
    • Making Site Visits
    • Gathering Data Related to Gardens
    • Interacting with Visiting Experts
    • Creating Collections of Artifacts and Specimens
    • Incorporating Science Activities
    • Incorporating Language Arts and Literacy Activities
    • Incorporating Math Activities
    • Incorporating Social Studies Activities
    • Incorporating Fine Arts Activities
    • Incorporating Physical Development and Health Activities
    • Debriefing after Fieldwork
    • Involving Families in the Garden Project during Phase 2
  • Phase 3: Bringing the Project to a Close
    • Revisiting the Question Table
    • Facilitating Play
    • Planning for Final Displays of Documentation
    • Planning a Culminating Activity
    • Involving Families during Phase 3
  • A Final Word
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix A: Illinois Early Learning Benchmarks Addressed during a Project on Gardens
  • Appendix B: Children’s Literature Related to Gardens
  • Appendix C: Teacher Resources Related to Gardens

Introduction: A Project about Gardens

Projects are the part of the curriculum that involves children in investigating objects and events around them that are worth knowing more about. Project work is a way of uncovering a subject rather than just covering it.

A project focusing on gardens has the potential to involve the entire class, the children’s families, and community members. A garden project can help children begin to understand the work that goes into producing food, enabling them to see that food doesn’t just “come from the store.” All phases of a project on gardens can offer children opportunities for activities related to the life sciences, social studies, physical development and health, language arts, mathematics, and fine arts.Figure 1Figure 1: Some children may have experience with gardens at home.

Note: It’s a good idea to ask families specifically about their children’s allergies before the project begins. Some children may be allergic to plant pollen, mold, or insect stings and bites. Children with such allergies can participate in the project, but a few activities may be off limits to them.

The topic of gardens could work well as a project for young children who are somewhat familiar with project work, especially if the study will involve creating a garden. If they already have project-related skills (such as sketching and drawing from observation, conducting surveys, interviewing experts, and representing what they have found out), they may be able to spend more time on activities such as planting and tending the garden.

This guide outlines possible steps that teachers might take to engage preschool-age children in projects about gardens. In addition, the guide indicates ways that investigating gardens can address a wide range of Illinois Early Learning Benchmarks (see Appendix A).

This slide show, All about Gardens, incorporates the work of several Illinois photographers and gardeners to show many features of gardens that might be investigated during a garden project. (See Acknowledgments for names of contributors to the slide show.)

Slideshow

Slide Show (PDF) of “All about Gardens

A wide variety of investigation activities are suggested, but all need not be included for the project to be interesting and enriching. Much depends on the program’s location and the time available, as well as the children themselves.

Keep in mind that this Project Guide offers a variety of ideas—not “recipes.” Children’s ideas about what directions a study of gardens might take are likely to emerge as the project progresses. The activities outlined in this guide are just suggestions; many other worthwhile experiences are possible—and often the children themselves come up with related ideas to pursue. At the same time, it is not necessary for every activity suggested in this guide to be included in a project!

Return to Top

Launching the Investigation of Gardens: The Teacher’s Role

Several steps may be involved for the teacher who would like to help children get started on an investigation of gardens:

These steps are discussed in detail below.

Considering Children’s Potential Interests

It’s a good idea for the teacher to consider what experience the children in his or her class will bring to a project on gardens. Some young children will be familiar with gardens, while others will have little or no experience. Many children will have knowledge of gardens based on books and videos that have been shared with them. (See Appendix B for suggested titles.)

This particular project topic has the potential to engage a class with a wide range of interests. Even children who have never seen a garden may be drawn into some aspect of the project. Some children may especially want to know about the tools and machines used to create and maintain gardens. Others may be interested in the life cycles of plants or the role of plants in producing food. Some may be engaged by the aesthetic aspects of gardens such as the colors and scents of flowers. Still others may be curious about the animal life in a garden—from slugs, worms, ants, and butterflies to birds, rabbits, groundhogs, and (in some parts of the state) deer.

Locating Resources for the Project

Before starting a project on any topic, it is helpful for the teacher to explore available local resources and potential sites where children could safely make direct observations of relevant phenomena, ideally on a regular basis. A key question for the teacher considering a project on gardens is, “Where will we find gardens to study?” 

If the school has a garden, or space to create one, much of the children’s fieldwork can be done there. People who live near the school, including parents of children in the class, may have backyard gardens that the children could visit. A local garden club or Master Gardener’s group might be able to put the teacher in touch with people who will let the class visit their gardens. Occasionally, master gardeners are willing to advise or assist a class that wants to make a school garden. (Master gardeners can be contacted through the University of Illinois Cooperative Extension Service.) Making a garden will be discussed in Appendix C.

It’s a good idea to keep in mind that storage space can be an important resource during a garden project, if the class is making a garden or growing plants indoors. Tools, bags of topsoil, containers, and seeds or bulbs all should be stored safely, and plants that the children are starting in small containers will need to be close to a light source.

Gardens at local parks can be good sites for fieldwork. A nearby arboretum, conservatory, forest preserve district, community garden, or neighborhood backyard or rooftop garden might also be good places for a site visit. Gardens can sometimes be found on the grounds of retirement facilities, hospitals, or college campuses. Businesses such as hardware stores or home and garden centers are also potential sites for data collection. It’s a good idea to find out if the people who own or work in these places will be open to having young children visit. Figure 2Figure 2. A nursery or home and garden center can be a site for data collection during the “All about Gardens” project.

Gardeners, botanists, plant pathologists, members of horticulture organizations, entomologists, and other people whose work is related to gardens can be invited to assist the children with the project in a number of ways. Local groups (such as garden clubs or park districts) sometimes produce print materials that children may find useful during a garden project. Businesses in the area may be willing to lend tools to the class or to donate such items as seeds, bulbs, or flower pots.

