6-8 Forest Lessons
Introduction
Trees on your school grounds present an incredible opportunity for hands-on learning by students in all academic disciplines. In this section, you will find a curated selection of lessons in the subject areas of science, mathematics, language arts, social studies, visual and performing arts, social-emotional learning, and physical education. Environmental literacy is naturally embedded within all of these lessons. The included lessons and activities were chosen from organizations and individuals that are established leaders in the field of outdoor education.
We have showcased lessons that (1) are outdoor activities, (2) are engaging, (3) involve hands-on and kinesthetic learning, and (4) can generally be taught in one to two class periods. The lessons included were selected to be generally applicable to both young saplings as well as larger, established trees. These activities also support state-level content standards.
Click on the links below to navigate directly to each subject area or scroll down to browse.
Additional Lesson Ideas
To connect academics and instruction to the hands-on tasks of caring for trees, visit our section on Stewardship Lessons. See Adopt a Tree to explore a short list of activities that focus on building student connections with an individual tree.
Science
Experiencing science phenomena is central to science instruction, and a schoolyard forest is a wonderful opportunity for students to directly experience phenomena in the natural world. We have provided a curated collection of lessons and activities that support life sciences education in three main strands: (1) plant structure and function, (2) ecosystem interconnections, and (3) the carbon cycle. This is just the start! Many other connections will emerge for students and teachers as they engage with trees in a spirit of inquiry.
Plant Structure and Function
Acorn Sink or Float Experiment — KidsGardening
Students collect, observe, and test acorns to find out if they are viable for planting, based on whether the seeds float or sink.
Botany Language Basics for Identification of Flowering Plants — Cornell University
This guide to botanical terms and characteristics helps students deepen their observations of plant anatomy and communicate using standard classification terminology.
Build A Tree — California ReLeaf
Students role-play the different parts and functions of a tree, including the heartwood and sapwood, to deepen their understanding of a tree’s structures and functions.
Common Leaf Characteristics — KidsGardening
Students learn about plant anatomy while learning to observe, compare, and classify a variety of leaves.
Leaf Transpiration (English) and Transpiración de las Hojas (Spanish) — Canopy
This activity can be used as a simple demonstration of transpiration by leaves or can be expanded into more complex investigations.
My Best 'Bud' — Learning withOutdoors
Students observe twigs and buds on trees while learning dissection and classification skills.
Pine Cone Investigation — Kew Royal Botanic Gardens
Students investigate the effect of temperature on pine cones.
Team Observation — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
Student teams use nature journaling prompts to observe the same subject, such as a tree, and collaborate to get a greater depth and variety of observations and questions.
Twigs: Field Investigations — Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies
Students observe and describe physical characteristics of twigs and developing buds, develop comparative questions, and record observations.
Ecosystems
Biotic or Abiotic, PDF page 97 — Green Schoolyard Network
Students conduct a survey of their school grounds to learn about living (biotic) and nonliving (abiotic) components and their interrelationships.
Cool It — Outdoor Biology Instructional Strategies
Students learn about temperatures in the shade versus sun while playing a “save your lizard” game.
Follow the Drop — Earth Partnership
Students investigate the movement of stormwater runoff on their schoolyard, comparing impervious and pervious surfaces, examining topography, creating maps, and calculating runoff volume.
How Cool Is Your Schoolyard?™ — Green Schoolyards America
Students use infrared thermometers to study the microclimates in their schoolyard on hot days, exploring how surface and air temperatures are influenced by the materials in their environment.
Insect Trap (English), Trampa Para Insectos (Spanish), and Insect Trap (Chinese) — Plant Heroes
Students design their own traps to capture insects and other invertebrates that crawl on the ground. These can be used to study insect biology and species diversity in different school ground habitats.
Leaf Litter Ecology Lab — Chicago Botanic Garden
Students explore the leaf litter ecosystem, capture living organisms, measure their mass, apply their understanding of trophic levels and food webs, and develop biomass pyramids.
Measuring Canopy Cover — Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation
Students measure forest canopy cover, using tools such as densiometers and percentage cover sheets. They then use their measurements for inquiry into the availability of sunlight and precipitation at the forest floor, how habitat is affected by canopy cover, and how different methods of measurement compare.
The Nitty Gritty — Life Lab
Students analyze soil samples from the schoolyard forest to determine the soil texture and relative proportions of sand, silt, and clay.
Soil Infiltration Tests — Earth Partnership
These experiments use a simple hole dug in the ground or a cut-can infiltrometer to investigate soil water infiltration in natural schoolyard areas.
Solar Energy and Soil Temperature — Paleontological Research Institution
In this outdoor experiment, students measure soil temperatures at different depths and different times throughout the day to investigate how soil absorbs solar energy.
Who’s Been in the Forest? — Green Schoolyards America
This visual guide supports students in closer observation as they look for signs of bug and animal activity among the trees.
