Cross Curricular Connections
Cook, Bake and Learn

Cook, Bake and Learn
Make connections to food and nutrition across all curriculums. Here are some examples...
Math
- Practice patterning and counting by making fruit kabobs.
 - Learn about fractions using different measuring cups and spoons for dry and wet ingredients.
 - Explore student taste or meal preferences and display results on different types of charts and graphs.
 - Calculate fractions by measuring ingredients and calculate modifications to the recipe (e.g., how to double a recipe).
 - Using a sample budget, make a grocery list and cost out the ingredients for a recipe.
 - Reading a nutrition facts table and % daily values.
 - Estimate the quantity of food needed for the student nutrition program in a given time-frame and calculate the cost to purchase it.
 
Science
- Learn about how to keep food safe and proper handwashing.
 - Make a recipe that celebrates seasonality of ingredients (e.g., maple syrup in spring, strawberries in early summer, winter squash in fall).
 - Learn about states of matter using water as an example (e.g., boiling, freezing).
 - Study a variety of food preservation techniques (e.g., fermenting, drying, freezing, smoking, canning) and why they’re effective.
 - Explore how heat is transmitted in different cooking and baking methods (e.g., moist heat methods like poaching, steaming, and boiling vs dry heat methods like roasting, grilling, and sautéing).
 - Research how climate change is impacting Indigenous foods and foodways.
 
Language
- Read and discuss books about food and family traditions.
 - Learn new vocabulary related to food preparation (e.g., bake, broil, grill, roast).
 - Write a poem, letter, song or other narrative to describe food experiences using the five senses.
 - Draft a recipe as an example of a procedural text (e.g., how to make a salad or yogurt parfait).
 - Write in cursive to create a draft restaurant menu board (e.g., with today’s specials).
 - Critically analyze food advertisements.
 - Research and synthesize information about a food-related topic using a variety of reliable sources.
 - Learn about traditional foods and foodways in First Nations, Metis, and Inuit cultures and how nations are working towards Indigenous food sovereignty.
 
Art
- Create paintings, drawings, prints or sculptures of students’ favourite fruit or vegetables.
 - Create a collage using pictures of meals from around the world.
 - Role play and present with props various age appropriate kitchen skills and activities including families baking cookies, a chef in the kitchen, grandma baking a pie etc.
 - Make a step-by-step video of students preparing a recipe from start to finish.
 
Social Science
- Help students learn to taste foods and support them in identifying and describing food.
 - Research and/or prepare cultural foods (invite parents, local elders, local chefs to share their stories and foods).
 - Explore how food connects people and communities through books and/or local cultural stories and events.
 - Explore and discuss changes in cooking practices and trends over time.
 - Explore and discuss gender roles related to food and nutrition and how this has changed over time.
 


