
"Eat Smart. Play Hard.
"
Activities to Promote Healthy Nutrition and Physical
Activity Habits Among Children
FN-692, August 2006 Julie Garden-Robinson, Ph.D., LRD, Food and Nutrition Specialist
Bridget Curley,
Program Assistant
Amanda Helbling,
Student Dietitian
Are you looking for hands-on nutrition and fitness activities
for your students or club members? Most of the activities in
this publication require little time, preparation or equipment.
Most can be modified to fit the knowledge and skills of a
variety of age groups.
These activities provide a way for teachers and volunteer educators to
reinforce nutrition and fitness concepts for children in classrooms,
after-school programs or club settings -
and have fun, too! You might consider involving older
students as "teachers" for
the younger students.
We hope these lessons and activities encourage children
to eat smart and play hard!
Table of Contents
Nutrition and Physical Activity
1. Exploring MyPyramid.gov
2. Tossed Salad
3. Make a "MyPyramid"
4. Kids' Choice Trail Mix
5. Taste Testing Grain Foods
6. Sandwich Sense-ations
7. MyPyramid Relay
8. MyPyramid Hopscotch
9. Pop-It Balloon Game
10. Fruit (or Vegetable) Walk
11. Physical Activity Charades
Food Safety
12. Germ Tag
13. Soap is Essential
14. Internet Food Detectives
15. Kids' Choice Kabobs
16. Fight BAC! Food Safety Trivia Game
Lesson 1
Objective
Children will become aware of the new
guidelines for healthy eating and activity at
www.mypyramid.gov.
Participants
Children age 8 and older (with help).
In after-school or club settings with a variety of
age groups, consider pairing together older and younger children.
Time
20 to 30 minutes
Supplies/Equipment
Computer lab with Internet access
Location
Local library, school or other facility with
multiple computers and Internet access
Preactivity Talking Points
Who has heard of MyPyramid? What is it?
What do the colors stand for?
MyPyramid is a personalized food pyramid with
tips to help us stay healthy. It's for people of all ages.
The MyPyramid Web site has information
about nutrition and physical activity. The Web site includes a
fun game for kids called
"MyPyramid Blast Off,"
which we will be
playing today.
Directions
Familiarize yourself with the MyPyramid
site before the activity. See "Introduction
to MyPyramid" and other fact sheets found at
this Web site: www.ext.nodak.edu/food/mypyramid/
� Have children go to the Web site
www.MyPyramid.gov.
First, explain parts of the site and have them
take the animated tour of MyPyramid to obtain background information.
Then, have children determine their
personal pyramid by using the "My Pyramid Plan."
If possible, have them print their individual plans.
Children then can play the "MyPyramid Blast
Off Game." Older children could try the
"MyPyramid Tracker."
Optional handouts under the "For Kids"
section include a printable poster, coloring page
and worksheet.
Post-activity Review
According to your MyPyramid Plans, raise your
hand if you are supposed to eat 1½ cups of fruit a
day. How about 2 cups? Who needs 3 cups of vegetables?
Your plan may be a little different from your
friend's plan, depending on how old you are, if you are a boy
or a girl and how much physical activity you get.
That is what makes MyPyramid so useful.
It is designed just for you.
You also can use the Web site to track your
daily nutrition and activity using the MyPyramid Tracker.
The Web site is a good tool for you and your
family. You can help your parents find their MyPyramid
Plan, too.
Lesson 2
Objective
Children will learn about eating vegetables as
part of a healthy diet.
Participants
Age 8 and older, 10-player minimum-works well with large groups
Time
15 to 30 minutes
Supplies/Preparation
Masking tape or chairs (if indoors)
See this section of the MyPyramid Web site
for more background information: mypyramid.gov/pyramid/vegetables.html
Location
Best to play outside in large, grassy area or
indoors in large, open area. This activity is
a good supplement to a lesson on fruits and
vegetables or the lesson provided below.
Preactivity Talking Points
(As an opening, consider having everyone state
his or her favorite vegetable and why - or ask for
a few volunteers.)
Eat a variety of vegetables every day for good
health! Any vegetable or 100 percent vegetable juice counts
as a member of the vegetable group. Vegetables
may be raw or cooked; fresh, frozen, canned or
dried/dehydrated; and whole, cut up or mashed.
Vegetables are organized into five subgroups:
1) dark green, 2) orange, 3) dry beans and peas,
4) starchy vegetables and 5) others.
Who can name a green vegetable? How about
an orange one? A kind of bean? A starchy vegetable?
Eat a rainbow of vegetables and fruits every day.
They are a part of a healthy diet and provide the
nutrition your body needs to stay healthy and strong.
Directions
This activity is similar to the game "fruit
basket upset."
Players should start out standing or sitting in
a circle. One player will not have a spot and will
be in the center.
The teacher/leader will walk around the
circle and "label" each participant with a
vegetable name. At least two people should be labeled
with each vegetable; for example, label three
as a "green bean." (Alternatively, you can have
the children draw their vegetable names out
of a hat.)
The player in the center will call out the names
of the vegetables.
When the people labeled with that vegetable
are called, they must rush to another spot in the
circle. The player in the center attempts to "steal" a
spot along the circle.
Whoever doesn't have a spot then will be in
the center and that person calls out the next vegetable.
