Do You Garden At Home?


National Weed Your Garden Day, observed on June 13, is a perfect opportunity to teach kids about gardening, responsibility, and the importance of maintaining healthy plants. Here’s a full classroom lesson plan centered on planting and weeding a garden with interactive and educational elements. Here is an ideal Lesson Plan to use or build from:

🌿 Classroom Lesson Plan: “Grow, Weed, Repeat!”

For National Weed Your Garden Day – June 13

Grade Level: 2nd–4th
Duration: 45–60 minutes
Theme: Gardening, Plant Care, Environmental Awareness


🎯 Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will:

  • Understand the basic steps of planting seeds.
  • Learn why weeding is important for plant health.
  • Practice identifying weeds vs. garden plants.
  • Participate in a simulated or real garden activity.

📚 Materials Needed

  • Seed packets (beans or sunflowers work well)
  • Small pots or seed starter trays
  • Potting soil
  • Spray bottles or watering cans
  • Plastic garden tools or child-safe weeding tools
  • Printable worksheet: “Plant or Weed?”
  • Access to school garden or green space (if available)
  • Optional: Gloves, magnifying glasses, clipboards

🪴 Lesson Outline

1. Introduction (10 minutes)
Start with a fun question:
“What do plants need to grow?”
Write answers on the board (sun, water, soil, space, air).
Introduce National Weed Your Garden Day and explain what a weed is. Use a real weed or a picture to show an example.

2. Mini-Lesson (10 minutes)
Topics to cover:

  • Steps to planting a seed
  • What a healthy plant looks like
  • Why weeds are a problem (compete for water, sunlight, nutrients)
  • How to remove weeds safely

3. Activity Stations (25–30 minutes)

🌱 Station 1: Plant a Seed
Students fill a small pot with soil, plant a seed, and water it.

🧤 Station 2: Weeding Practice (Real or Simulated)
If outdoors: Let students carefully pull weeds from a garden bed.
If indoors: Create a pretend garden with colored paper “plants” and “weeds” in a sensory bin or sandbox. Kids identify and remove the “weeds.”

🧠 Station 3: Worksheet – “Plant or Weed?”
Students complete a worksheet where they circle pictures of plants and cross out weeds. Include fun facts on each page.


💬 Discussion & Wrap-Up (5–10 minutes)

Gather students and ask:

  • What was the most fun part of gardening today?
  • Why do you think gardeners need to check for weeds often?

Let students name one thing they learned. Optionally, sing a simple garden-themed song or read a short poem or story about gardening.


📌 Extension Ideas

  • Track their planted seeds’ growth for the next few weeks.
  • Write a garden journal entry or draw a picture of their “dream garden.”
  • Take a class photo with their planted pots to send home.

Teachers can download this Lesson Plan here…