TEACHERS,
BRING THE ORCHARD INTO THE CLASSROOM!
Use our
ideas and worksheets, for numeracy, literacy, science, geography,
D&T, ICT and art.
See our
list of Apple Resource sheets.
Introduction
Healthy eating is very
much in the forefront of parents, schools and Government thinking.
Our Apple Activities are an ideal way to raise the awareness among
pupils of healthy eating and our English Apple heritage.
The apple is the ultimate
convenience snack which so often languishes on supermarket shelves,
or in fruit bowls, overlooked in favour of a more expensive packaged
‘treat’. The following activities have produced a very
enthusiastic response from children and teachers in successful trials
in Gloucestershire Primary Schools.
Children have been overheard
discussing the merits of a Blenheim Orange over a Newton Wonder,
unimaginable before the Apple Project. They enthuse over the taste
of the fresh pressed juice, or the colour and size and names of
the fruit. Some children even taste apples for the first time, encouraged
by their friends’ eager reception of the tastes available.
All activities have direct
links to National Curriculum Guidelines.
A whole school involvement,
including parents, governors will give the maximum benefit from
this project and make a memorable and satisfying event in the Autumn
Term.
How to Get Started
- Pick a suitable week in the first half of the Autumn Term (when
most apple varieties are available).
- Contact local suppliers or grocers for contributions of apples.
Most are only too glad to help in some way and may even come in
to talk to the children.
- Purchase or even borrow an ‘All in One’ apple peeler,
corer and slicer. Available from good cook shops or Lakeland Plastics.
- Borrow if possible an apple presser contact us to see if we
are available to help.
- Ensure all staff Governors and parents know what is going to
happen and when (see resources).
- Enlist as many helpers as possible for allocated ‘Apple
Day’ to help with cutting, peeling, printing, pressing,
measuring and recording.
Apple
Resources:
Apple
Peel Competition: Children peel their apple brought from home,
using the all in one, peeler, corer machine*, then compare and record
their results. (* Available from good cook shops
or Lakeland Plastics.)
Apple
Food Miles Sheet: Children record the name of the apple and
where it has come from. Results can be put into graph form. Labels
can be pinned to a world map to show country of origin and route
taken to the UK.
Apple
Taste Sheet: Children taste a slice of all the available apples,
which have been collected for the week. Ideally, these will have
been donated by a local grocer or grower. Results are then recorded,
discussed anddisplayed.
Slogans
and Logos: Having tasted the apples, children will be in a good
frame of mind for making up jaunty and hopefully witty slogans and
logos!
Life
Cycle of an Apple Tree: This is mainly a reference sheet for
older children. It could be used to support science activities or
in conjunction with the craft activity, making a poster of the Apple
Tree Life Cycle.

Apple
Poetry: A template to inspire poetry for Key Stage 2 children.
Apple
Word search: A fun activity for Key Stage 2.
Apple
and Leaf Prints: Instructions for craft activity.

Blossom
Prints: Instructions for craft activity.

Apple
Tree Pictures: Instructions for craft activity.

Apple
Tree Life Cycle Pictures: Instructions for craft activity.

Sample
Letter to Parents
Apple Project, National
Curriculum Links
Numeracy
Measure, Shape
and Space (Y1 to Y6)
- Understand vocabulary related to length and mass
- Compare lengths of peels
- Read scales
- Suggest, use, read and write using correct units depending
on year group
- Estimate, measure and record results in appropriate units
- Y6 convert mm to cm and vice versa
Handling Data
(Y3 to Y6)
- Solve a given problem by organising and interpreting numerical
data in lists, tables, graphs, charts and diagrams.
Literacy Links
Y1
- Signs, labels, captions, lists, instructions
- Information texts including recounts of observations, visits
and events
Y2
- Instructions
- Information texts including non-chronological reports
- Explanations
Y3
- Poems based on observation and the senses
- Shape poems
- Poems that play with language, word puzzles, puns and riddles
- Information texts on topics of interest
Y4
- Poems based on common themes e.g. apples
- Poems based on a range of forms, e.g. lists, thin poems, conversations
and free verse
- Persuasive writing: adverts, circulars, flyers
- Discussion texts: debates, editorials
Y5
- Concrete poetry
- Recounts of events, activities, visits, observational records
- Persuasive writing to put or argue a point of view: letters,
commentaries, leaflets to persuade, criticise, protest, support,
object, complain
Y6
- Range of poetic forms, e.g., kennings, limericks, riddles,
cinquain, tanka, poems written in other forms (as adverts, letter,
diary entries, conversations), free verse, nonsense verse
- Journalistic writing
- Formal writing: notices, public information documents etc.
ICT
Children can explore the
possibilities of displaying their Apple Peel Data using a range
of programmes such as:-
Junior Pinpoint, Longman
Logotron Picture Point,
Starting Graph, RM Bar Chart, My World, Semerc
Information Workshop, Black Cat Software Data Sweet, Kudlian Decision
Trees, Steps Mathematics, Harper Collins
Science
Unit 1B Growing Plants
Unit 2A Health and Growth
Unit 2B Plants and Animals in the Environment
Unit 3A Teeth and Eating
Unit 3B Helping Plants Grow Well
Unit 4A Moving and growing
Unit 5A Keeping Healthy
Unit 6B Micro organisms
Geography
Unit 1A Around our school-the
local area
Unit 5 Where in the world is Barnaby Bear
Unit 6 Investigating our local area
Unit 8 Improving the environment
Unit 18 Connecting ourselves to the world
Unit 21 How can we improve the area we see from our window?
Unit 24 Passport to the world
Design & Technology
Unit 1C Eat more fruit and vegetables
A teacher in a small school in the north-west
of England adapted this unit to support the whole-school focus on
healthy eating, linking in with work in PSHE. As well as reinforcing
messages about bringing healthy snacks like fruit to school, she
wanted to involve parents and families. The unit also offered the
opportunity to extend the children's experiences of a range of fruits
from different parts of the world, and to extend their awareness
of different cultures. She wanted to make the unit more accessible
to her year 1 class by giving them extra support with basic cutting
and food processing techniques.
Unit 3A Packaging
Unit 3B Sandwich snacks
Citizenship
Unit 01 Taking part-developing skills
of communication and participation
Unit 02 Choices
Unit 06 Developing our school grounds
Follow
up activities for Apple Day
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