Let’s talk about the beautiful, chaotic dance that is teaching a full-sized class (25–36+ kids) in a garden space. My team would love to hear from some battle-hardened garden educators regarding the insane amount of choreography that it takes to keep everyone safe and engaged.
Brilliant hive mind, please share your wisdom for these two areas:
1. The Logistics: What are your "crowd control" hacks?How do program the choreography? How do you keep the rest of the class occupied while you do small group hands-on skills training? Do you use a specific station rotation? Do you have "waiting zone" activities (like bug hunting or journaling) while you work with a small group? How do you engage classroom teachers (if they come with the class) in supporting outdoor classroom management? How do your tactics vary by age band?
2. The Scripts: What are your "magic phrases" for kids?Sometimes the right wording crystallizes a thought and captures a child's attention. For example, one educator shared that she uses the prompt "Show me how you hold your tools safely." It instantly flips the kid into "expert mode" and they freeze and demonstrate their safe posture.
What are your go-to talking points or verbal scripts? How do you word instructions so they don't accidentally pull up a crop instead of a weed, step in a bed or water weeds?
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Dear Christina
So good to hear from you. I hope my notes help keep up the good work
As an MG School Garden Consultant, I often work with classes of students and adults I have never met before and need to organize meaningful, safe, hands-on garden experiences within a 40-minute class period. Clear structure, visuals, movement, and consistent language make all the difference.
Before anyone touches tools or plants:
Keep instructions short, visual, and energetic.
Example:
“Today you are all gardeners and scientists. You will rotate through 4 garden stations. When the timer rings, you freeze, clean up your area put things back, and move to the next station.”
I also physically demonstrate:
I ideally set up:
If there are not enough beds or containers needing work, I add:
This keeps all students engaged and prevents overcrowding in one area.
A visible or audible timer is extremely helpful.
When the timer rings:
Children respond very well when the process is predictable.
Example:
“When you hear the bell, gardeners freeze like statues.”
Each station should have:
This helps:
Example Station Sign:
Pictures help younger students tremendously.
Instead of:
“Show me safe garden walking feet.”
Instead of:
“Gardeners use gentle scientist hands.”
Instead of:
“Show me how a gardener carries tools safely.”
Kids immediately demonstrate the correct posture.
“If you are not sure if it is a weed or a plant, ask first.”
“Roots are sleeping underground. We protect them with our feet.”
“The garden beds are for plants. The paths are for people.”
“Touch leaves like you are touching a butterfly wing.”
“Water the roots, not the sidewalks.”
“Plants drink slowly.”
“We water plants we want to grow — not weeds.”
“Freeze like a statue.”
“Eyes on me in 3…2…1.”
“Gardeners clean their station before moving.”
“Leave the station better than you found it.”
Best with:
Use:
Keep stations highly tactile.
They enjoy:
Good phrases:
“You are now the garden experts.”
“Teach your partner the next step.”
Middle school students respond well when given:
They often engage better when spoken to respectfully and directly.
Example:
“This garden depends on your team today.”
Before class begins, I quickly explain to teachers/adults:
I also ask adults to:
Adults often appreciate having written station instructions too.
Master Gardener San Diego County
“To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow.” — Audrey Hepburn
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