The center player may call out "Tossed
Salad!" once while in the center and everyone
must switch spots.
Post-activity Review
Eating vegetables helps you stay healthy.
What vegetables do you like to eat?
How can you get more vegetables in your diet?
Does anyone have a salad with evening meals?
Adding a tossed salad is a great way to add a variety
of vegetables to your diet. How about adding veggies
to your sandwiches? How about carrots and broccoli
for a snack? Do you choose some vegetables every
day for lunch at school?
Lesson 3
Objective
Children will become familiar with the
different food groups of MyPyramid and the importance
of variety in the diet.
Participants
Children of all ages (with help). 12-player minimum.
Time
15 to 20 minutes depending on the group
Supplies
Slips of paper with foods from each food
group listed (one food item per slip of paper)
and a MyPyramid poster (print from
www.MyPyramid.gov). For example, write
"loaf of bread, "broccoli," "strawberries,"
"olive oil," "glass of milk" and "steak" on
six separate slips of paper. Create enough
MyPyramid sets to match the number of children in the group.
Location
Can be played outdoors or indoors in a large,
open area
Preactivity Talking Points
Eating foods from all the food groups throughout
the day helps keep us healthy.
What are the six colors on MyPyramid? What
does each color stand for? They represent the Grain
Group (orange), Vegetable Group (green), Fruit Group
(red), Oils (yellow), Milk Group (blue), and Meat and
Bean Group (purple). (Show MyPyramid poster if available.)
Let's take turns and name some foods. The others
can decide where the food belongs on MyPyramid. Sometimes one food item can include several
food groups. For example, a plain hamburger includes
both a grain (the bun) and a meat (the burger patty).
If you add lettuce and tomatoes, you're getting
some vegetables, too.
One food can't provide you with all the nutrition
your body needs. Go for variety!
Directions
Give each child a slip of paper with a food
item listed on it.
All the children will start in the large, open area.
The participants need to find other children
with different foods and form a six-person "MyPyramid group" with all the groups
represented.
The first "MyPyramid group" formed needs
to run as a group to the designated finish line
and line up in the color order of the MyPyramid.
- Example: A child who is a "loaf of bread"
needs to find five other children: a vegetable, fruit,
oil, milk and meat/bean. After a MyPyramid team is formed, the children need to go to the finish
line and stand in the correct order: Grain,
Vegetable, Fruit, Oil, Milk, and Meat and Bean.
If a team crosses the finish and is missing a
food group, it needs to return to the whole group
and form new teams with other children.
Post-activity Review
Variety is important in your diet. Set a goal to eat
foods from each of the food groups every day. Do you
eat fruits and vegetables every day? Do you have at least 3 cups of milk every day? How about trying veggies and fruit for a snack or milk instead of soda pop?
Optional: Pass out a blank MyPyramid shape and
ask children to record the food they eat the next day
in the area it belongs. This will help them see if
they consume a variety of foods.
Lesson 4
Objective
Children will recognize that snacks can fill
"nutrition gaps" in the diet if they are
chosen carefully.
Participants
Children of all ages. Older children can help younger children.
Time
15 to 20 minutes
Supplies/Equipment
Large bowl, mixing spoon, measuring cup,
sealable plastic bags. The participants bring
ingredients, which should be assigned ahead of time. Alternatively, a smaller group of
children could bring the ingredients and use this as a
demonstration for a club or class.
Location
Kitchen or area with tables. Be sure to clean
and sanitize surfaces first. Children should wash
their hands before assisting with food preparation
and tasting the snack.
Preactivity Talking Points
Healthy snacks can fill "nutrition gaps" - the
"holes" in your diet when you don't eat all the different kinds
of foods your body needs to stay healthy and strong.
Nutritious snacks can include foods from any of
the MyPyramid groups. Can you think of some
healthy snacks from different food groups? These are
some examples: Grain Group (whole-grain crackers),
Fruit Group (dried cranberries), Vegetable Group (broccoli) and Milk Group (yogurt dip).
Today we will be making a snack that
represents healthy foods from different MyPyramid food groups.
It's fun and easy to make, too.
Directions
Before the class or meeting, have children
or parents sign up to bring certain ingredients.
(You may wish to send home reminder notes.)
Ingredient ideas: Peanuts, sunflower seeds,
dried soybeans, other nuts, crackers, pretzels,
dry cereal, granola, popcorn, raisins, dried
fruit pieces or other nutritious dried foods.
Note: Check if anyone is allergic to nuts or
other ingredients. If so, this activity may not
be appropriate.
Have a large bowl and spoon ready for mixing
the ingredients.
Each child will talk about the ingredient he or
she brought, what food group it fits into and
why he or she likes it - or the children can state their ingredient and the group can discuss it.
Then they will add the ingredient to the bowl.
Have an older child or adult mix the
ingredients after all the children have talked about
their ingredients.
Portion snack into sealable plastic bags using
a measuring cup and allow children to eat
and/or take home for later.
Post-activity Review
What could we enjoy with this snack to have more
of the food groups? How about some yogurt or
carrot sticks? How about adding a beverage,
such as low-fat milk or 100 percent juice?
Trail mix is a tasty grab-and-go snack. You can eat
it on the way to a school activity or during snack time
at school. Making healthy choices, such as picking nutritious snacks, helps you live a healthy lifestyle!
