Hands-on activity
Medium ~120 minBuild a raised garden bed
A sturdy classroom-friendly bed where kids can grow vegetables, herbs, and observe soil up close.
Raised beds are the single fastest way to bring living soil into a school yard. They sidestep poor or contaminated ground, are easy on backs, and let learners observe roots, compost and biodiversity right at hand-level.
You'll need: untreated planks (cedar or pine), screws, a drill, landscape fabric, compost, topsoil, and one weekend morning with a small crew. Aim for a bed that is 1.2 m × 2.4 m and 30 cm tall — narrow enough that no one ever needs to step on the soil.
Steps
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1
Pick the spot
Choose a sunny location (6+ hours of direct sun), level enough that water won't pool. Avoid the shadow of buildings and the spread of large trees. Mark out the footprint with stakes and string.
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2
Cut the timbers
Cut your planks into two long pieces (2.4 m) and two shorter ones (1.2 m). Use untreated timber — pressure-treated wood can leach into the soil. Cedar lasts longest; pine is cheaper and fine for 3–4 years.
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3
Assemble the frame
Pre-drill the corners and screw the frame together on flat ground. Two screws per corner. Have one child hold the boards while another drives the screws — a great moment to talk about teamwork.
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4
Place and line it
Move the frame into position, level it with a spirit level, and shim with stones if needed. Lay landscape fabric on the inside bottom to slow weeds without trapping water.
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5
Fill with the soil sandwich
Layer from bottom up: 5 cm of small branches and twigs (helps drainage and slow release of nutrients), then 10 cm of leaf mould or straw, then a generous 15 cm of compost mixed with topsoil on top.
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6
Water it in and plant
Soak the bed thoroughly — the layers settle as you water. Wait a day, then plant. Start with quick-growing crops kids will recognise: radishes, lettuce, beans, marigolds. Add a simple sign with the planting date.
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7
Set up a care rota
Two children per week, ten minutes per day. They water, weed, and write one observation in the class notebook. Over a term, those notebooks become the richest soil-literacy resource your school has.
Wrap-up
Once it's built: resist the urge to dig the soil. The whole point of the raised bed is that nobody compacts it again. Add 2 cm of fresh compost every spring on top, let the worms do the mixing.
The first season, expect things to settle by 5–10 cm — top it up. Save tomato cages and a roll of horticultural fleece for cold snaps and you'll get an extra month of growing on each end of the year.
📺 Videos
Three-minute raised-bed build
Placeholder — replace with the real walkthrough recorded with your school crew.
🔗 Additional resources
Linked MOOC lessons
This activity is referenced from these lessons. Open one to bring the activity back into the learning flow.