Perhaps more than with other project topics, the time of year may affect the optimal time to start a project on gardens. Some potential resources will be seasonal, available only at certain times of the year. For example, garden centers may not carry many seeds in the fall, and their displays of gardening tools are likely to be much smaller then than in late winter, when people plan their gardens for the coming spring. Of course, fieldwork can be done in a garden in winter, but much more data can be collected during the growing and harvest seasons.

Looking at Gardens before the Project Begins

The teacher may find it helpful to visit one or two gardens and other fieldwork sites without the children. While there, the teacher can take a few photographs or collect some specimens or artifacts to take back and show the children to provoke some initial conversations about the topic. Tools and equipment, different types of plants, and jobs related to gardens may be of interest to a number of the children.

Figure 3Figure 3. Sharing a few gardening tools with the class may provoke children’s interest in a garden project.

NOTE: It’s a good idea for the teacher to ask about use of chemical treatments in any garden, nursery, or other site that the children might ultimately visit. Some children are especially sensitive to fertilizers, herbicides, or pesticides. Any visits by the class should be planned for times when the chemicals have not been freshly applied, if finding another site that doesn’t use the chemicals is not possible.

Making the Teacher’s Topic Web

Teachers usually find it helpful to make a topic web related to the project topic before launching into Phase 1 with the class. This web is sometimes called an “anticipatory planning web.”

The teacher’s topic web is intended to be a reminder of the wide range of possible subtopics that the children can investigate, rather than an outline of lessons or activities. It includes concepts, ideas, information, and vocabulary related to gardens that the teacher believes are worthy of the children learning more about.

For example, a garden project can be rich in math-related activities such as measuring, sorting, counting, and making predictions. Preschoolers may also be able to meet early learning science benchmarks as they find out about garden tools, plant life cycles, the uses of plants, the effects of weather on plants, the cycle of the seasons, animal life that can be found in gardens, and the sights, sounds, textures, and smells of a garden. A garden project also offers opportunities for children to become familiar with jobs involved in creating and maintaining gardens.

The teacher may also wish to note ways for children to express curiosity and take initiative while learning to solve problems cooperatively.

The teacher’s web can also include resources such as potential sites to visit and experts to invite. Once the project is underway, some changes can be made to the initial web, based on what the teacher learns about the children’s interests, understandings, and knowledge of the topic.

Some teachers’ webs include potential ways for families to participate in a project. Family involvement in a garden project might cover a range of activities, such as donating cartons for growing seeds, assisting on site visits, or helping with difficult tasks such as clearing space for a school garden.

Gathering Reference Materials

Before beginning a garden project, the teacher may find it helpful to collect some good-quality reference books, magazines, and other resources about gardens for her own use and to share with the class. (See Appendix C for selected teacher resources related to gardens and project work.) A librarian can help with this process. A librarian can also help the teacher locate reliable Web resources on topics such as seasonal changes in gardens or the animal life of gardens. Several Web sites are available related to children and gardens, including one sponsored by the University of Illinois Cooperative Extension Service. Web articles about projects related to gardens are also available. (See Appendix C for URLs.) It’s important to keep in mind that Wikipedia may be a source of basic information, but it is notoriously inaccurate. (It is not a secure site, and users are sometimes able to insert misinformation.)

Nonfiction picture books to read aloud are likely to be useful throughout Phase 1 and Phase 2. (See Appendix B for some selected children’s books, Web sites, and other resources for children related to gardens.) Slides or videos about gardens, gardening, or about specific plants can also enrich the class discussion during the first two phases of the project.

Planning for Documentation throughout the Project

It’s a good idea for the teacher to decide before the investigation begins how to document the project work during each phase. The overall documentation of the project should “tell the story” of the project, so the teacher may want to set aside enough wall space for a display showing how the children’s work progressed.

Many aspects of documentation during a project on gardens will be similar to documentation for any other project. For example, children may record information about gardens through drawing, writing, note taking, photography, and discussion, representing their data in a variety of ways to share with others. As with any other project, the teacher can also plan for his or her own documentation of the children’s work via note taking, photography, or videography.

However, documentation during a study of gardens may present challenges that some other projects do not. For example, children may be studying plants that they are growing indoors, which will require more storage space than may be needed for some other types of projects. It’s a good idea for the teacher to decide ahead of time where children can keep the plants.

For resources to help with documentation during any project, see Appendix C.

Return to Top

Phase 1: Getting Started

It’s a good idea for the teacher to make sure that the children all know what gardens are before proceeding with any other activities during Phase 1. Sharing a few photographs of gardens, a picture book about gardens, or some pages from a gardening magazine will help to provide the class with a common understanding of the topic. The teacher can then help the children begin their study of gardens in several ways:

Collecting Data Outside of School

One way to start the investigation of gardens is for the teacher to have children find out about gardens that they see near where they live:

Recalling Prior Experiences Related to Gardens

As the children talk about their drawings of gardens, it is likely that some of them will recall and bring up related personal experiences. Seeing Will’s sketch of a potato plant may remind M’Kayla that her grandmother grows potatoes in a barrel. Hearing about growing potatoes may encourage Arnav to tell about the time that he went to a greenhouse.

To further support children’s conversations about the topic, the teacher might recount a personal experience with gardens. Reading aloud from a related storybook can also spark children’s interest in telling about their experiences. (See Appendix B for a list of selected children’s picture books related to gardens.) The teacher can invite the children to talk about their memories of gardens, preferably over a period of several days. Continuing to encourage memory sharing may help children who are slow to recall their experiences, as well as those who may be reluctant to speak.