Lesson 5
Objective
Children will be aware of different varieties of
grain foods and have the opportunity to taste whole-grain products.
Participants
Age 8 and older; younger children may need
help. Modify amount of background information
shared based on their age.
Time
15 to 25 minutes
Supplies
Samples of bread/crackers/cereals, paper
plates, cups for water, evaluation sheets,
identification numbers, ingredient labels from breads or
other foods, tongs or spoons. You may wish to bring
some spread (butter, margarine, peanut butter
or jelly) to spread on crackers or bread, if
desired. That may increase the likelihood they will try it.
Location
Kitchen or area with tables. Be sure to clean
and sanitize surfaces first. All participants
(teachers and children) should wash their
hands before this activity.
See the fact sheet "Make Half Your Grains Whole"
at www.ext.nodak.edu/food/mypyramid/ for
more background information about whole grains.
Preactivity Talking Points
Grain products are part of a healthy diet.
� What are some foods in the grain group?
(Rice, pasta, bread, crackers, etc.)
What color is the Grain Group on
MyPyramid? (orange)
Grains are divided into two
subgroups, whole grains and refined
grains. Whole grains contain all parts
of the grain kernel - the bran, germ and
endosperm. Examples of whole grains include whole-wheat
flour, oatmeal and brown rice.
Refined grains have been "milled." The milling
process grinds the grain and removes the bran and germ.
White flour and white rice are refined grains. White flour and other refined grains are
"enriched," which means the B vitamins and iron are added
back into them.
We'll try some different grain foods in this activity.
Directions
Be aware of any food allergies among the
children. This activity may not be appropriate if
food allergies are an issue.
Prepare bowls or plates with four to eight
food items to sample. You may wish to select all
cereals, all crackers or breads or a combination.
- For example, as a comparison, soda crackers
are made from refined flour and Triscuits crackers are made from whole grains.
"Whole-wheat bread" is whole grain, but "seven-grain bread"
is not usually whole grain. Popcorn is a
whole-grain snack but pretzels are not.
Some cereal is brown and may be "made
with whole grains" but that doesn't mean
it's "whole grain." Read package labels.
If it has a health claim about whole grains,
it must meet government standards.
Provide cups of water. Drinking water
between samples is important to being able to taste
the differences among samples.
Have tongs or spoons available with each
serving container. Place a number by or on each
serving container. Provide paper plates, and have
children "number" the area on the plate next to
the samples they select. If the group of children
is small, you could have the children rotate from station to station.
Give each child an evaluation sheet so he or
she can identify the type of bread and decide on a "rating."
Ex.
Whole-wheat bread
Love it! Like it It's OK Dislike it!
Tell the children what type of grain product
they tried and emphasize which foods are made from whole grains.
Hold up a food package and show where
the Nutrition Facts panel and ingredient label are located. Pass around other packages so
children can look at them. Have them look at the
ingredient list to see if it lists whole-grain
ingredients. Whole grains often have whole wheat, whole-grain oats or oatmeal listed
first. Some carry a health claim.
Post-activity Review
How did everyone do? Sometimes telling whole
grains from others is hard.
Did you like the taste of the different grain foods?
What was your favorite?
Try to "make half your grains whole." Eat a variety
of grain foods every day, and include whole grains
in your choices. Read labels at the grocery store.
Try making baked goods using whole-grain
ingredients, such as rolled oats or whole-wheat flour.
You can show your family members how to look at
an ingredient list to find out if a product is made
from whole grains.
Try Some Grains!
Taste the different foods. Write down what you think each one is.
Circle your rating for the food.
Check the box if you think it is a whole grain.
Type of Food: Whole grain?
| 1. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 2. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 3. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 4. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 5. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 6. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 7. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 8. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
Try Some Grains!
Taste the different foods. Write down what you think each one is.
Circle your rating for the food.
Check the box if you think it is a whole grain.
Type of Food: Whole grain?
| 1. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 2. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 3. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 4. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 5. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 6. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 7. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
| 8. _______________________________ |
Love it! |
Like it |
It's OK |
Dislike it! |
Yes |
No |
Lesson 6
Objective
Children will use their five senses (and their
imaginations) to explore a variety of foods.
Participation
Children of all ages (with help). Older children
can help younger children using scissors.
Time
15 to 20 minutes
Supplies
Paper pictures of foods
(cut out from magazines or
print from computer clip art),
colored paper, crayons, scissors, paper plates.
Location
A room with tables and chairs or desks
Preactivity Talking Points
What are the five senses?
(sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch)
You can see all the colors of foods. You can hear
the crunch of a carrot. You can smell freshly
popped popcorn and your favorite type of pizza. These are
all examples of foods reaching different senses.
Can you think of some examples?
We will be making paper sandwiches using
ingredients that trigger our senses.
Directions
The children will create their sandwiches
out of paper pictures of different ingredients,
or they can use crayons, markers or colored
paper to create their own pictures to cut out.
Each sandwich should have at least five
ingredients, such as these:
-Breads: wheat bread, white bread, rye
bread, hamburger buns, etc.
- Meats/Beans: turkey, chicken, meat loaf,
sliced roast beef, tuna, refried beans,
hamburger patty, etc.
