Curriculum
Tiny Wins: Sample Lessons (K–8)
These lessons are designed as "tiny wins": minimal prep, no extra materials, maximum impact. Each lesson lasts about 90 minutes to 2 hours, aligned with the Ontario Curriculum, and integrates Permacognitive Leadership principles.

Kindergarten – Sit Spot Discovery
Activity: Children find a quiet outdoor spot. They notice one thing with eyes, ears, nose, and touch. They draw or share what they noticed. Curriculum: Belonging & Contributing; Self-Regulation (Kindergarten Program).
Grade 1 – Listening to the Wind
Activity: Students sit in a circle outdoors. Silent listening for 2 minutes. Children map sounds using chalk, sticks, or gestures. Curriculum: Science (needs of living things); Language (oral communication).
Grade 2 – Counting Creatures
Activity: On a nature walk, students tally visible creatures. Create a group chart with sticks, pebbles, or chalk marks. Curriculum: Math (data management); Science (growth and changes in animals/plants).
Grade 3 – Mapping My Place
Activity: Students sketch a simple map of the schoolyard, marking trees, play areas, paths, and special places. Curriculum: Social Studies (local community); The Arts (visual art).
Grade 4 – Rock, Root, River Stories
Activity: Students collect a natural object. In small circles, they create and share a story that includes all their objects as characters. Curriculum: Language (oral storytelling, narrative structure); Science (rocks, soils, plants).
Grade 5 – Shadow Geometry
Activity: Using chalk, students trace shadows of trees, peers, or objects at different times of the day. Curriculum: Math (geometry, measurement); Science (Earth & space systems).
Grade 6 – Mini-Ecosystem Stewards
Activity: In pairs, students adopt a 1m² outdoor patch. They catalog what they see and create a care plan. Curriculum: Science (biodiversity, ecosystems); Social Studies (responsibility, stewardship).
Grade 7 – Silent Line Walk
Activity: Students walk silently in single file for 10 minutes. Each carries a notebook. At the end, they compare notes. Curriculum: Language (writing — descriptive, comparative); Geography (land use, natural systems).
Grade 8 – Design for Change
Activity: Students identify a small issue in the schoolyard. In teams, they design a regenerative solution and present designs outdoors. Curriculum: Science (sustainability, human impact); Math (measurement, design); Language (persuasive speaking).