Letting children draw or paint something that they recall about gardens is another way that they can share their memories. The teacher can write the children’s dictated words on their work. Memory stories and drawings can give teachers a sense of what sorts of experiences that children have had, as well as what misconceptions that they may hold and what subtopics may interest them.

Posing Provocative Questions

During Phase 1, asking provocative or probing questions can help children to think about gardens in new ways. Such questions might include “What are gardens for?” or “Why do you suppose people have gardens?” or “What do you think people grow in gardens?” More specific questions might also provoke children’s thinking and problem solving, such as, “Do you think that anybody in our neighborhood has an indoor garden?” A good follow-up question might be, “What could we do to find out?”

The teacher may find that some of the children want to do some gardening. In that case, he or she might pose questions such as, “What if we could make a garden here—what would you like to grow?” The teacher might then ask, “What makes you think that [the suggested item] would be good for a garden?” After listing the children’s responses, the teacher might then follow up by saying something like, “What are some places at school that we could grow the things you suggested?” More will be said in Appendix C about starting a garden.

Making Preliminary Observations of Gardens with Children

The next step might be for the children to take a walk where they can closely observe a garden. If enough adults are available, the class can take garden walks in small groups. If the availability of adults is a problem, it often helps if the teacher is able to take only three or four of the children at a time. Each child can take a clipboard, a pencil, and some drawing paper for making observational sketches. The group can stop occasionally to talk about what they observe. They should have time to sketch what they see in the garden, take pictures, measure the height of the plants or the length of garden tools, and so forth.

It’s a good idea for the teacher to keep a record of what children pay attention to, talk about, and wonder about during the initial visit to the garden. This information can help the teacher facilitate discussions among the children later. It can also be useful during the children’s webbing process and when they are working with the question table (see below).

Upon their return to the class, children can report to the class about what they saw in the garden and what they included in their photos and drawings. The teacher can encourage members of different groups to compare what they have observed and to ask each other questions about what they encountered.

Creating a Topic Web with the Children

As with any project, creating a topic web with the children is an important part of starting a project on gardens. It’s a good idea to start the web after the children have shared several experiences, such as making memory drawings, hearing or telling stories related to the topic, or examining some relevant specimens or artifacts. Typically, the children’s topic web is created during group time.

The teacher can start the topic web discussion by asking the children some questions focusing on gardens:

What the children say during this conversation can become part of their topic web. As the children say what they know, what they think, or what they wonder about, the teacher can write the words directly on the topic web paper or on sticky notes. 

The teacher can also use the notes taken when the class first observed the garden to remind children of what they noticed or wondered about.

Many teachers find that making a web is likely to take more than one group meeting, depending on the children’s ages and their level of experience with the process. Children can also help the teacher organize their initial questions, comments, and ideas into categories. For example, if comments related to flowers were generated during the conversation, those could be grouped separately from the children’s questions about animals that live in gardens.

For more information about the children’s topic web, see the following resources:

Helping Children Ask Questions and Make Predictions

In addition to the children’s topic web related to gardens, the teacher may want to generate a question table based on the questions that the children ask. Some teachers post a large hand-printed question table on a classroom wall. Others prefer to create the question table as a computer file (Figure 4).

What would you like to find out? (Question) What do you think the answer might be? (Prediction) What did you find out?
(Answer)

What can people grow in gardens?

Flowers and green plants.

 

Can you have a garden inside the house?

No. Because the plants have to be in the ground.

Yes, you could dig up your floor and plant flowers.

What kinds of creatures might be in a garden?

Rabbits and squirrels.

Bugs.

Lions.

 

Figure 4. Some teachers create the question table on the computer.

(For more information about making and using a question table, see Lilian Katz’s blog entry titled “The Question Table” on the Projects in Practice Web site at http://illinoispip.org/blogs/katz/2010apr06.html.)

The question table is likely to be useful during all phases of the project. New questions usually arise while children are involved in fieldwork. Teachers can encourage children to ask questions during any phase of the project in a variety of ways:

(See “The Project Approach: Helping Children Ask Questions” at http://illinoisearlylearning.org/tipsheets/projects-questions.htm for more suggestions.)

Predicting possible answers and sources of information is another important aspect of project work that can begin during Phase 1 and continue throughout the project. The teacher might occasionally ask a child, or the whole class, “What do you think the answer to your question might be?” or “What do you think the guest expert will answer when you ask him that?”

The teacher can also encourage children to make predictions about other things:

Some teachers engage the entire class in making predictions by posing a simple two-option question on a sign-in sheet designed like a survey form. Questions can focus on a site visit or on an experiment in progress: “Do you think that we will see ants at the Arboretum today?” “Do you think that the squash plant will have more than 2 blossoms on it today?”

Forming Subtopic Groups

Several of the children may show interest in the same question related to gardens. They can become part of a subtopic group that will try to find answers to the question.

The teacher can work with each group to help them decide what they might try to get answers to their questions. For example, the subtopic group that is interested in the question “What animals might be in the garden?” will benefit from particular references, experts, and site visits, while those who want to find out how to grow corn will probably need to use different resources.

Involving Families during Phase 1

As the project begins, the teacher can send a note to families letting them know that the class will be investigating local gardens. The note can also mention what the children have said and done about gardens so far. The teacher may also want to use the note to request help from family members. Do any of them have gardens, either indoors or outdoors? Are their jobs or hobbies related to gardening? Do they have interesting experiences with gardens to tell the class?

As mentioned previously, it is a good idea to ask parents if their children have allergies that might affect their being outdoors or studying things in a garden. The teacher may also suggest that from time to time parents informally ask their children to talk about what they have found out recently about gardens.