Wildlife Inventory — KidsGardening
Students investigate what species live in their schoolyard habitat.
The Carbon Cycle and Climate Literacy
Understanding the carbon cycle is a key part of understanding the science of climate change. Schoolyard trees are an opportunity to directly explore photosynthesis and carbon uptake and storage by plants. Younger and beginning students can start with basic concepts, such as learning about leaves, photosynthesis, and gas exchange. Older and more advanced students can build on this knowledge to tackle these concepts in greater detail and calculate carbon storage by their schoolyard’s trees. This will help students better understand and value how their schoolyard forest is part of the solution for mitigating carbon emissions.
The Carbon Dioxide Game — Green Teacher
In this role-play, students learn about climate change, the greenhouse effect, and human impacts and solutions. This activity is best done in an open space outdoors.
Caught Up in the Carbon Cycle — Green Teacher
In this role-play, students simulate the movement of carbon molecules to learn about the carbon cycle. This activity is best done in an open space outdoors.
Photosynthesis Drives Change In Atmospheric CO2 — Paleontological Research Institution
Students use a carbon dioxide sensor outdoors to collect data on atmospheric carbon dioxide levels throughout the day.
Trees and Climate Change — Canopy
This activity guides students in calculating carbon storage in a tree based on its diameter and height. It also includes basic background information on photosynthesis and greenhouse gasses. Please note that this activity depends on the tree being at least 2 meters/6 feet high and 0.25m/25 cm in diameter.
“Science as One Way of Knowing, Not the Only Way
All cultures have a deep history of observing, investigating, and living closely with the natural world that predates modern “science.” Humans have always gathered knowledge about the natural world in ways that are similar to current scientific thinking and in other ways that differ from scientific thinking. The ecological knowledge that is obtained by Indigenous peoples and western science are both valid, with each having roots that are based on philosophical foundations, methods of validation, and communities of respected experts. Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) refers to an evolving body of knowledge based on hundreds or thousands of years of close observations of ecosystems by Indigenous people.”
— BEETLES, Lawrence Hall of Science
Mathematics
Trees and their parts—leaves, twigs, seeds, and flowers—can be used for applying the mathematical skills of sorting, measuring, classifying, counting, estimating, data collection, and understanding patterns. The sensory nature of these materials can make math lessons appealing to a broader segment of the student population and give them an opportunity to collect real-life data to analyze and represent. Below you will find a curated collection of lessons and activities that use schoolyard forests to support math education.
Counting Spirals — Double Helix
Pine cone spirals, leaf arrangements, and petal numbers—these are a few of the natural objects students can investigate for patterns in the Fibonacci sequence.
Does Your Tree Measure Up? — Learning withoutDoors
Students measure the height of trees with a variety of methods and tools.
Estimating Environments — Royal Horticultural Society
Students learn to estimate the number of leaves on a tree as well the surface area of a leaf.
Fractal Trees — Fractal Foundation
In this math activity, students explore the natural fractal branching of a tree, measure branch lengths and angles, and calculate quotients and ratios.
Hidden Figures — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
Students apply their math skills outdoors, whether quantifying their school forest or an individual tree. This activity includes suggestions for measuring, timing, counting, and estimating. This activity can also be done as a nature journaling lesson.
Mean, Median, Mode — Oh My!, PDF page 114 — LEAF - Wisconsin’s K-12 Forestry Education Program
Students measure the circumference of multiple tree trunks and calculate the mean, median, mode, and range of values for a group of trees.
Natural Equations — Learning through Landscapes
Students use leaves, twigs, and other natural materials to represent numbers in equations—a fun and hands-on introduction to algebra!
10 Ways to Measure a Tree — Learning through Landscapes
This guide provides a variety of ways to measure tree heights, from simple to complex.
Tree Math Prompts — Green Schoolyards America
A short handout to inspire teachers about math connections they can make in their schoolyard forest.
Language Arts
The sensory stimulation experienced in nature can open new worlds in children’s imagination, vocabulary, and questioning. Teachers can use the schoolyard forest areas as an outdoor classroom setting for their existing curriculum, but they can also use this awakened enthusiasm to support outdoor literacy games, creative writing, nature journaling, and hands-on research skills. Nature journaling, in particular, is an activity ripe with Language Arts possibilities that also intersect with Science and Mathematics. We have provided some curated lessons below that include the focus areas of Language, Reading, Writing, Speaking, and Listening and that encourage teachers to take learning outside.
Build a Tree Poem — Longwood Gardens
This activity provides a set of prompts for students observing a tree, reflecting on the tree’s perspective, and developing ideas for a poem.
Nature Journaling: I Notice, I Wonder, It Reminds Me Of — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
This excellent set of prompts for developing observation and inquiry skills includes both drawing and writing. This can be used as a once-off activity or can be incorporated into a series of nature journal pages.