- Veggies: mushrooms, onion, lettuce,
peppers (green, yellow, red), pickles, sprouts,
zucchini, spinach leaves, tomato slices, olives, etc.
- Fruits: pineapple, banana, sliced apples,
raisins, etc.
-Cheese: Swiss, cheddar, American, etc.
- Other ingredients: mayonnaise,
mustard, ketchup, jelly, etc.
The children can cut out and color the food
pictures or create them using colored paper
or crayons/markers.
Give each child a paper plate to fan out
his or her ingredients for display.
Post-activity Review
Which foods affect the five senses? Which
ingredients in your sandwich affect your sense of smell?
Sight? Hearing? Touch? Taste?
Foods affect your senses. Eating a variety of
colors, textures and flavors of foods makes your meals
enjoyable.
Lesson 7
Objective
Children will learn how to classify foods in MyPyramid and get some physical activity.
Participants
Age 6 or older (or younger children with assistance)
Time
10 to 20 minutes
Supplies
14 paper grocery bags, food pictures/models
Location
A place with a lot of room to move, such as a
wide hallway, gym or outdoor area
Preactivity Talking Points
See Lesson 3 for additional information
On MyPyramid, what color are these groups:
Grain, Vegetable, Fruit, Oil, Milk, and Meat and Beans?
Why is eating a wide variety of foods every day
important? (We need lots of different foods to meet
our body's needs.)
Directions
You will need two sets of cardboard or plastic
food models, or use printed pictures of food
that easily correspond with the six segments
of MyPyramid (grain, vegetables, fruits, oil,
milk, meat and beans). Place an equal number
of food models/pictures in two separate bags,
one for each team. Include a variety of foods.
- Note: Inexpensive miniature toy food
models (often available in the toy sections of department stores) would work for this purpose.
Make two sets of six grocery bags representing
the segments of MyPyramid. Each set of six
bags should include a bag labeled 1) Grains,
2) Fruits, 3) Vegetables, 4) Oil, 5) Milk, and 6) Meat and Beans. You may want to reinforce
the color concepts by using colored paper for the labels (orange = grain; green = vegetables,
etc). Provide a set of six labeled bags to each group.
Set the bags at the end of the hallway, in a gym
or in an outdoor area. Line up the bags in the order of MyPyramid: grains, vegetables, fruits,
oil, milk, and meat and beans.
Place an equal number of food models/pictures
in the two remaining bags and provide one to each team. This bag will stay with them at
the beginning of the line of participants.
When the leader says "Go," each team will
begin its relay. The children will take turns pulling
a food model/picture from their team's grocery
bag, running to their MyPyramid bags and putting it
in the correct one.
After placing the food picture/model in a
grocery bag, the participant will run back and tag the
next person in line. The teams will continue the
activity until the grocery bag at the starting line of
each team is empty.
When both teams have finished, remove the
food models/pictures from the bags. Pull the items
one by one from each bag as a check and review of what foods "belong" in each food group.
Post-activity Review
How did everyone do? Let's review!
What color represents the Grain Group?
The Vegetable Group? The Fruit Group? Oils?
The Milk Group? The Meat and Beans Group?
(Check out the contents of each bag to review
food groups)
Eat foods from each food group every day to
stay healthy.
Lesson 8
Objective
Children will be active while reviewing
MyPyramid concepts.
Participants
Children of all ages (with help)
Time
10 to 20 minutes
Supplies
Chalk or masking tape, a beanbag (such as a
zipper-lock bag filled with dry edible beans)
or a "place marker" of some type
Location
Outside on the sidewalk or other cemented area
or in a gym or wide hallway (use masking tape)
Preactivity Talking Points
- What is physical activity? Physical activity
simply means movement of the body that uses energy.
What are some kinds of physical activity?
Walking, climbing the stairs, playing soccer
and dancing are some good examples.
Children should try to get 60 minutes of physical activity every day, and adults should try to get
30 minutes of physical activity every day for
good health. Moderate physical activities include walking briskly (about 3½ mph), hiking, bicycling
(less than 10 mph) and swimming.
- Do you know how to play hopscotch?
Playing active games, such as hopscotch,
is a fun way to be physically active.
Jumping strengthens your bones and muscles, too.
- Today we will combine hopscotch with MyPyramid ideas. Do you know the MyPyramid
Food Groups and colors? (Grain Group - orange; Vegetable Group- green; Fruit Group
- red;
Oils - yellow; Milk- blue; Meat and Beans - purple)
Can you name a food from each group?
Directions
Before activity: Draw a hopscotch pattern on
the sidewalk outside. You also can use tape to draw
a hopscotch pattern if you are indoors. In each square, list a food group (grain, vegetable,
fruit, oil, milk, meat and beans).
- Use a beanbag to throw onto a square.
- Before the participant "hops" he/she needs to
call out a food from the food group of the square containing the bean bag. The participant
jumps over that spot.
- The participant will continue jumping
from square to square, calling out different foods
from the indicated food group with each hop (carrot, broccoli, beans, etc).
- If the participant gives an incorrect answer,
he or she gets a second chance at naming a food.
- At the end of the hopscotch, the person
turns around and hops back, pauses and picks up
the beanbag and then finishes.
- Then the next player takes a turn at trying to
get the beanbag in another square.
Post-activity Review
- Eating a variety of foods from each food group
helps keep you healthy. Get plenty of physical activity to
stay healthy and strong, too.
