Understand what it means to harvest with your preschooler through videos from around the world harvesting their crops. Plus Preschool Harvest Activities and Harvest themed Books!
Here’s how to explain harvest to preschoolers.
At 8:00 this morning, my kids were outside in the garden. It’s HARVEST time!!! Our garden is tiny, but we still have herbs and vegetables to harvest. I want my preschooler to understand what it means to harvest the food that he planted from seed.
And then, I want to help him make connections to what the harvest theme means for people around the world!
Take your Kids on a Virtual Harvest Theme Field Trip:
I am a HUGE fan of gardening with kids. In fact, we even have an entire label on our sidebar dedicated to gardening with kids. Children can learn SOOOOO much in a garden. From math, science, history, geography, art and real life skills such as patience, hard work and persistence.
Here are some of my favorite articles here At The Educators’ Spin On It:
HARVEST isn’t just the act of picking a vegetable from the vine, it is a season for collecting the crops and celebrating the plentiful gifts our garden has brought to us.
People all around the world plant and harvest crops to feed their families. They plant fruits, vegetables and wheat that match their soil type and temperatures. Many countries plant similar crops such as potatoes and root vegetables.
Often times when we look at the world through a global lens, we come to the realization that we are more alike than different.
LEARN: Harvest Preschool Activities for Social Studies:
- Watch a few videos together. Look at the pictures.
- Discuss. See if you can see any similarities and differences in these harvests around the world.
- Open your fridge and see where the produce you bought was grown.
- Grab a map and find those places in the world.
This activity will combine SOCIAL STUDIES AND TECHNOLOGY!
NOTE: I have previewed MANY harvest videos and selected the most appropriate. Most contain advertisements in the beginning and music in the background. They would all work well muted and you can click, skip ad after a few seconds.
Potatoes from Egypt
This is a really cool informative video about growing potatoes in Egypt. I was amazed, but it may be a little bit over a preschoolers understanding. You can skip to 7 minutes to see the harvest of potatoes in the desert.
Midwest U.S.A. At Grandma and Grandpa’s garden:
Tomato Harvest – Mostly Heirloom
Onion Harvest
The grandkids helping pick the vegetables.
At a Wheat Farm in North Carolina
Different views of a wheat harvest set to music
South, U.S.A our tiny garden:
Red Potato Harvest
Broccoli Harvest
Papaya Golden from Brasil – FARM
They live in Izhevsk, a city East of Moscow. See if you can find it on a map!
Squash Harvest
Big Beets in Russia
Japan Rice Harvest
Now – don’t let your Harvest Preschool Activities stop with the virtual field trip, bring your learning back to the couch and snuggle in with a good harvest theme book.
Then, craft, explore, and make even more Harvest Preschool Activities.
Affiliate links included in this post
HARVEST Themed Books for Preschoolers
For every thematic unit we do at home, I like to gather the books in my home that relate to the theme. We also check out books from the library and purchase books to build themes. I like to display these books on an open bookshelf with the covers facing out. My preschooler tends to read these more than if they are tucked in the depths of my bookshelves. Setting them in a basket near the couch or reading chair would work as well. Here are some that I would include on our bookshelf for this unit.
Apples for Everyone (Picture the Seasons)
This book is a National Geographic reader with stunning pictures to show the seasons. A perfect literacy connection to a harvest trip to an apple orchard!
Read the Full Book Description
Seed, Sprout, Pumpkin, Pie (Picture the Seasons)
This book is the companion to Apples for Everyone. Vibrant pictures show the transition of pumpkins from seed to harvest. A perfect literacy connection to a harvest trip to a pumpkin patch.
Read the Full Book Description
Kids’ Pumpkin Projects: Planting & Harvest Fun (Williamson Good Times Books)
Crafts and projects are interwoven with pumpkin stories. Although geared for Kindergarten to 3rd grade, preschoolers could do most of these projects with adult support.
Read the Full Book Description
Pumpkin Circle: The Story of a Garden
This is the story of the life cycle on a pumpkin and how it is all connected in a big garden circle.
Read the Full Book Description
Rainbow Stew
Children harvest vegetables from Grandpa’s garden in this delightful tale.
Read the Full Book Description
Yum! Mmmm! Que Rico! Americas’ Sproutings
From chili peppers to papaya, this book highlights an enormous variety of fruits and vegetables that are found in the Americas. A non-fiction text accompanies each Haiku for an enriched learning experience.
Read the Full Book Description
PIN this image to your Reading & Literacy or Fall Board!