Poetree — Learning through Landscapes
Students create group poems by observing a tree from different vantage points. This activity can be applied to any form of poetry being studied in the classroom.
Poetry of Place and Moment — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
This activity provides a scaffold for writing poetry, linking observations to internal experiences and thoughts. It can also be part of a nature journaling curriculum.
Writing to Observe, Writing to Think — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
In this nature journaling activity, students use writing as an observation and thinking tool while experimenting with different forms of writing they can use in their nature journal, such as labels, sentences, paragraphs, bullet points, or different fonts.
Social Science
Schoolyard forests provide easy and powerful ways to connect students to a place. Mapping activities on school grounds, for example, are a way in which teachers can make connections to the geography curriculum. In addition, teachers can make connections to the schoolyard forest when studying topics such as human modifications to the landscape and resource use, local indigenous knowledge and relationships with trees, the current and historic economic value of different tree species, and trees in ancient civilization mythology. We have provided some curated lessons below that focus on students learning outdoors.
Animal Perspectives: Mapping the School Ground, PDF page 67 — Evergreen
Students map the school ground while evaluating it from the perspective of other species.
Create a Schoolyard Site Survey Map, PDF page 115 — U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
This one-pager helps teachers get started thinking about mapping various schoolyard features.
Mapping a Study Site — Outdoor Biology Instructional Strategies
Students use symbols to represent different plant species and different natural features as they map their school site.
Mapping Your Schoolyard — Earth Partnership
Students work with compasses and grids to measure and map their schoolyard and create scaled drawings.
Photo Monitoring — Green Schoolyards America
Students use permanent locations to photograph and record changes to the forest over the long term, developing a record for future student cohorts to conduct historical research on their schoolyard forest.
Soundscape Maps — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
Students apply mapping skills to the soundscape outdoors. They tune into the sounds around them and map them using directions, symbols, and legends. This activity also develops a sense of place through sound.
Visual and Performing Arts
Nature makes a rich and inviting subject for the visual arts. The activities showcased below include (1) art lessons that use plant materials that can be gathered from a schoolyard forest and (2) lessons that feature trees as the subject for different media such as drawing, painting, or photography. The forest can also be used as an outdoor setting for arts classes when material needs are simple, or be a source of inspiration that is further interpreted in the art studio. We have also included a few lessons on sound that can complement concepts being taught in music or science classes.
Autumn Leaf Bunting — Royal Horticultural Society
Students press leaves from trees to make a beautiful display to string outside, in hallways, or in classrooms.
Counting Spirals — Double Helix
Pine cone spirals, leaf arrangements, and petal numbers—these are a few of the natural objects students can investigate for patterns in the Fibonacci sequence.
Forest Karaoke: Transcribing Birdsong — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
Students learn to creatively transcribe sounds (from birds or other auditory phenomena) using words, drawing, diagramming, and numbers.
Garden Photography — KidsGardening
Students develop their photography skills by learning more about framing their shot, shifting their perspective, exploring composition, and other photography techniques.
Inspirational Tree Mural, PDF page 200 — EcoRise Youth Innovations
Students create a mural inspired by observing and researching trees in their schoolyard.
Leaf Rubbings (English) and Calcos de Hojas (Spanish) — Canopy
Students explore leaf shapes and patterns by making rubbings on paper.
Nature Journaling: I Notice, I Wonder, It Reminds Me Of — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
This excellent set of practices for developing observation and inquiry skills includes drawing and writing. This can be used as a once-off activity or can be incorporated into a series of nature journal pages.
Painting the Seasons, PDF page 29 — Green Schoolyards America
Students bring the art studio outside to create paintings of trees while observing and recording changes throughout the year
Paint with Chlorophyll! — Emmy Brockman
Students extract chlorophyll with acetone or isopropyl alcohol and use the green pigment as paint.
Plant Mandala Journal (English), Diairio de Mandalas de Plantas (Spanish), and Plant Mandala Journal (Chinese) — Plant Heroes
Students create a mandala from natural materials, learn about symmetry, and have an opportunity to engage in mindfulness and reflection.
Pressed Flower Card — Life Lab
This guide provides suggestions on how to press and dry plant material, which can be used for art projects or herbarium specimens.
Printing with Leaves — Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Students use paint or ink with a variety of leaves to capture shapes and textures on paper.
Rethinking Drawing a Tree — John Muir Laws
Observing parts of a tree rather than trying to draw the whole tree can be equally valuable and less overwhelming. This two-page visual guide provides a range of strategies for capturing a tree’s essence.
The Secret Picture, PDF page 69 (English) and The Secret Picture, PDF page 17 (Chinese) — Naturskolan i Lund
In this partnered activity, students create simple pieces of “secret” art, with the fun twist of practicing communication skills as they keep their backs to each other.