- Was thinking of foods for each group easy?
Lesson 9
Objective
Children will be able to state the MyPyramid
slogans.
Participants
Children age 7 and older (with help as needed)
Time
10 to 15 minutes
Supplies and Preparation
Seven balloons, scissors,
pieces of paper and some tape.
Photocopy the slogans that
accompany this lesson. Cut the words apart.
Since some of the slogans are short, you might
cut the words in half so each balloon has an
equal number of pieces inside. If possible,
match the color of the balloon to the MyPyramid group slogan. For example, a red balloon
would contain a scrambled version of "Focus on Fruits."
The activity slogan balloon may be black or white.
Location
This activity can take place anywhere.
Space the kids a distance apart so the messages don't become mixed up when the balloons pop.
Preactivity Talking Points
How many of you watch TV?
Have you seen any commercials?
Do you know what "slogans" are?
These are ways to get us to remember something. MyPyramid also has some slogans or sayings.
Can you think of any slogans used for foods or
beverages? What fast-food restaurant uses this
slogan: "I'm Lovin' It"? (McDonald's) Which fast-food
restaurant uses this slogan: "Have It Your
Way"? (Burger King)
Today we will be learning the slogans
from MyPyramid, but we've scrambled the words and
put them in balloons. To figure them out, we will pop
some balloons.
Directions
Divide children into seven teams.
Give each team a filled balloon, tape and a
piece of paper.
Each group (or child) should pop a balloon
and unscramble the message inside.
Each group or child should tape the
message together on the paper. The first team to
accurately complete its message and sit down wins.
Post-activity Review
(Read through each slogan and discuss.)
What ways can you and your family use
the slogans?
- How can you "vary your veggies?"
(You can add a salad to supper or choose a
different vegetable every day at school lunch.)
- How can you "focus on fruit"?
(You can have fruit for after-school snacks.)
- How can you "go lean with protein"?
(You can choose lean meats at the grocery store.)
- How can you "get your calcium-rich foods?
(Drink milk every day; eat yogurt and cheese.)
- (Continue with other slogans.)
MyPyramid Messages/"slogans"
Photocopy this page and cut out each word.
Insert words of one slogan into the balloon before blowing it up completely.
Make Half Your Grains Whole
Vary Your Veggies
Focus On Fruit
Know Your Fats
Get Your Calcium-rich Foods
Go Lean With Protein
Find Your Balance Between Food and Physical Activity
Lesson 10
Objective
Children will get some physical activity while
learning about fruits.
Participants
Children of all ages.
One participant per spot in the circle.
Time
10 to 20 minutes
Supplies
CD player, music, pieces of paper with numbers
or masking tape, slips of paper numbered to
correspond with spots on floor and pieces of fruit. If possible,
bring exotic fruits (mangoes, unusual types of apples). Since
the fruit may be eaten right away, wash the whole pieces
of fruit with running water and wrap in plastic or place
in a plastic bag to keep them clean. Do some
research about the fruits you brought, and be ready to share
some key points at prize time. Alternatively, you can have
a vegetable walk with a variety of cleaned, cut-up
vegetables with Ranch dip as "prizes." You will
find background information about vegetables in Activity 2.
Location
Best to play in an open area. Designate "spots" to
stand around a circle using pieces of numbered paper,
or mark the spots with tape labeled with a number.
Preactivity Talking Points
Raise your hand if you like to eat fruit.
What is your favorite?
What color is the Fruit Group on MyPyramid? (red)
Fruit is a great snack to bring for school or after school.
Any fruit or 100 percent fruit juice counts as part of
the Fruit Group. Fruits may be fresh, canned, frozen or
dried, and may be whole, cut up or blended into a smoothie.
Most fruits are naturally low in fat, sodium and calories.
Fruits contain nutrients, such as potassium, fiber, vitamin
C and folate (folic acid). Different fruits contain
different vitamins, so try to eat a variety of colorful fruits every day.
Directions
Players are to start out standing one person per
numbered spot.
The leader will announce the way the children
should move around the circle
- Examples: "Gallop and move
counterclockwise around the circle;" "Skip clockwise around the
circle;" "Hop clockwise around the circle;" "Walk
slowly counterclockwise around the circle." (The
leader should announce the change in activity each round.)
Start playing music. As the music plays, the
children move around the circle the way they were instructed.
When the music stops, the children should stop on
the nearest numbered spot.
After everyone stops on a number, the announcer
will pull out a slip of paper.
The child standing on the spot corresponding to the
slip drawn wins a piece of fruit and leaves the circle.
(If possible, provide an interesting "tidbit" about
the piece of fruit.)
Continue playing until everyone is a winner or you
run out of time.
If you draw a slip and no one is standing on the
corresponding spot, draw another slip until you
have a winner.
Fruit ideas - Apples, pears, kiwi, bananas,
peaches, plums, strawberries, etc. Try exotic or dried fruit,
such as cranberries or raisins. Or, you may want to
purchase the prepackaged, shelf-stable individual servings
of exotic fruits. If possible, provide every participant
with some fruit to enjoy.
Post-activity Review
Fruits are a healthy part of our diet. What are some
good times to enjoy fruits? (Any time!) What are some
different colors of fruits? (red, green and yellow, etc.)
