This lesson helps young people think of healthful snacks they can eat. In this two-day activity, youth will use their creativity to invent a healthful snack and market it to their peers.
Before facilitating this lesson, you may want to review the following information about snacks. These facts can be shared with young people during your discussions.
Display a variety of food packaging for the youth to review. Ask the kids to name some of their favorite snacks. Analyze the snacks they mention, as well as the ones on display, and decide as a group if they are healthful. Do they include the five food groups found on MyPlate? Are they high in sugar, fat or salt?
Tell the youth that they will be inventing their own made-up healthful snack. They will have the opportunity to use their creativity to invent a made-up healthful snack on paper. This will include naming their product, what it looks like and its packaging (including a nutrition facts label). They will decide the pricing and marketing/advertising strategy for their snack. They will then give a brief presentation/commercial promoting their product idea to their classmates.
Provide the youth background knowledge on inventing a healthful snack item. Remind them to consider factors that would make the item healthful or unhealthful. Encourage young people to think about MyPlate as they create their snacks. Does it have ingredients that are part of the five food groups (vegetables, fruits, grains, dairy, and protein)? Is it low in fat and added sugars and/or too much salt?
Feel free to share the following made-up snack ideas to help jump start their imaginations.
Provide each young person or group with white poster board, blank nutrition facts label, scissors, colored paper, colored markers and/or pencils for drawing.
When their created snack item is complete it should include the following:
Have the young people present their healthful food product to the class.
Ask the following questions:
Optional: Post creative healthful snack displays in the classroom or school cafeteria.
As a group, reflect back to the creative snacks that the youth invented. Remind young people that they can be creative with their snacks each day to make healthful eating more fun!
Hand out the Healthy Families Newsletter in English or Spanish, so that families can continue discussing healthful snack ideas at home.
Healthy snacking: Moving beyond milk and cookies
Looking for a quick and healthy after-school snack?
Are You a Smart Snacker? – (Russian) – (Somali) – (Spanish)
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What Kind of Sugar is in Your Food? – (Russian) – (Somali) – (Spanish)
ChooseMyPlate.gov
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