
Students learn how nature works together.

Lessons connect to books and characters.

Students apply learning through projects.

Introduce young learners to nature through story, visuals, and simple actions.

A story-based learning experience that teaches how ecosystems work.

Reinforce learning through interactive play and group engagement.

Bring the story to life through listening and storytelling.

Everything is designed to work together — story, learning, and action in one system.
A story-driven, hands-on introduction to ecosystems that helps students confidently identify living vs. non-living elements and explain how they work together to support life. Students explore ecosystem roles through interactive sorting, discussion, and creative group work, building foundational environmental literacy and systems thinking. Perfect for launching an ecosystems unit and strengthening science vocabulary through engaging, classroom-friendly activities. Standards-aligned to core ecosystem interactions and scientific explanation skills.
Students explore two major ecosystem types—terrestrial and aquatic—through guided discussion, mini research, and creative storytelling. Small groups investigate forests, deserts, tundra, and grasslands, then compare freshwater and marine habitats through drawing and descriptive writing. This lesson builds strong vocabulary, habitat understanding, and real-world connections to places students know or imagine. Standards relevance includes ecosystems, observation-based explanations, and communication skills.
This lesson turns students into “ecosystem fact-checkers” as they learn how energy moves and matter cycles through producers, consumers, and decomposers. Students practice key terms (photosynthesis, decomposition, nutrient cycling) and demonstrate understanding through a True/False assessment with optional multiple choice for extension. A strong fit for upper elementary science pacing, vocabulary development, and assessment-ready instruction. Standards relevance includes energy/matter in ecosystems and evidence-based explanation.
Students learn the difference between energy flow and matter cycling through a clear ecosystem model and role-based examples tied to engaging character connections. The lesson includes direct instruction, guided practice, and a structured assessment to reinforce producers, consumers, decomposers, and matter. Great as a standalone or paired with food chains, composting, or ecosystems units. Standards relevance emphasizes modeling, cause-and-effect reasoning, and ecosystem processes.
Students investigate ocean plastic pollution through vocabulary, video learning, and a biomagnification food-chain activity. They learn key concepts like microplastics, gyres, plankton, and biomagnification, then create an educational poster advocating for ocean protection. Includes a student-facing assessment sheet with a kid-friendly “Ocean Guardian” rubric, making it perfect for Earth Day, ocean units, or environmental stewardship projects. Standards relevance includes ecosystems, human impacts, and science communication.
Students explore how everyday materials connect to ecosystems through a “ripple effect” lens—extraction, production, waste, and environmental impact. This lesson strengthens environmental literacy with powerful vocabulary (landfills, methane, deforestation, eutrophication) and includes both multiple choice and true/false assessments with answer keys. Great for teaching waste, recycling, and sustainability in a concrete, kid-friendly way. Standards relevance includes ecosystem impacts, human activity, and vocabulary mastery.
A fast, high-impact science lesson that connects ecosystems, sustainability, and key vocabulary through a fun pop quiz format. Students review concepts like decomposers, photosynthesis, biodiversity, greenhouse gases, and carbon footprints through multiple choice and true/false questions (with answer keys). Perfect as a review day, sub plan, or warm-up before a larger ecosystems or waste unit. Standards relevance includes ecosystems, climate concepts, and scientific vocabulary comprehension.
A story-centered lesson where students learn how waste and pollution disrupt ecosystems through the compelling case study of the Blue Macaw. Students collaborate to create their own “Green Team” and develop practical waste-reduction actions for school and community. Includes discussion prompts, project structure, and a pledge-to-action component that builds leadership and stewardship. Standards relevance includes ecosystem relationships, human impact, and communication/advocacy skills across grade bands.
Students connect personal consumption to global ecosystem impacts through vocabulary, video learning, and a three-day resource-use inventory. They classify renewable vs non-renewable resources, link choices to impacts like landfills, methane, deforestation, and dead zones, and launch a research project on a selected waste stream. A powerful bridge between literacy and science that builds systems thinking and student agency. Standards relevance includes scientific vocabulary, evidence use, and explanatory writing/discussion.
Students conduct a hands-on baseline waste audit to measure real waste patterns at school. They weigh, sort, identify contamination, and build pie charts to visualize what’s happening in compost, recycling, and landfill streams. This lesson builds data literacy, systems thinking, and student ownership—perfect for sustainability clubs, STEM units, or project-based learning. Standards relevance includes data analysis, human impacts on Earth systems, and evidence-based recommendations.
A multi-part follow-up audit that moves students from data collection into real behavior change. Students observe bin behaviors, calculate contamination patterns, compare results with Audit #1, and design a communication campaign (posters, announcements, presentations) to improve sorting school-wide. This lesson turns students into sustainability leaders who use evidence to influence their community. Standards relevance includes argument from evidence, solution design, and statistical reasoning.
This culminating audit lesson guides students through trend analysis and final reporting across three audit cycles. Students compare data over time, create graphs, identify behavioral shifts, and produce a final report with recommendations for the school community. Includes communication tool creation and reflection prompts to solidify leadership learning. Standards relevance includes patterns, stability/change, and communicating scientific information with evidence.
Students take learning outside with a campus/community litter pickup paired with a real waste audit. They categorize litter by material type, track food-related plastics, create charts, analyze behavioral causes, and propose solutions to reduce pollution. Includes a reporting component to share findings with administrators or local partners. Standards relevance includes monitoring human impact, interpreting data, and designing solutions.
Students explore soil as a living system and learn how fungi and mycelium help recycle nutrients, support ecosystems, and inspire real solutions like composting and plastic breakdown research. The lesson combines read-aloud/excerpts, visuals, composting concepts, sorting practice, and reflective action planning. A great capstone for sustainability units that blends science, environmental leadership, and student reflection. Standards relevance includes matter cycling, human impacts, and communicating scientific ideas.
A complete elementary environmental science bundle that builds ecosystem understanding from the ground up—living vs non-living, terrestrial vs aquatic habitats, producers/consumers/decomposers, energy flow, and human impacts like plastic pollution and wasted resources. Students learn through hands-on sorting, creative projects, kid-friendly assessments, and action-based stewardship activities. Designed for flexible pacing across classroom units, Earth Week, science blocks, or enrichment programs. Standards relevance includes ecosystems, scientific explanation, vocabulary acquisition, and solution-based thinking.
A middle school sustainability and data-powered advocacy bundle that turns students into real environmental leaders. Students conduct waste audits, analyze contamination trends, create charts and reports, investigate litter and consumption impacts, and design communication campaigns that change school behavior. This bundle emphasizes systems thinking, statistics/data literacy, and evidence-based solutions while connecting to real-world sustainability careers and civic engagement. Standards relevance includes human impacts on Earth systems, data interpretation, and scientific communication.
A comprehensive K–8 environmental education suite built around ecosystems, sustainability, waste reduction, and student-led action. Elementary learners build foundational ecosystem understanding and stewardship habits, while middle school students expand into data collection, audits, trend analysis, and real advocacy campaigns that influence their school community. Ideal for districts, homeschool co-ops, afterschool programs, and organizations seeking a full-year environmental literacy pathway. Standards relevance spans NGSS ecosystems/human impacts plus CCSS literacy and data skills.
Aligned with NGSS, Common Core ELA, and California frameworks.

Students use stories, games, and activities to understand ecosystems and lead projects that support their school and community.