Lesson 11
Objective
Children will be aware of the amount of
physical activity they need every day and some
different ways to meet their physical activity needs.
Participants
Children of all ages
Time
10 to 20 minutes
Supplies
Pieces of paper with charade
ideas listed on each, and a hat,
basket or bowl for drawing. Some examples to
list on the slips of paper are: golfing, ice
skating, playing soccer, badminton, tennis, dancing,
riding a bike, sledding, water skiing, horseback riding, canoeing, jogging, yoga, etc. Be creative!
Location
A classroom
Preactivity Talking Points
Refer to Talking Points on Lesson 8. Getting
enough physical activity helps you feel good and look good.
Do you know how much physical activity kids should
try to get every day? (An hour a day)
How many of you watch TV or play video games?
What's the most "screen time" (TV, video games)
that kids should have every day, according to
doctors? (two hours) We will be playing "Activity
Charades" today, so you'll have a chance to move and guess
some fun ways to get physical activity.
Directions
Explain the game of charades to the group.
Without using words, a person "acts out"
an activity and the audience tries to guess
what the "actor" is doing.
Have each volunteer draw a slip of paper
with an activity written on it and then act it out.
This also can be played in teams. The idea is to have fun.
Post-activity Review
What are ways you can stay active every day?
Can you think of a way to make video games be
"active games"? (Stand and jump while you play!)
Let's each set a physical activity goal.
- How many minutes of physical activity do you
think you do during the day?
- Are you meeting the one-hour goal?
- What are some ways to get more activity during
the day?
Lesson 12
Objective
Through a unique game of tag, children will
learn how quickly germs can be spread.
Participants
Children of all ages;
10-player minimum
Location
Play outside in large,
grassy area or indoors
in a gymnasium
Preactivity Talking Points
Germs multiply rapidly, especially in warm
environments.
In the right conditions (warm, moist), bacteria
double in number every 20 minutes. So, if we started with
10 bacteria at 1 p.m., by 1:20 p.m., we would have
20; by 1:40 p.m., we would have 40; and by 2:00 p.m.,
we would have how many? (80) Germs grow fast!
To keep germs under control, keep hands and
kitchen surfaces clean. Don't share germs
with others by sharing your cup or sneezes! "Capture" germs by sneezing into a tissue or
your sleeve.
Wash your hands often.
How long should we wash our hands? (20 seconds)
Directions
Define boundaries for the group so the game
is played in a safe area (especially when outdoors).
Select two players to be the "germ team."
They will link elbows and play the game as a team. (One germ team should be created for every
10 players.)
The germ team is "it" and its goal is to tag
people to join the team.
The rest of the players will run as
individuals within boundaries.
When an individual player is touched with
the hands of a "germ team," he or she must
link elbows with the germ and continue to run
after other players.
After the germ has captured two players
and formed a germ team of four, they must "divide"
in the middle and form two germ teams of two players each.
The game continues until all players have
been captured and turned into germ teams.
Post-activity Review
Germs multiply quickly and no one is safe from
them. You can reduce germs by using soap and warm
water for 20 seconds when washing hands.
What are other ways you can reduce the spread
of germs? (Covering your mouth when you sneeze;
not sharing cups; washing your hands before you
help cook dinner and before you eat, and after
playing with a pet and using the restroom, etc.)
Lesson 13
Objective
Children will learn the importance of
washing hands with soap and warm water.
Participants
Children of all ages
Time
15 to 20 minutes
Supplies
Cooking oil, ground cinnamon, soap, access to
hot and cold running water, paper towels
Location
Any facility with access to warm, running
water, such as a classroom with a sink, a room
near restrooms or a kitchen
Preactivity Talking Points
Washing your hands is important because it
can reduce the spread of bacteria and germs.
Germs can make you sick!
When should you wash your hands?
(After blowing your nose or sneezing, before you eat
or prepare any food, after touching raw meats,
before holding a baby, after using the bathroom,
after playing with a pet, after playing outside, etc.)
Directions
Divide participants into three groups.
Apply 1 tablespoon of cooking oil to each
child's right hand. Have the children rub their
hands together.
Sprinkle 1 teaspoon cinnamon on each
child's right hand and have the children rub their
hands together until the cinnamon is evenly distributed.
Have the children wash their hands as follows,
rubbing them for 20 seconds:
- Group 1:
Wash hands with cold water and no soap
- Group 2:
Wash hands with warm water and no soap
- Group 3:
Wash hands with warm water and soap
Post-activity Review
Which method was the best for washing hands?
(warm running water and soap)
Washing hands using warm, running water and
soap is important. Rubbing hands together under
running water helps remove dirt and bacteria.
Now let's all go and wash our hands the correct way
to remove the cinnamon.
Lesson 14
Objective
Children will learn about general food safety
guidelines and the concepts of "Fight BAC!"
Participants
Children age 8 and older. Possibly pair together
older and younger children.
Time
20 to 30 minutes
Supplies
Computer lab with Internet access
Location
Local library, school or other facility with
multiple computers and Internet access
Visit www.fightbac.org for some background
information on the four steps to food safety
to include in your discussion.
Preactivity Talking Points
Is having foods that are safe important? Why?
Do you know the four steps to food safety?
(Clean, separate, cook and chill)
We can help keep our foods safe in many ways.