Make: HARVEST Activities for Learning
Plan your PRESCHOOL Harvest Theme Learning Week with Activities from the Playful Preschool Education Team:
Learning with Gourds: Comparing, Sorting, and Labeling for Fall by Still Playing School
Corny Science: Will it sink or float? by Capri + 3
Harvesting in the Carrot Patch by Powerful Mothering
Preschool Math: Measuring Pumpkins by Mom Inspired Life
Making Bread by Rainy Day Mum
Alphabet Activities: Letter Harvest by Growing Book by Book
There Was An Old Lady Who Swallowed Some Leaves Sequencing Cards & Power Point by The Preschool Toolbox Blog
Go Global: Harvests Around the World by The Educators’ Spin On It
Harvest Time: Jamaican Style Music by Learning 2 Walk
Little Red Hen Activity – Retelling through Sensory Play by Fun-A-Day
Pumpkin Play and Learning by Little Bins for Little Hands
PLAY: Harvest Play Ideas for Preschoolers
I have come to the realization that after teaching many years in the kindergarten classroom, I REALLY like harvest and farm toys. They are so versatile and lend well to incorporating many important ideas and academics into play.
Small World Toys Living – Peel ‘N’ Play Velcro Play Set
I make most of my own playfood with felt and hand sewing. We do have several wooden food items too. This plastic peel set is a hit with my kids though because you can take the pieces apart and put them together again.
Fisher-Price Little People Fun Sounds Farm
Yes it is plastic. If you like wood better, there are many great products. I happen to have an older model of this farm and my kids use it often. We set it up on our train table and they take the train to the farm. We set up an apple orchard and they pretend to harvest apples. In all, it has seen MANY hours of use.
So, this is more farmy than harvesty, but I made my kids a really cute set of playmats with fields of plants and the animals naturally fall in with the harvest unit.
Ok – so this one is more farmy too. BUT, I have looked for vegetable beads to no avail. Beading is so good for fine motor. And YES, these are in with my wooden beads. Didn’t I tell you I had a ton of farm and harvest toys!
Ertl Big Farm 24 Pack Of Small Square Bales
Last, but not least, doesn’t every kid need a pack of hay bales. So, I do not OWN these, but trust me, if I did, I would SOOOO use them.
GO: Making the Most of Harvest Photographs
If you do not have a garden, I strongly urge to you head to a u-pick farm or pumpkin patch and let your children experience the word HARVEST with their own two hands.
AND for those of you who always post super cute pictures of your kids harvesting apples, or pumpkins, I’d like to end on these pictures.
Here is a picture of my preschooler sitting nicely near a pumpkin, smiling for a photo…. NOT, but you take what you can get! LOL.
Don’t miss our other POPULAR posts in the #PLAYfulpreschool Series:
For more Fall Virtual Field Trips for Preschoolers you might also like…
Natalie Sears says
Hi!
What cute ideas! I was just wondering where you got the quote, “HARVEST isn’t just the act of picking a vegetable from the vine, it is a season for collecting the crops and celebrating the plentiful gifts our garden has brought to us.” or if it is your own. I would love to use it in a powerpoint presentation I am doing on WORK and would love to give it the proper credit.
Thank you for sharing!
Amanda Boyarshinov says
Thanks for the sweet message, it is my own words. You may of course use it with proper credit! ~ Amanda Boyarshinov
Natalie Sears says
Amanda you are amazing! I love it! Thank you for your permission, it fits perfect with my presentation:-)
Kim Staten says
Thanks for including so many great resources for learning about the harvest!
Mary Catherine says
Love the silly photos! 🙂 Thanks for gathering such great videos. My son loves watching them, and I know my preschoolers will too!
Sarah McClelland says
We always enjoy watch you pick out to watch! I love the different perspectives on harvesting and what is important to what location. Although we enjoyed it now, as my son gets older it will be even better!
Natasha Johnson says
So many different places and so much fresh veggies to harvest. Lucky kids to have taken the virtual harvest.
Pschooltoolbox says
Love this post AND gardening with kids! You have some wonderful resources for sharing a global view of harvest with our little ones! TY!
Amanda Boyarshinov says
I love the book too. The Egypt one is really an eye opener.
Amanda Boyarshinov says
You are welcome… you have NO idea how many I preview before letting my kid watch one. Youtube is great, but there is a lot of content that I don't feel is kid appropriate!
Amanda Boyarshinov says
Thank you Danielle for stopping by – my preschooler is in LOVE with all the tractor and harvest videos. We do very limited video time, so it is a treat for him and a great springboard for more learning.
Devany LeDrew says
You are my one stop shop for the BEST educational videos! Thank you!
Growing Book by Book says
It's so neat to see the different crops that are harvested across the country. Love the book choices too. Rainbow Stew is one of my favorites.
Danielle Buckley says
Great lesson plan! Thanks for all the wonderful resources you included with the pictures, videos and book recommendations!
Theresa A says
I love the idea of taking a virtual field trip to see harvests from around the world. It would be fun to cuddle up with a harvest themed book after the field trip!