The teacher might also invite family members to help their children recall experiences with gardens. Another way to involve families is to suggest that children take their clipboards, paper, and pencils home to make sketches in gardens or in home and garden centers near where they live. Children can also invite family members to make drawings, which they can bring back to class to share.

Help from families will be very important if the class will be making a garden. The teacher may want to create a list of garden-related tasks to send home to families.

Return to Top

Phase 2: Fieldwork

The children’s fieldwork on gardens can begin after their topic web has been completed and they have selected the subtopic groups that they want to participate in. Depending on their subtopic groups and the questions that the children want to answer, their fieldwork may include a range of activities:

These activities are discussed in detail below. It’s a good idea to keep in mind that these are only suggestions. The children’s ages and interests—as well as the teacher’s experience with project work—are factors to consider when thinking about which activities might be most helpful and engaging to the class.  

Making Site Visits

If the school has a garden, or if it is possible for the class to have an indoor garden, the children may be able to conduct their investigations without leaving the school grounds. Walking trips to gardens in parks, backyards, or on windowsills or rooftops can also provide valuable opportunities to study a variety of gardens.

If the class is permitted to visit sites away from school via bus or car—such as a home and garden center, an arboretum, or a greenhouse—such trips can also be worthwhile.

The teacher might keep in mind that site visits should be made by subtopic groups as much as possible. When children in a subtopic group have decided what their questions are, the teacher can help them to decide where they might go to find the answers: A park? An arboretum? A home and garden center? They can also discuss who might be able to answer their questions during the site visit.

Occasionally, a whole-class visit to a site (a large botanical garden, for example) can be useful, particularly if each child or small group of children has specific data to collect.

It’s a good idea to arrange multiple visits to some sites if possible. For example, children might visit a garden in small groups two or three times a week, in different types of weather (calm sunny, windy, foggy, etc.). Visiting more than once over a period of several weeks can help children to observe seasonal changes. Making more than one visit to a home and garden center or greenhouse can be helpful to small groups studying those locations, as well; the first visit to a large place may be overwhelming. On later visits, they may be better able to focus on details that they missed while still trying to “get their bearings.” Making multiple visits provides a chance to observe the effects of weather on a garden: “What happened to the plants during this morning’s hailstorm (or last night’s frost)?” Children will also have more opportunity to look for evidence that animals use or depend on plants in the garden over time: Has something made new holes in the lettuce leaves that they observed earlier? Do they notice animal tracks that were not there on their first visit?

When preparing for outdoor site visits, it is a good idea to remind the class of the usual safety procedures for outdoor activities (for example, use sun protection, stay on the path, dress warmly in winter). It is a good idea also to remind children to ask permission before they touch things or collect artifacts during any visit and not to litter.

During the site visit, children can use the data-gathering techniques described in the section “Gathering Data Related to Gardens” below, such as making observational sketches, taking notes, and collecting artifacts (with permission). They may also have opportunities to ask questions of people who work or live there. (See “Interacting with Visiting Experts” below.)

Gathering Data Related to Gardens

One of the teacher’s key roles during Phase 2 of a project on gardens is to facilitate children’s close observations of things to be found in gardens and at related sites. Here are some things that the teacher might do to encourage data collection:

With older preschoolers or those who are more experienced with project work, the teacher might suggest some additional types of data collection:

Interacting with Visiting Experts

The teacher can help the children generate a list of potential guest experts to provide information about gardens and gardening. The list might include the following people:

The teacher may take on several roles in having experts talk with the class, depending on the children’s ages, interests, and experience:

Creating Collections of Artifacts and Specimens

Helping the class build and maintain a collection of specimens and artifacts related to gardens and gardening can be another important role for the teacher during Phase 2 of the project. The teacher might choose to help in some of the following ways, depending on available resources and the ages, interests, and experiences of the children.

Note: Commercially packaged seeds and bulbs may be treated with chemicals that children should not handle. To avoid contact with these chemicals, it’s best to use food-grade seeds or seeds and bulbs taken directly from plants for the class collection. Keep in mind that some children are allergic to nuts, peanuts, or soybeans.

During a project on gardens, the class may be interested in collecting a few of the following specimens and artifacts:

As children and family members add to the collection, the teacher can help them label each item with its name, the date it was collected, where it was collected, and the name of the person who provided it. Children may be interested to know that the term for such documentation of artifacts is “provenance.”

Incorporating Science Activities

As children learn more about gardens during Phase 2, they may have questions that can best be answered through scientific explorations or experiments that they plan collaboratively or individually. Such activities may include finding answers to questions about items in the collection and examining them closely; growing plants; designing, making, and testing garden tools and equipment; and setting up experiments.

Looking Inside the Collection: Children can learn much by examining items in the class collection. Teachers might encourage such activities in several ways:

The teacher might anticipate that older preschoolers or those who have more experience with project work may want to use the collections in additional ways:

Designing, Making, and Testing Garden Tools and Equipment: Some children may want to design their own garden tools, machines, and equipment in response to questions such as “How could a gardener get water to the garden without carrying a bucket?” or “What could a gardener do to keep rabbits from eating all of the plants?” As they do so, they will have opportunities to learn the principles of design and engineering used by adults who create the tools and equipment that gardeners use.

The teacher might help in some of the following ways, depending on available resources and the ages, interests, and experiences of the children:

Setting up Experiments: As the project proceeds, a number of questions may arise that children can address through experiments that they plan individually or with the help of classmates or the teacher. The questions may vary widely, depending on the children’s ages, interests, and experience with gardens. The following are a few examples of garden-related questions from children that might be investigated by experimenting:

For an example of how one teacher facilitated children’s explorations and experiments, see “Magnets and Cars” at http://illinoisearlylearning.org/videos/magnets-car.htm.

