Label it!

Learn about food labels and how to make informed choices when choosing food

white, yellow, green and red rectangular shapes to represent nutrition labels

Learn about nutrition labels on food and identify healthy options

Activity Type
Activity type Card activity
Duration
Four sessions of 45 - 60 minutes
Age and stage
P5–P7

Learn about food labels and how to make informed choices when choosing food

  • HWB 2-15a
  • HWB 2-16a
  • HWB 2-30a
  • HWB 2-36a
  • HWB 3-15a
  • HWB 3-36a
  • we are learning to understand the colour coding on food labels
  • we are learning to make informed and healthy choices about food we eat and buy
  • I can explain what each colour code on the front of food packs means
  • I can name the different categories on the front of a food pack
  • I can predict the colour of each category for certain foods

Resources

  • Food Cards (main meals only)*
  • real food packaging for labels and print example labels that appear on the worksheet
  • make red/amber/green voting cards
  • FSS Cookin Castle interactive game

*Food cards can be ordered from FSS

Activities

Warm up

  • sort packaging by salt, sugar, fat and calorie content:
    • with values covered up to explore initial perceptions of food
    • with values revealed
  • discussion of results

From teacher resources talk about:

  • why some values are red/amber/green
  • daily recommended allowance
  • how this is calculated
  • why this is important

Creating graphs and charts

  • create graphs and pie-charts using the information on the front of packs, e.g. by comparing the calories, fat, saturated fat, sugar, salt against different products
  • visually represent front of pack information in a different way for comparison

Games-based activities

  • guess the colour for each category on a range of packaging (hold up main meals in food cards and teacher has examples of a nutritional label for each of them as an answer)
  • pupils have Red/Amber/Green cards to hold up/vote with when each category is shown
  • values and colours are revealed
  • discuss differences and healthy options
Play Your Cards Right
  • a game like the old T.V. show
  • uses examples from food packaging rather than playing cards
  • class needs to vote higher or lower for each category of content – e.g. compare 2 cards for one nutrient
Find the healthiest food
  • show a range of packaged food using physical examples
  • pupils need to identify the most/least healthy foods and explain why

Cookin Castle

  • play Cookin Castle 'in the kitchen' game to create a day or week of healthy meals - look up front of pack information on supermarket websites to analyse meals cooked

 

Assessment opportunities

Observations

Photographs as evidence

Guess the colour games

Consider CfE Benchmarks, for example:

  • uses different food labelling system to select foods for a specified dietary requirement for example, low in fat
  • evaluates information on food packaging and uses it to make informed choices when selecting food for given situations

Differentiation

Support
  • mixed ability groups
  • Pre-prepared Top Trumps
  • focus on one category eg. Sugar at a time.
  • remove numbers and use colours or another visual representation eg. spoons of sugar.
Challenge
  • design your own system of denoting nutritional content of packaged food
  • design your own food label Top Trumps
  • introduce portion size, frequency of eating and recommended daily allowance
  • plan a healthy eating plan or class party
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