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- Hoop ball
- Students must move very quickly to try to get three balls in their hoop. This game can be played by grades one through four and may be played by large groups (30–50). This game requires students to use problem solving skills while getting a great workout.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 2 Healthful Living)
- By JoAnne Harrell.
- How can I make sure I'm getting what I need?
- In I’m on a diet and proud of it: Nutrition through math and science, page 9
- Through mathematics and technology integration, students will further understand what it means to have a balanced diet, as well as explore the causes and effects of healthy and unhealthy eating habits, and eating in moderation.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3–4 Computer/Technology Skills, Healthful Living, Mathematics, and Science)
- By Karina Colón.
- How do I look to you?
- In this lesson, students will evaluate public service posters and a grooming pamphlet to determine if and how propaganda was used to improve the health of children, and define acceptable appearances for young women in the 1930s.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 6–8 English Language Arts)
- By Loretta Wilson.
- How do living things get energy from food?
- In I’m on a diet and proud of it: Nutrition through math and science, page 4
- This lesson will teach students about calories as a measurement of the potential energy found in food and that everything their body does burns calories.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 4 Healthful Living, Mathematics, and Science)
- By Karina Colón.
- How much am I supposed to eat?
- In I’m on a diet and proud of it: Nutrition through math and science, page 3
- In this lesson, students compare serving sizes with portions, and discover their personal energy requirements through the integration of math and technology. In the end, students will understand diets are as individual as people.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 4 Healthful Living, Mathematics, and Science)
- By Karina Colón.
- I’m on a diet and proud of it: Nutrition through math and science
- In this unit, students will be involved in hands-on, inquiry activities that integrate various subject areas in order to learn and apply concepts of food chemistry and nutrition.
- Format: lesson plan (multiple pages)
- Identifying oily foods: Discovering healthy snacks
- Using a drop of water and a drop of oil for comparison, students conduct food rubs to detect oily content in foods. The lesson culminates with a cookbook of healthy snacks.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 5 Healthful Living)
- By Janie Bourbina.
- Island basketball
- In this activity, the class will be divided into two teams: the "Sharks," who play defense and the "Swimmers," who play offense. The "Swimmers" attempt to cross the ocean and avoid the "Sharks."
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3–5 Healthful Living)
- By Resa Holt.
- It's all about choice
- Students will examine the different choices they make as supporting or undermining their intent to remain abstinent, including the affect of substance use on those choices.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 9–12 Healthful Living)
- By Kathy Crumpler.
- Jumping with Jack Be Nimble
- In Mother Goose in use: Rhymes that teach, page 3
- In this kindergarten lesson plan, students use the nursery rhyme "Jack Be Nimble" to practice locomotor skills and sorting objects.
- Format: lesson plan (grade K Healthful Living and Science)
- By Lisa Wright.
- Keeping food safe to eat
- In Food for thought: Elementary lessons on nutrition and healthy living, page 5.2
- This fourth-grade lesson plan, from the Food for Thought nutrition curriculum, teaches students about the germs that can be found in foods and the ways to prevent food-borne illnesses by washing our hands, using safe food handling procedures, and keeping foods refrigerated.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 4 Healthful Living)
- Leaping, jumping, hopping
- This basic movement lesson focuses on leaping, jumping, and hopping skills.
- Format: lesson plan (grade K–2 Healthful Living)
- By Bozena Mielczak.
- Learn to communicate
- Students will try to duplicate a pattern based on verbal directions from a partner.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 6 Healthful Living)
- By Danetta Samuels.
- Learning about animals with Three Blind Mice
- In Mother Goose in use: Rhymes that teach, page 7
- In this kindergarten lesson plan, students listen to the nursery rhyme "Three Blind Mice." They compare mice to other animals based on their size and think of foods that begin with different letters of the alphabet.
- Format: lesson plan (grade K English Language Arts, Healthful Living, Mathematics, and Science)
- By Lisa Wright.
- Learning about time with Wee Willie Winkie
- In Mother Goose in use: Rhymes that teach, page 11
- In this kindergarten lesson plan, students use the nursery rhyme "Wee Willie Winkie" as a starting point to learn about time.
- Format: lesson plan (grade K–1 Healthful Living and Mathematics)
- By Lisa Wright.
- M&M cafe
- Students will be divided into small groups and be required to come up with two balanced meals and one unbalanced meal using breakfast, lunch and dinner.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 2 Healthful Living)
- By Barbara Money.
- Moooving over to low-fat milk
- In Food for thought: Elementary lessons on nutrition and healthy living, page 1.4
- This kindergarten lesson plan, from the Food for Thought nutrition curriculum, teaches students that low-fat and fat-free milk are delicious substitutes for whole milk and provide the same amount of calcium without the fat.
- Format: lesson plan (grade K Healthful Living)
- Moooving to low-fat milk
- In Food for thought: Elementary lessons on nutrition and healthy living, page 4.2
- This third-grade lesson plan from the Food for Thought nutrition curriculum, focuses on the nutrition benefits of milk and teaches students about fat, protein, carbohydrates/sugars, and calcium.
- Format: lesson plan (grade 3 Healthful Living)
- Movement ABCs
- Notecards with upper and lower case letters are placed under cones. Students hop, skip, or jump to a designated cone, find a letter, then continue using the locomotor movement to find the student with a match to their letters.
- Format: lesson plan (grade K English Language Arts and Healthful Living)
- By Lisa Watlington.
- Moving with Hey Diddle Diddle
- In Mother Goose in use: Rhymes that teach, page 2
- In this kindergarten lesson, students use the nursery rhyme "Hey Diddle Diddle" to discuss basic facts about the moon and to perform a series of basic movements.
- Format: lesson plan (grade K English Language Arts and Healthful Living)
- By Lisa Wright.