Incorporating Language Arts and Literacy Activities

Introducing New Vocabulary: Learning vocabulary related to gardens will be important to children’s growing knowledge during the project. The children’s ages and levels of experience may influence what words and concepts they learn and use. Subtopic groups may also learn some specialized vocabulary. For example, a group that investigates “How Plants Grow” may need to know such terms as “germinate,” “sprout,” and “seedling.”

The teacher can help the class find definitions of basic “garden” words:

  • Worm
  • Aphid
  • Beetle
  • Slug
  • Germinate
  • Blossom
  • Pollinate
  • Ripen
  • Season
  • Vine
  • Corn
  • Bean
  • Squash
  • Gourd
  • Cultivate
  • Irrigate
  • Pathway
  • Planter
  • Edging
  • Trellis
  • Toad house
  • Birdbath
  • Clay
  • Sand
  • Frost
  • Water
  • Drought
  • Fertilize
  • Compost
  • Stone
  • Mulch
  • Row
  • Rake
  • Hoe
  • Shovel
  • Spade
  • Trowel
  • Wheelbarrow
  • Hose
  • Scarecrow
  • Pest
  • Wilt
  • Rot
  • Ant
  • Rock garden
  • Rooftop garden
  • Rain garden
  • Vegetable garden
  • Flower garden
  • Bed
  • Raised bed
  • Hoop house
  • Vertical garden
  • Seed
  • Leaf
  • Stem
  • Root
  • Plant
  • Bulb
  • Corm
  • Gall
  • Tuber
  • Pod
  • Fruit
  • Vegetable
  • Soil
Figure 5

Figure 5. The labels that come with nursery plants may include new garden-related symbols or vocabulary words.

As children begin to use and understand the new vocabulary, the teacher might facilitate class discussion about some of the words. For example, he or she might pose provocative questions such as, “How can you tell if a bean is a seed?” Or if some children seem confused about a term, the teacher might suggest, “Let’s look it up in this garden encyclopedia.”

Writing in the Context of the Project: A variety of writing activities may be relevant and useful during Phase 2 of a garden project. Teachers can choose from a variety of ways of encouraging children’s dictations or writing during the project, depending on the children’s interests and levels of experience:

Sharing Books and Other Reference Materials: The teacher’s tasks during the project include selecting and sharing high-quality resources. Many books and Web sites are available about children and gardening. A librarian can help locate good informational picture books, magazines, Web sites, and other resources about gardens to share with children. (See Appendix B for lists of relevant children’s literature and Appendix C for teacher resources related to gardens.)

Incorporating Math Activities

As the fieldwork progresses, the teacher might want to suggest a wide range of math-related activities that may help children answer questions and express new understandings, depending on their ages and levels of experience:

The teacher might anticipate that preschoolers who are older or who have more experience with project work may express interest in other math activities during the garden project:

Incorporating Social Studies Activities

During Phase 2, children can collect and represent data from a number of social-studies-related activities. Their participation in these activities may vary, depending on their ages, interests, and prior experiences:

Incorporating Fine Arts Activities

The visual arts, creative movement, drama, and music can offer children a variety of perspectives on what they find out related to gardens. During Phase 2, it’s a good idea to focus on realistic representations and interpretations of data—the more imaginative or impressionistic interpretations may be more appropriate for Phase 3. Here are some possible approaches to bringing the fine arts into Phase 2 of a garden project, depending on available resources and the children’s ages and interests:

Incorporating Physical Development and Health Activities

Questions related to physical development and health may arise as the children investigate gardens. The teacher can help to facilitate discussion of these topics:

The teacher might use a variety of approaches to helping the class focus on how a human body moves while doing garden work. The teacher can decide which of these might be most engaging to the class, taking into account available resources and the ages, interests, and experiences of the children:

Debriefing after Fieldwork

It’s a good idea to make time for subtopic groups to report to the class regularly about what they have found during fieldwork. The teacher might facilitate these discussions in several ways, depending on the children’s ages and levels of experience:

Involving Families in the Garden Project during Phase 2

Multiple opportunities for family involvement are likely to arise during Phase 2 of a garden project. Teachers can use their newsletters or special invitations to engage families in a variety of activities: 

Figure 6Figure 6. Children and their families can look for gardens in the neighborhood. Return to Top

Phase 3: Bringing the Project to a Close

A project about gardens might last from 3 weeks to several months, depending on the resources and time available and the extent of the children’s interest. A teacher can often tell when any project is about to “run out of steam”; however, at times, the school year may come to an end before the children feel the project is over! In that case, the teacher may need to gently urge the class toward completing their work and planning culminating activities.

The teacher can help the children bring the project to a close by revisiting the question table with them, facilitating their use of their new knowledge in their play, assisting with plans for displaying their documentation, working with them on plans for a culminating event, and inviting families to participate.

Revisiting the Question Table

As the study of gardens begins to wind down, the teacher can look at the question table with the class or with individual children:

Depending on the ages of the children and the resources available, they may want to contact some of their guest experts or consult books and other references to answer remaining questions or to clarify what they have misunderstood.

What would you like to find out? (Questions) What do you think the answers might be? (Predictions) What did you find out?
(Answers)

What do people grow in gardens?

Flowers and green plants

Many kinds of flowers.

Corn, squash, beans, lettuce, spinach, cabbage, tomatoes, strawberries, and radishes.

People can’t grow cookies in a garden, or money.

Can you have a garden inside the house?

No. Because the plants have to be in the ground.

Yes, you could dig up your floor and plant flowers.

Yes, if they have soil for the roots and enough light and water.

What kinds of creatures might be in a garden?

Rabbits and squirrels.

Lions.

Rabbits, squirrels, deer, woodchucks, ants, worms, butterflies, potato bugs, bees, earwigs, birds, and slugs are some animals you would find in gardens.

