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Grades
Integrated Subjects
Food Education Standards
Iroquois’ Three Sisters in Agriculture & Nutrition
Students will discover the practical application of why corn, beans, and squash are considered “three sisters” in agriculture by reading the legend of the “Three Sisters” and preparing a traditional succotash.
What Pilot Light Teachers are saying:
“This Pilot Light lesson allowed my students to experience vegetables that they are not familiar with. It allowed them to try foods in a natural state with no cooking or toppings added. It also brought their learning to life. Not only were they able to read, illustrate and understand a folktale of the three sisters, but they were able to tie it to actual experience. They are then bringing their comprehension and experiences together to solidify their understanding.” – 3rd grade teacher
Lesson Topics:
Three Sisters, ecosystems, nutrition
Curricular Connections:
Common Core English Language Arts:
Grades 3-5 Reading: Literature: Key Ideas and Details (Standard 3) & Integration of Knowledge and Ideas
(Standard 9)
Illinois Social Science Learning Standards:
Grades 3-5: Geography: Human-Environment Interaction: Place, Regions, and Cultures
Grades 4-5: Geography: Human Population: Spatial Patterns and Movements
- 3rd
- 4th
- 5th
- agriculture
- beans
- companion planting
- corn
- ecosystem
- ecosystems
- english language arts
- farming
- food system
- gardening
- geography
- health
- history
- horticulture
- indigenous
- indigenous culture
- integration of knowledge and ideas
- Iroquois
- key ideas and details
- literature
- Native Americans
- native plant
- native plants
- nutrient density
- nutrient-dense
- nutrition
- oral tradition
- protein
- social studies
- squash
- succotash
- Three Sisters
- wellness
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