Signs and Displays — Green Schoolyards America
This tip sheet showcases several possibilities for creating signs for trees while incorporating the arts and language arts as well as science and social studies.
Soundscape Maps — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
Students apply mapping skills to the soundscape outdoors. They tune into the sounds around them and map them using directions, symbols, and legends. This activity also develops a sense of place through sound.
Tree Faces — Learning through Landscapes
Students use clay to sculpt a face on a tree while incorporating features of the tree.
Social-Emotional Learning
It is now well understood that the social-emotional aspect of teaching and learning is a critical component of education. We also know that being outdoors in nature supports social-emotional development. The curated resources below support the five competencies of self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship skills, and responsible decision-making. They also overlap with curriculum in the sciences, social sciences, and visual arts, while developing environmental literacy.
Animal Perspectives: Mapping the School Ground, PDF page 67 — Evergreen
Students map the school while evaluating it from the perspective of other species. This activity can be used to develop social awareness and responsible decision-making skills.
Build A Tree — California ReLeaf
Students role-play the different parts and functions of a tree, including the heartwood and sapwood. This team activity develops social awareness and relationship skills.
Busy and Calm, PDF page 56 — Karel Komárek Proměny Foundation
Students survey different areas of the school grounds to evaluate how they feel in them, build self-awareness, and develop responsible decision-making.
Create a Me Tree: A Self-Reflection Activity — Action for Healthy Kids
This art activity uses tree anatomy as inspiration and metaphor for self-awareness.
Forest Bathing — Learning through Landscapes
In this mindfulness activity, students spend time in nature, whether it is the school forest or other natural areas. This helps build self-management and self-awareness skills.
Meet a Tree — Sharing Nature Worldwide
In this activity, one student leads a blindfolded partner to “meet” a tree and get to know it through the sense of touch. This trust-building activity can be used to develop relationship skills, social awareness, self-management, and self-awareness skills.
Plant Mandala Journal (English), Diairio de Mandalas de Plantas (Spanish), and Plant Mandala Journal (Chinese) — Plant Heroes
Students practice mindfulness while creating a mandala from natural materials.
The Secret Picture, PDF page 69 (English) and The Secret Picture, PDF page 17 (Chinese) — Naturskolan i Lund
In this partnered activity, students create simple pieces of “secret” art, with the fun twist of practicing communication skills as they keep their backs to each other. — Naturskolan i Lund
In this partnered activity, students create simple pieces of “secret” art, with the fun twist of practicing communication skills as they keep their backs to each other. In this communication exercise, they practice social awareness and relationship skills, while improving mathematical and spatial vocabulary.
Sit Spot — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
This nature journaling activity gives students the opportunity to notice their own experience in nature, while slowing down, developing mindfulness, and constructing their own narrative. It builds self-awareness and self-management skills.
Team Observation — John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren
Students use the practices of nature journaling to observe the same subject, such as a tree, and collaborate to get a greater depth and variety of observations. This team-building activity can be used to develop relationship skills and social awareness.
Tree Faces — Learning through Landscapes
Students use clay to sculpt a face on a tree while incorporating features of the tree. This can be used to build self-awareness and social awareness.
Tree of Hope — Roots and Shoots
This self-reflection activity invites students to connect to a tree and to explore their personal roots (e.g., community, family) and shoots (hopes and dreams).
Physical Education
Kinesthetic learning is a great addition to the educational toolkit. Involving students in stewardship tasks such as watering, weeding, and mulching keep young bodies active, bending, and stretching in a variety of ways. Read more in Stewardship Tasks with Students. We have also included some classic outdoor games below that have been adapted to teach scientific concepts. A creative collaboration between academic and physical education teachers could result in many more lessons tailored to each school’s curriculum needs.
Food Chain Game — Outdoor Biology Instructional Strategies
In this active game of tag, students role-play different organisms in a food chain.
How Bad is Your Bark? — Save the Redwoods/Caritas Creek
In this team-building game, students playing the “bark” have to protect “cambium” students from fire or insects.
Photosynthesis Tag, PDF page 136 — Los Angeles Unified School District Office of Outdoor and Environmental Education
In this tag game, students learn about photosynthesis—the foundation for understanding the carbon cycle in plants and eventually the role of trees in storing carbon from the atmosphere.
Tree Pose — Bluearth
This classic yoga pose can be included in a yoga routine. Tree pose improves balance, core strength, and concentration.
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Schoolyard Forest System℠
The Schoolyard Forest System℠ Resource Library is a set of practical tools for schools and districts working to increase tree canopy on public school grounds to shade and protect PreK-12 students from extreme heat and rising temperatures due to climate change. Funding for the first phase of this initiative was provided by a grant administered by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) Urban and Community Forestry Program, and private philanthropy.