No lions. Except maybe a lion sculpture.

Figure 7. At the close of the project, the question table shows the children’s findings.

Facilitating Play

Children’s spontaneous play may reflect their new understandings of gardens throughout the project, but especially during Phase 3 when they can apply their knowledge about such things as caring for gardens and operating a home and garden center. Teachers can take any of several approaches to fostering such play, depending on the children’s ages and interests:

Planning for Final Displays of Documentation

When the children’s questions about gardens have been addressed, the teacher can suggest that it is time for the class to plan how they will display the findings from their project. The teacher might help with this process in a variety of ways:

Planning a Culminating Activity

The subtopic groups should meet to decide what they want to do to share with others their new knowledge and skills. A key decision is how best to express and represent what they have found out about gardens. Their choice will depend on their interests, their ages, and the resources available. Among the activities a group might choose to do are: 

The teacher can help the children’s decision-making process in various ways, such as the following:

During Phase 3, children may feel inspired to imaginatively express what they have been learning about gardens as part of the culminating activity. The teacher might choose from a number of possible ways to foster their creative work, depending on the children’s ages and interests:

Involving Families in Phase 3

Family members often enjoy seeing what children have done and learned during a project. As the investigation of gardens comes to a close, the class may think of a variety of ways to share their work with their families. Here are some ways that teachers can help:

Return to Top

A Final Word

This Project Guide is meant to suggest possibilities, to support the teacher who wants some ideas for ways to get started with a project related to gardens, or to help maintain momentum once an investigation is underway.

Keep in mind that the children themselves are likely to find many worthwhile ways to investigate gardens. In fact, as children pursue what interests them, any project may end up with a main focus very different from what was originally expected. Gardens could become just a small part of some other topic that engages the minds of many children in a class.

Return to Top

Acknowledgments

Thanks to those who granted permission to use their work. Permission to use slide show photographs: Jeannette McCollum (slides 2, 3, 5), Durango Mendoza (slides 4, 12, 20, 22, 31, 49, 54, 55, 58-61, 63, 66, 67), Lola Mendoza (slides 7, 48). Permission to use photographs in Figure 1: Durango Mendoza. Permission to take photographs used in slide show and in figures: University Primary School, Champaign, Illinois; Country Arbors Nursery, Urbana, Illinois; Wolfe Orchard, Monticello, Illinois.

Return to Top

Appendix A: Illinois Early Learning Benchmarks Addressed during a Project on Gardens

Benchmark Benchmark Description Benchmark is addressed when…

Language Arts
3.B.EC

Dictate stories and experiences.

…children dictate labels or captions for their drawings and other representations.
…children dictate questions that they want to ask guest experts.
…children recount their activities (e.g., on a site visit) while an adult writes their words.

Language Arts
3.C.EC

Use drawing and writing skills to convey meaning and information.

…children sketch what they see during fieldwork.
…children label parts of their drawings of gardens, plants, tools, etc.
…children talk with others about what they have drawn.

Language Arts
5.A.EC

Seek answers to questions through active exploration.

…children discuss what they want to find out.
…children conduct fieldwork to follow up on their own questions.

Language Arts
5.C.EC

Communicate information with others.

…small groups report to the class about what they have observed or found out, using their drawings as visual aids.
…children collaborate on displays that tell the story of the project.

Mathematics
6.A.ECa

Use concepts that include number recognition, counting, and one-to-one correspondence.

…children identify numerals on rulers, rain gauge, etc., and use them to report measurements.

Mathematics
6.C.ECa

Explore quantity and number.

…children count quantities of seeds collected or planted, numbers of petals on flowers, etc.

Mathematics
7.A.ECa

Demonstrate a beginning understanding of measurement using non-standard units and measurement words.

…children use terms such as “how high,” “how deep,” “how far apart,” etc., and measure using nonstandard or standard linear units and tools.
…children use a rain gauge to report on rainfall amounts.
…children use terms such as “heavier” and “lighter” and use balance scales to determine comparative weights.

Mathematics
7.A.ECb

Construct a sense of time through participation in daily activities.

…children notice and keep a record of changes in the gardens and the plants they study during the project.

Mathematics
7.B.EC

Show understanding of and use comparative words.

…children discuss or make drawings that show how specific gardens, plants, tools, etc., are similar to/different from each other.
…children use words such as more, fewer, or taller when discussing findings.

Mathematics
8.A.EC

Sort and classify objects by a variety of properties.

…children group garden tools or plant parts (seeds, leaves, etc.) by common characteristics such as size, shape, purpose (for example, when making graphs or charts).

Mathematics
8.D.EC

Describe qualitative change, such as measuring to see who is growing taller.

…children report on using nonstandard or standard measurement to determine height of a plant, color of a flower or leaf, etc., over time.
…children talk about changes that they have observed in sizes, colors, shapes, and quantities of items they observe during fieldwork.

Mathematics
9.B.EC

Find and name locations with simple words, such as “near.”

…children use terms such as next to, across, through, etc., to describe the location of a plant, flowerbed, etc.

Mathematics
10.A.ECa

Represent data using concrete objects, pictures, and graphs.

…children make real graphs or Venn diagrams using objects they have collected.
…children sketch and draw accurate and detailed pictures of gardens, plants, and related objects.
…children organize drawings, photos, and other documentation to tell the story of their investigation of gardens.

Mathematics
10.A.ECb

Make predictions about what will happen next.

…children speculate about possible results of an exploration or experiment.
…children discuss possible changes in weather and their potential effects on gardens.
…children speculate about changes that may occur in the plants or gardens they are studying (e.g., growth, ripening of fruit, withering of leaves, etc.).

Mathematics
10.B.EC

Gather data about themselves and their surroundings.