Let's go on an Internet adventure and solve some
food safety "cases" on file at the Food Detectives Web site.
Directions
Have children go to the Web site
www.fooddetectives.com.
First have them click on the Food Detectives
Fight BAC icon on the left side of the Web site
to watch the introduction video. This gives them information about the site's games and activities.
Then have children begin their detective work
by attempting to solve one or more of the four "cases" in the file drawer. Time permitting,
the site has personalized certificates that can
be printed after they all have solved the cases.
Post-activity Review
� Why is safe food important? What are the four steps to food safety?
What are some ways to prevent foodborne illness? What activity was your favorite?
Lesson 15
Objective
Children will learn about grilling and food safety.
Participants
Children age 8 and older with adult supervision.
An adult should operate the grill.
Time
30 to 40 minutes
Supplies
Grill, cutting boards, ingredients
(listed below), skewers, platter, paper plates,
napkins, food thermometer, accessible sink with soap and paper towels
Location
Kitchen area or large table for assembling
kabobs, outdoor space for grill, accessible to sink with
warm running water, soap and paper towels
Preactivity Talking Points
Review the grilling safely fact sheet found at this
Web site: www.ext.nodak.edu/food/factsheet/b-grilling.pdf
Do you know how to Fight BAC (bacteria, that is)?
The four steps to food safety are clean, separate, cook
and chill.
Start with clean hands. How long should you
wash your hands before handling food? (Wash your hands
for 20 seconds under warm running water using
soap. After washing, dry with a paper towel.)
Be sure to bring a clean serving plate to the grill.
Don't put the cooked food on the plate that held
raw food. Keep raw meat away from veggies that won't
be cooked, such as a lettuce salad.
If you decide to "soak" the meat in a marinade to
make it taste better or be more tender, keep the food in
the refrigerator and save some fresh marinade for a
dipping sauce. Why shouldn't you reuse the marinade
that touched the raw meat? (It has germs in it.)
Cook meat thoroughly. Use a food thermometer to
check meat on the grill.
Where do any leftovers go? (In the refrigerator)
Chill leftover food quickly. This food will be so
good, you won't have any leftovers!
Directions
Have adults marinate and cut steak or
chicken into cubes or strips. Bring some of the
following items (cleaned and prepared) - cherry
tomatoes, pineapple chunks, green pepper pieces,
onion pieces, small mushrooms or other ingredients.
Have children wash hands with soap for
20 seconds under running water before starting.
Provide each child with a skewer (metal or
wood) and have him or her assemble the kabob with
the ingredients he or she likes. Have the children
give their skewer to an adult to grill.
Immediately have children thoroughly wash
their hands because they touched raw meat.
Have an adult grill the kabobs, place them on
a clean plate and return them to the children
to enjoy.
Post Activity Review
Do you know how to Fight BAC?
The four steps to food safety are clean, separate,
cook and chill.
Lesson 16
Objective
Children will learn general food safety
guidelines through a trivia game.
Participants
Children age 8 and older; younger children
can help draw numbers, etc.
Time
15 to 20 minutes
Materials
Something to write on, such as a blackboard (whiteboard); pen, marker or chalk; bowl or hat
(to hold numbers); and number cut-outs for playing the game. Each number corresponds to a question.
Location
Classroom or large room
Preactivity Talking Points
How many of you help cook or bake at home?
Keeping food safe for yourself and anyone else
who might eat the food you make is important.
Do you know the four steps to food safety?
In the national Fight BAC campaign, the four steps
to food safety are: 1) clean, 2) separate, 3) cook and
4) chill.
Today we are going to play a trivia game about
food safety. Most people have played the game
Horse. You shoot a basket through the hoop and earn a
letter, based on whether you make the hoop. This is a twist
on that game.
When you play the Fight BAC! food safety trivia
game, you or your team gets a letter of the word "BAC"
each time you answer a question correctly.
Directions
Copy and cut out the drawing numbers provided.
Divide the group into teams. Two to four
teams works well.
Have a team member draw a number out of
the bowl.
Ask the question that corresponds with the
number. The team will have 30 seconds to answer. If the team answers the question incorrectly,
the next team will have a chance to answer
the question unless it is a true/false question. Teams should receive only one chance to
answer true/false questions.
When a team gives the correct answer, write
the appropriate letter of the word "BAC."
Reinforce the correct answer by repeating it.
The team that completes the word "BAC"
first, wins. Play at least two "rounds" of Fight BAC.
Optional: Provide "prizes" for everyone,
such as pieces of fruit, veggies and low-fat dip; granola bars; or cups of 100 percent juice.
Post-activity Review
Did any of the answers surprise you? Take some
simple steps to food safety: clean, separate, cook and chill.
1. True/False: A refrigerator should keep your food at 40 degrees
or lower.
True. A refrigerator at 40 F or lower will slow the growth of bacteria.
2. True/False: Meat can be thawed safely on the countertop.
False. Thaw food in the refrigerator or in a microwave oven, not on
the countertop. Germs can grow on
meat left at room temperature.
3. How long can you safely leave a
meat sandwich in your backpack without a freezer pack?
a. Three hours
b. Two hours
c. One hour
d. Half-hour
b. Two hours. Foods should spendno more than two hours at room
temperature.
