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Fairtrade and Cocoa Choices

Geography • 40 • 27 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Geography
40
27 students
14 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

I want to plan a lesson where the children read a news article about cocoa farming, the challenges and how fair trade helps. Teacher might also discuss other fairtrade products aswell as chocolate, and the children will parktake in conscience alley (right for/agree, left against/disagree) with these prompts; : You are the Cadburys chocolate company manager deciding whether to use only Fair Trade cocoa beans, You are a shopper deciding between a regular chocolate bar and a more expensive Fair Trade one, You are a chocolate shop owner deciding whether to only sell chocolate made from Fairtrade cocoa, You are a government leader deciding whether to support laws that require chocolate companies to use Fairtrade cocoa, You are a child in Ireland writing to a chocolate company — should you ask them to switch to Fairtrade cocoa?, You are a cocoa farmer offered a low price by a big company — should you take it or say no?, You are a teacher planning a school fundraiser — should you sell only Fairtrade chocolate?

This is my lesson plan template:ST Name: Kym Fox ST Number: 40036679 Class Level: 2nd & 3rd Class Date: 15/05/25

Subject: Geography Time: 12:40 Duration of Lesson: 40 Minutes No of Pupils: 27 pupils Strand(s) Environmental Awareness and Care Strand Unit(s)/ Element(s) Environmental Awareness Learning Outcome(s)/ Content Objectives: Recognise and investigate human activities which may have positive or adverse effects on local and wider environments Learning Objectives: (Two are required. One other may be added if deemed necessary)

  1. The child should be enabled to:
  2. The child should be enabled to:

Assessment:

  1. Method:
  2. Assessment of:
  3. To be recorded: Teacher Questioning: (Insert I, D, C for relevant part of lesson) Lower order questions (Closed Questions)

Higher order questions (Open Questions) 1. 2. 3. Language Development opportunities in this lesson: Literacy Development opportunities in this lesson: Teaching Methodologies: · All Subjects: Talk and Discussion, Collaborative/Co-operative Learning, Active Learning, Skills Through Content, Using Local Environment, Problem Solving

Introduction: Stimulus: Elicit Prior Knowledge: Share Learning Intention:    Development:  Palm oil, deforestation, endanger animals, climate change  Conscious alley shampoo, chocolate etc. Conclusion: Cognitive: Social: Transition (if appropriate:    Universal Design for Learning

Pupil(s) Reason(s) Method(s) Additional Comments/

The Learning Environment: Resources:

Fairtrade and Cocoa Choices

ST Name: Kym Fox

ST Number: 40036679

Class Level: 2nd & 3rd Class

Date: 15/05/25

Subject: Geography

Time: 12:40

Duration of Lesson: 40 Minutes

No of Pupils: 27 pupils


Strand(s):

Environmental Awareness and Care

Strand Unit(s) / Element(s):

Environmental Awareness

Learning Outcome(s) / Content Objectives:

  • Recognise and investigate human activities which may have positive or adverse effects on local and wider environments.
  • Understand the concept of Fairtrade and describe how it helps farmers and communities around the world.

Learning Objectives:

  1. The child should be enabled to explain some challenges cocoa farmers face and how Fairtrade can support them.
  2. The child should be enabled to express their opinions confidently and respectfully during a conscience alley activity about Fairtrade decisions.

Assessment:

  1. Method: Teacher-led questioning and observation during conscience alley activity.
  2. Assessment of: Pupils’ understanding of Fairtrade, cocoa farming challenges, and their ability to articulate viewpoints with reasoning.
  3. To be recorded: Individual participation in discussion and responses to questions.

Teacher Questioning:

Lower order questions (Closed Questions):

  1. What is cocoa used for?
  2. Can you name one problem cocoa farmers face?
  3. What does Fairtrade mean?

Higher order questions (Open Questions):

  1. Why might it be important for chocolate companies to buy only Fairtrade cocoa?
  2. How do you think choosing Fairtrade products might help farmers and their families?
  3. What would you do if you were a shopper choosing between regular chocolate and Fairtrade chocolate? Why?

Language Development Opportunities:

  • Introduce vocabulary such as “Fairtrade”, “cocoa”, “farmer”, “market price”, “sustainable”, and “community”.
  • Use sentence starters to support expressive language during conscience alley (e.g. “I think… because…”).
  • Promote listening and speaking skills through paired and whole class discussion.

