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2.B School project — ages 6-8 + 9-14 + extracurricular

Designing the project: pros, cons, solutions

Engaging primary school students in a soil literacy project enhances their understanding of the environment, agriculture, and sustainability.

Pros: Hands-on learning; interdisciplinary approach; environmental awareness; skill development (observation, analysis, teamwork); local focus; community involvement.

Cons + solutions:

  • Resource intensive → scalable project with readily available resources; partner with gardening centres or environmental orgs; crowdsource from parents.
  • Weather dependency → indoor backup (soil testing experiments, virtual garden simulation, indoor pots).
  • Safety concerns → safety briefing; child-safe tools; adult supervision; small groups.
  • Knowledge gap → CURIOSOIL MOOCs cover what you need.

8 Steps of action:

  1. Planning: Define objectives. Gather resources (soil samples, testing kits, gardening tools, reading materials). Arrange permissions.
  2. Introduction: Kick-off with a storytelling session or video about soil's importance.
  3. Engagement: Divide students into small groups with specific tasks. Activities: school garden, soil experiments, soil-themed art. Guest speakers from local farmers or environmentalists.
  4. Execution: Ensure active participation and rotation of roles. Use magnifying glasses and simple microscopes.
  5. Documentation: Journals, photos, drawings, charts of progress.
  6. Presentation: Exhibition day for students to showcase findings.
  7. Evaluation: Feedback from students, parents, teachers.
  8. Reflection: Debriefing session about long-term impact and continuation.