…children do fieldwork in gardens, home and garden centers, etc., taking notes and making field sketches.
…children interview guest experts about gardens.
…children take surveys of peers and family members.
…children listen to (or read) and discuss books and other resources with information related to gardens.

Science
11.A.ECa

Use senses to explore and observe materials and natural phenomena.

…children handle or use the garden-related artifacts and specimens collected.
…children closely study gardens and the things in them, noticing aspects such as textures, odors, sounds, and visible properties (e.g., size, shape, colors, etc.).
…children use a variety of media to represent their knowledge and understanding of gardens.

Science
11.A.ECb

Collect, describe, and record information.

…children sketch, draw, take photographs, and make notes during all fieldwork.
…children debrief with classmates after fieldwork, describing what they have observed or found out.

Science
11.B.ECa

Use scientific tools such as thermometers, balance scales, and magnifying glasses for investigation.

…children check the outdoor temperature with a thermometer and keep a record of temperature.
…children create or use a rain gauge.
…children use balance scales to compare weights of objects.
…children use magnifiers to look closely at objects.

Science
11.B.ECb

Become familiar with the use of devices incorporating technology.

…children study or use garden tools and equipment such as trowels, buckets, rakes, wheelbarrows, and hoses.

Science
12.A.ECa

Investigate and categorize living things in the environment.

…children investigate the types of plants people cultivate in gardens.
…children differentiate among the forms of animal life found in gardens (e.g., slugs, insects, birds, mammals).
…children investigate parts of plants (leaves, flowers, fruit, pollen, roots, and stems), which aid in identifying plant species.
…children learn ways to identify plants in a garden using a variety of resources.

Science
12.A.ECb

Show an awareness of changes that occur in themselves and their environment.

…children study and discuss the ways that plants and gardens change over a period of several weeks.
…children help to organize drawings and photographs chronologically to show the changes in the gardens or specific plants during the study.

Science
12.B.EC

Describe and compare basic needs of living things.

…children find out what plants need in order to survive.
…children find out some reasons people grow vegetables in gardens.
…children find out what specific animals might do in gardens (e.g., eat plants, create compost, and make homes).

Science
12.C.EC

Make comparisons among objects that have been observed.

…children talk with each other about differences and similarities among the gardens they are studying.
…children compare characteristics of plants or tools they are studying.
…children create charts and tables, with the teacher’s help, to show comparisons.
…children compare their predictions to their findings.

Science
12.D.EC

Describe the effects of forces in nature (e.g., wind, gravity, and magnetism).

…children observe and discuss ways that gardens may be affected by changes in temperature, rainfall, sunlight, etc.

Science
12.E.ECa

Use common weather-related vocabulary (e.g., rainy, snowy, sunny, windy).

…children sketch and discuss what the gardens or specific plants are like in different types of weather.

Science
12.E.ECb

Participate in recycling in their environment

…children help to maintain a worm compost bin indoors.
…children help to make temporary pots from newspaper for germinating seeds.
…children use “boxes and junk” to create models of gardens, plants, and garden tools or equipment.

Science
12.F.EC

Identify basic concepts associated with night/day and seasons.

…children sketch and discuss the ways that gardens or specific plants change through the seasons.

Science
13.A.EC

Begin to understand basic safety practices.

…children wear sun protection, and proper clothing etc. when doing outdoor fieldwork.
…children talk with experts about garden safety procedures.

Science
13.B.ECa

Express wonder and ask questions about their world.

…children ask questions or state what they want to find out during the webbing activities.
…children develop questions to ask guest experts.
…children ask questions after their classmates have reported on fieldwork.
…children create poetry, dance, music, or works of visual art showing a sense of wonder related to the investigation of gardens.

Science
13.B.ECb 

Begin to be aware of technology and how it affects their lives.

…children learn the uses of garden tools and equipment such as wheelbarrows, irrigation systems, trowels, rakes, and rain gauges.
…children use cameras to record data.
…children use the Internet, with adult help, to locate resources related to gardens.
Social Science
14.C.EC
Participate in voting as a way of making choices. …children vote or reach consensus about types of seeds to plant for close study.
Social Science
15.A.EC.
Identify community workers and the services they provide. …children interact with experts whose work involves gardens.
Social Science
15.D.EC
Begin to understand the use of trade to obtain goods and services. …children find out about the prices of seeds, garden tools, etc.

Social Science
16.A.EC

Recall information about the immediate past.

...children debrief with classmates about what they have learned during fieldwork.
…children dictate the story of a site visit or interaction with a visiting expert.

Social Science
17.A.ECa

Locate objects and places in familiar environments.

…children are able to find specific plants or objects in a garden or other place they have visited previously.

Social Science
17.A.ECb

Express beginning geographic thinking.

…children can describe where a plant or other item is located in a garden they have visited, relative to some other object there.
…children make detailed drawings or create maps of a garden, a home, a garden center, or some related place, showing the location of key items relative to each other.

Social Science
18.A.EC

Recognize similarities and differences in people.