Literacy Development Opportunities:

  • Reading comprehension through a short, age-appropriate news article about cocoa farming and Fairtrade.
  • Writing a short letter from the perspective of a child to a chocolate company (optional extension or homework).
  • Encourage the use of descriptive language when discussing challenges faced by farmers.

Teaching Methodologies:

  • Talk and Discussion
  • Collaborative / Co-operative Learning
  • Active Learning through conscience alley role-play
  • Skills Through Content
  • Problem Solving by evaluating different roles and decisions
  • Using Local Environment by connecting Fairtrade with local shops / products

Introduction (10 minutes):

Stimulus:
Display images of cocoa pods, chocolate bars (both regular and Fairtrade labelled), and photos of cocoa farmers. Read aloud a short, child-friendly news article about the challenges cocoa farmers face and the benefits of Fairtrade.

Elicit Prior Knowledge:
Ask pupils what they know about where chocolate comes from, if they have heard of Fairtrade, and what they think Fairtrade means. Briefly discuss other Fairtrade products they might know (bananas, coffee, flowers).

Share Learning Intention:

  • Today, we will learn about how cocoa is grown and some challenges farmers face.
  • We will explore how Fairtrade helps people who grow cocoa.
  • We will share and respect different opinions in a special activity called conscience alley.

Development (20 minutes):

  1. Read & Discuss News Article (5 mins):

    • Teacher reads aloud key points from the prepared news article.
    • Highlight difficulties such as low prices, hard work, and community issues.
    • Explain Fairtrade’s fair prices and community support.
  2. Fairtrade Products Discussion (3 mins):

    • Discuss other products with Fairtrade labels.
    • Why might people choose these products even if they cost a bit more?
  3. Conscience Alley Activity (12 mins):
    Set up two lines facing each other — right side = Agree/For, left side = Against/Disagree. Assign roles and prompts to individual pupils or pairs, rotating so all get to contribute. Teacher guides and encourages respectful listening.

Prompts:

  • You are the Cadbury’s chocolate company manager deciding whether to use only Fairtrade cocoa beans.
  • You are a shopper deciding between a regular chocolate bar and a more expensive Fairtrade one.
  • You are a chocolate shop owner deciding whether to only sell chocolate made from Fairtrade cocoa.
  • You are a government leader deciding whether to support laws requiring chocolate companies to use Fairtrade cocoa.
  • You are a child in Ireland writing to a chocolate company — should you ask them to switch to Fairtrade cocoa?
  • You are a cocoa farmer offered a low price by a big company — should you accept or refuse?
  • You are a teacher planning a school fundraiser — should you sell only Fairtrade chocolate?

Encourage students to use “I think… because…” statements and connect back to the article and discussion.


Conclusion (5 minutes):

Cognitive:

  • Recap what Fairtrade means and why it is important.
  • Ask pupils to share one new thing they learned today.

Social:

  • Emphasise the value of hearing different perspectives and making fair decisions.
  • Praise respectful listening and sharing during conscience alley.

Transition:

  • Suggest the class investigate other Fairtrade products used locally or organise a simple Fairtrade chocolate taste test next week.
  • Prompt pupils to think about how their choices as consumers affect others around the world.

Universal Design for Learning (UDL):

Pupil(s)Reason(s)Method(s)Additional Comments
Pupils with language difficultiesSupport verbal expression and vocabularyProvide visuals and sentence startersUse peer support during discussion
Pupils with attention difficultiesHighly engaging conscience alley physical activityMovement-based learningShort bursts of talk supported by actions
EAL pupilsExposure to vocabulary with use of picturesKey vocabulary displayedPair EAL pupils with supportive peers

The Learning Environment:

Resources:

  • Age-appropriate news article printouts or projected text
  • Photos/images of cocoa pods, farmers, chocolate bars (Fairtrade and non-Fairtrade labelled)
  • Two lines of chairs or floor markers for conscience alley
  • Posters or real Fairtrade products (chocolate, bananas, coffee packets)
  • Sentence starters printed on cards for conscience alley participation

This lesson aligns with the IE Curriculum framework by fostering Environmental Awareness and Care through investigation of human activities (cocoa farming), developing critical thinking, communication skills, and social responsibility in young learners. The conscience alley activity supports oral language development and collaborative learning while reflecting cross-curricular literacy and citizenship competencies.

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