4. True/False: Freezing food will kill harmful bacteria.
False. Freezing will stop most bacteria from growing, but
freezing won't kill bacteria.
5. How long should you wash your hands with soap and water
before rinsing?
a. Two minutes
b. 60 seconds
c. 20 seconds
d. Two seconds
c. 20 seconds. You can sing
"Happy Birthday" twice or
"Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star."
6. True/False: You should wash eggs before you use them.
False. Washing eggs before using them is not necessary. Eggs
are washed and sanitized at the
packaging plant with a special detergent. This process
should remove most bacteria from the shell. However, eggs need to be
cooked thoroughly to be considered safe.
7. True/False: Marinade (the sauce
used on grilled meat) can be reused as a dipping sauce if the meat was
in the marinade for only an hour.
False. The marinade contains germs from the raw meat. By using the
old marinade as dipping sauces, you or your family could get sick. The
safest options are to make extra marinade or reserve some marinade that
hasn't contacted the raw meat.
8. True/False: Partly cooking meat and putting it in the refrigerator is OK.
False. You never should partially cook meat. Cook it completely,
then put it in the refrigerator.
9. Name two groups of people who could get sick more easily
from unsafe food.
Any of these: Infants, toddlers, elderly, those who already are
sick, those with depressed immune system function (e.g.,
people undergoing chemotherapy)
and pregnant women.
10. According to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, what is the "single most important way to
reduce the spread of disease"?
a. Cleaning up after you are
done preparing food
b. Cooking food to the right temperature
c. Picking up food from the floor
d. Washing your hands
d. Washing your hands
11. True/False: Cutting up lettuce for
a salad on a cutting board that you used to cut up raw chicken is OK.
False. The cutting board has germs from the chicken. To clean the
cutting board, wash it with hot, soapy water followed by a hot-water rinse
before cutting any other food. Even better, use a different cutting board
for meats and for vegetables.
12. True/False: Leftover foods never should be left to cool completely
on the counter before putting them in
the refrigerator.
True.
13. True/False: Using a dented or bulging can is OK if the food tastes
all right.
False. Be careful of dented cans, especially if the dents are at
the seams. Dents can allow harmful bacteria to enter. If a can is
bulging, that's a good indication bacteria is growing and producing gas. The
food in these cans never should be tasted.
14. True/False: As long as meat is
cooked until it is brown, it's safe to eat.
False. Cook ground meat to safe internal temperatures. Use a
meat thermometer to check. A brown
color doesn't mean the meat has
been cooked to a safe temperature.
15. True/False: If you hard-cook
eggs and leave them in the shells,
you still must refrigerate them.
True. Hard-cooking eggs may cause hard-to-see cracks in the shell
that can allow bacteria to enter the egg. You should eat refrigerated
hard-cooked eggs within a week.
16. True/False: If you use
antibacterial hand gels, you never have to wash your hands.
False. Hand gels are OK if no
hand-washing sinks are nearby, but washing your hands with soap
and water is a better idea. The alcohol in hand gels dries out your hands, too.
17. If you have a foodborne illness,
what are two possible symptoms?
Any of these: Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, chills,
fever, headache and muscle pain. Most of these symptoms also
are associated with the "flu."
18. True/False: The symptoms of some kinds of foodborne illness
may appear within hours, days or even weeks.
True. Foodborne illness shows up
at different times, depending on the kind of germ that caused the illness.
19. True/False. Eating the pizza that someone forgot on the counter
the night before is safe.
False. Pizza is a perishable food.
It should be refrigerated within
two hours of mealtime.
20. Which of these foods is safe stored
in the cupboard?
a. Bologna
b. Peanut butter
c. Eggs
d. Cooked rice
b. Peanut butter is safe at
room temperature.
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Free letter!
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Additional Information
Contact your local NDSU Extension Service office for more
information or visit the NDSU Extension Service Nutrition, Food Safety and
Health Web site:
www.ag.ndsu.nodak.edu/food.htm
For additional information on
MyPyramid,
including fact sheets, click on "Nutrition,"
then "On-line Publications," then
"MyPyramid Resources."
For a variety of nutrition and food safety
resources for parents/caregivers, teachers,
children and teens, click on "Nutrition" then "Kids & Nutrition."
Eat Smart. Play Hard. - Food and Nutrition Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture
www.fns.usda.gov/eatsmartplayhardhealthylifestyle/
- Provides parents and other caregivers with
tools for healthy living, including tasty,
low-cost menus and recipes that meet the new food guidelines. The Web page has a handy
Calorie Burner Chart, the MyPyramid Tracker and the ESPH Tracking Card.
www.fns.usda.gov/eatsmartplayhardkids/
- Provides kids with interactive learning
and skill-building experiences in a virtual community setting. This Web page is filled
with songs, experiments, activity sheets,
comics, clip art, worksheets, games, posters,
e-cards, recipes and other materials that
help form and reinforce healthy behaviors.
Fight BAC! - Partnership
for Food Safety Education
www.fightbac.org/
- Consumer food-handling information
and resources
MyPyramid - U.S. Department of Agriculture
www.MyPyramid.gov
- Click on "MyPyramid Blast Off"
for a kid-friendly nutrition game
Printing of this publication was made possible
by a grant from the National 4-H Council
and Cargill Inc.
FN-692, August 2006
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