From Classroom to Community: Innovative Approaches to Life Skills Education

Teaching Life Skills at School

Discussed in This Weeks Podcast:

✅ Implementing bottle recycling programs for ongoing fundraising

✅ Organising community volunteer work with local organizations (Lions Club, Railway Museum)

✅ Creating student-run market stalls for individual business ventures

✅ Setting up pop-up galleries to showcase student artwork and photography

✅ Developing student business cards and marketing materials

✅ Organising social events like gallery openings with grazing platters

✅ Establishing regular volunteering schedules at community venues

✅ Creating pet treat businesses with natural recipes

✅ Making and selling mocktails at community events

✅ Running photography projects that connect with local institutions

Cooking can be used as a tool to teach various skills such as reading, comprehension, sequencing, and even math.

Sensory Learning: Cooking can help children understand and navigate their sensory preferences, such as the sound of a frying pan or the feeling of cold items from the fridge.

Math Skills: Cooking can be used to teach fractions, volume, and even problem-solving skills. For example, doubling or halving a recipe can help children understand multiplication and division.

Motor Skills: Cooking involves various motor skills such as stirring, flipping, and opening containers. It’s a great way to help children develop these skills.

Hygiene: Cooking provides an opportunity to teach children about hygiene, such as washing hands before and after cooking.

Problem-Solving: Cooking can help children develop problem-solving skills. For example, if a recipe doesn’t turn out as expected, children can learn to think about what went wrong and how to fix it.

Social Skills: Cooking can help children develop social skills such as turn-taking, requesting help, and expressing likes and dislikes.

Creativity: Cooking allows children to be creative. They can experiment with different ingredients and flavors, and even invent their own recipes.

What’s in it for me?

Cookbooks

  • 340 photos of the key stages fo each recipe (ingredients, utensils, equipment and recipe)
  • PROVEN recipes that kids love
  • 50 full colour pages with step by step recipes
  • Easy activities to incorporate into school day/home
  • DURABLE: spiral bind, gloss art paper

Tecahing Manual

  • Over 300 skills to teach – from communication, maths, science, social skills and more (ALL curriculum areas)
  • Outlines learning outcomes from cooking
  • 6 step programme from evaluations to implementation
  • Worksheets for follow up activites
  • Heaps of time-savers and ideas

Fabulous Resources To Teach Cooking

MORE Resources for Teen Years

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