…children can identify various reasons why a person might have a garden and various reasons for choosing specific plants for a garden.
Physical Development and Health
19.B.EC
Coordinate movements to perform complex tasks. …children make newspaper pots.
…children plant seeds.
…children demonstrate how to use particular garden tools.
Physical Development and Health
23.A.EC
Identify body parts and their functions. …children observe how the human body works when performing garden-related tasks such as digging, planting, picking, etc.
Fine Arts
25.B.EC
Describe or respond to their own creative work or the creative work of others. …children discuss their own work (e.g., paintings, creative movement, creative dramatics, music making) with classmates, or constructively respond to classmates’ creative efforts.
Fine Arts
26.A.ECa
Participate in dance activities. …children choreograph or participate in creative movement activities related to the investigation of gardens.
Fine Arts
26.A.ECb
Participate in drama activities. …children create or have roles in dramatic performances (skit, puppet show) related to the investigation of gardens.
Fine Arts
26.A.ECc
Participate in music activities. …children sing songs related to gardens.
…children create instrumental pieces related to the investigation of gardens.
Fine Arts
26.A.ECd
Participate in the visual arts. …children create 2-dimensional (collage, painting, etc.) or 3-dimensional (sculpture, assemblage) artwork related to the investigation of gardens.
Social/Emotional Development
31.A.ECb
Exhibit eagerness and curiosity as a learner. …children involve their families in some garden-related activities.
…children participate willingly in many activities related to the project.
Social/Emotional Development
32.B.ECd
Develop relationships with children and adults. …children work with classmates in small groups to collect, record, and report data.
…children interact with adults who are visiting experts.
…children work with peers and adults to put together a culminating event.
Return to Top

Appendix B: Children’s Literature and Web Sites Related to Gardening

A teacher can often promote children’s interest in finding out more about a topic by sharing a picture book with the class. Gardens play an important role in a number of children’s stories and poems, and children’s book illustrators sometimes depict gardens as part of the background on a page.

Some teachers like to start a project by sharing well-written, accurate informational books or articles from children’s magazines. Having reliable factual information—whether from the text or the illustrations—is especially important for children during Phase 1 and Phase 2. Realistic fiction (stories that do not involve magic) can be appropriate during all phases of project work.

Children’s direct experiences with gardens can help them respond to the descriptive language of poetry during Phase 3. Magical elements in folktales and fantasy stories related to gardens may engage some children’s imaginations during Phase 3. Children may also enjoy looking at the different ways that illustrators of picture books represent gardens. Figure 8

Figure 8. A wide range of picture books may be useful during a garden project.

The following lists of selected books and other resources may be useful during a project on gardens. The lists are not comprehensive; teachers may know of additional books.

Informational Picture Books

The following is a sampling of books that can provide factual information relevant to a project on gardens. Some of the books listed may be too challenging overall for preschool-age children, but they contain some text or illustrations that the children may find helpful.

Realistic Fiction Picture Books

The following picture books are fiction—stories with no magical elements. Realistic fiction books can be useful to children during all phases of a project.

Picture Books of Poetry and Verse

The following picture books feature poems and rhymes related to gardens.

Picture Books of Folktales and Fantasy

The following picture books include folktales and fantasy writing that involves gardens.

Web Sites for Children

Preschoolers may need help from adults to use these Web sites, which contain useful information related to gardens.

Return to Top

Appendix C: Teacher Resources Related to Gardens

It’s a good idea to keep in mind that many commercial garden chemicals (fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides) are dangerous to children and must not be used in any activities they are involved in. Some resources below may recommend using these chemicals in gardens. For alternatives, talk to someone from the cooperative extension service or a local gardening group.

Books, Encyclopedias, and Related Resources

The following print resources for adults can be useful in the preparation and implementation of a project on gardens.

Articles about Projects on Gardens, Seeds, and Plants

Reports on project work related to gardens, such as the following Web articles, can be useful to the teacher who is considering a garden project.

A Living Resource: A School Garden

A garden is a living resource—a collection of plants that can be studied throughout the seasons, along with the creatures that live in or near it. Planning and creating a school garden is a major undertaking that can involve children, families, program staff members, and members of the community. A school garden may not be manageable for every program.

It usually helps to keep the creation of a school garden separate from a garden project. Some teachers might prefer to begin a garden project after the school garden has been constructed. In some classrooms, making a garden might be the culminating activity that draws upon the knowledge, skills, and understandings the children have gained during the project—as well as the interests and resources of the families, the school, and the community.

For more ideas about a class garden, see the Illinois Early Learning Tip Sheets in the “Get Growing” series (also available in Spanish):

Other Web Resources about Gardens and Gardening

Other Resources Relevant to Project Work

The following multimedia, print, Web, and related resources may be useful to the teacher during any project, including an investigation of gardens.

Fine Arts Resources

Both the Internet and the local library can be a source of additional materials (art prints, music CDs, and videos of performances, including dance) that the teacher may want to make available to children during a garden project.

Sharing art prints or photographs of 3-dimensional work related to gardens is one way that teachers can engage children in considering the aesthetic elements of gardens. The following internationally known artists are among many who depict gardens or garden plants in their work in ways that are appropriate for children to view and discuss:

Illinois artists who use gardens and garden plants as subjects include photographers Chris Main and Larry Kanfer and painter Charlotte Brady.

The teacher may find that some children are interested in music related to gardens. Songs and other compositions include:

Some older preschoolers might want to learn or to act out humorous songs related to gardens, such as the following:

To inspire children who are interested in dance, the teacher may want to become familiar with “The Dance of the Butterfly,” available on the Kennedy Center ArtsEdge Web site at http://artsedge.kennedy-center.org/educators/lessons/grade-k-2/Butterfly_Dance.aspx.

Another ArtsEdge feature that may interest the children is a video in which puppeteer Hobey Ford enacts the life cycle of a monarch butterfly with foam puppets (http://artsedge.kennedy-center.org/multimedia/VideoStories/hobey-ford/hobey-ford-butterfly.aspx).

Finally, teachers may want to offer some weather-related activities and information available in the ArtsEdge resources “Making Rain” (http://artsedge.kennedy-center.org/educators/lessons/grade-k-2/Making_A_Rainstick.aspx) and “Who Has Seen the Wind?” (http://artsedge.kennedy-center.org/educators/lessons/grade-3-4/Who_Has_Seen_the_Wind.aspx).

Return to the Guides main page.