The Benefits of Gardening with Preschoolers (2024)

Gardening is a rewarding family activity benefitting adults and preschoolers physically, emotionally, and academically. A home garden is easily created in any space, large or small: front yard, back yard, the grassy verge between the curb and sidewalk, community garden, porch, terrace, balcony, or windowsill. Even on a small budget, families can start a gardening practice that will teach children how to relate to the natural world. It will teach botany, entomology, conservation, and resource sustainability naturally and holistically. When planting a first garden, make it small and do not expect rigid results. Gardening is not a product the way home remodeling shows would have us believe; rather it is a process that allows children to witness cause and effect in action. Let go of images that magazines or home improvement series dictate; garden to share this joyous experience with your child.

Benefits

Gardening has many benefits for everyone in a family, both children and adults. Studies show that when parents involve children in the process of growing and preparing food, positive increases occur in diet and nutrition. While working in the garden, preschoolers develop fine motor control and also work larger muscles: gardening uses practically every muscle in the body. Sensorial lessons are found throughout the garden; preschoolers can practice color recognition, identify fragrances, and learn how fresh food tastes. Emotionally, gardening reduces stress while cognitively it improves attention and memory. Studies show that gardening increases math and science skills and even boosts standardized test scores. Opportunities for academic development abound in the garden; parents can teach children new vocabulary, ecological concepts, math skills (counting and probability), and the scientific method.

Flower Gardening

Novice gardeners might want to start on a small scale, perhaps a 4’ x 4’ area around a mailbox or near the house. Purchasing small packs of flowering annuals (flowers that do not survive the winter) gives preschoolers immediate results. To create your first garden:

  • Prepare the garden site by digging up any grass or unwanted vegetation. Adults are better equipped to do the heavy work of delineating a garden patch.
  • Turn the soil over and mix in a bag of compost or organic soil. Preschoolers will enjoy an activity where it is okay to play with dirt.
  • Do not use weed killers as they contain dangerous poisons like insecticides (many fertilizers do, too). Hand weeding is good for developing young children’s hand strength and fine motor control.
  • Purchase annual flowers from a local nursery. Check with the owner to make sure the plants are not sprayed with weed killers or insecticides.
  • Demonstrate how to dig a small hole deep enough to put seedlings in and then cover their roots with dirt. Small trowels for digging can be bought online or in garden stores.
  • Have your preschooler use a small watering can to gently water each freshly planted flower.
  • Set a time in the evening before or after dinner to water the garden with your preschooler.
  • For winter, leave plants to dry out and stay into spring. The flower stalks and dead flower heads offer shelter to beneficial insects and pollinators. Check the stems and branches for chrysalides and other signs of hibernating insects.

As your family’s gardening expertise grows, try starting flowers from seeds or dive into native plant gardening with perennials. See our previous blog articleabout starting a pollinator garden for more ideas.

Vegetable Gardening

Growing vegetables is a wonderful lesson in crop production and shows preschoolers how nutritious foods get to the table. Cold weather crops like kale can be grown in early spring and later replaced with simple summer crops like zucchini and string beans. Root vegetables, like carrots, work best in raised beds that contain rich, loose soil. Many vegetables start well from seed so check your local garden center. Be sure to talk to the nursery owner to confirm that pesticides are not used on any vegetable seeds or seedlings. If they are, check with another garden center or try an organic nursery. Vegetables that are easy to grow from seed include most beans, zucchini, yellow squash, pumpkin, lettuce, cucumbers, corn, and carrots. Vegetables that are easier to grow from a seedling (small plant) include tomato, celery, cauliflower, and eggplant.

Gardening for Small Spaces

If starting a garden in your yard is overwhelming or if you do not have a yard, try a window box or a container garden. Window boxes can be filled with flowers, herbs, or a combination of the two. Plant herbs like dill, thyme, fennel, or parsley in the back of the container and then plant nasturtium seeds in the front. The nasturtium flowers will cascade over the front of the window box and attract pollinators like bumblebees while the back row of herbs can be used for seasoning home-cooked meals. Preschoolers will enjoy harvesting the seasonings to add to meals or to dry for later use. The herbs fennel and dill are host plants for black swallowtail caterpillars, so your family might decide not to eat the plants, but rather observe the life cycle of these pollinators from small golden egg to caterpillar to chrysalis, and finally butterfly. Simple to care for window box annuals include nasturtiums, geraniums, herbs, petunias, alyssum, and coleus.

If you have a balcony, patio, or porch, container gardening is a simple way for families to create a garden space. Preschoolers can help select containers and the plants to put in them. Containers can be filled with annuals or native perennial plants which come back every year. Many native flowers are host plants to different butterflies who lay their eggs on the leaves. It can be a magical process for preschoolers to observe the lifecycle of a butterfly. Contact your local chapter of the Native Plant Society or look online to see which native plant is required for which butterfly. Simple to care for annuals for containers include lobelias, nasturtiums, or petunias to spill down the side of the container while taller annuals like geraniums, marigolds, salvia, and zinnias grow in the back. Perennials that are host plants for various butterflies include asters, goldenrod, and milkweed.

Setting Realistic Expectations

Gardening is a messy activity so make sure everyone dresses in play clothes. Also, expect the unexpected: a flower you thought would bloom doesn’t, a seed doesn’t sprout, or a butterfly chrysalis fails. Parents can help preschoolers build strong emotional skills and develop critical thinking by reviewing what has occurred in the garden. By talking through why a plant might or might not have thrived, parents support their child’s analytic mind and critical thinking skills.

Some years, depending on extracurricular activities, your family’s garden might be wild and other years a little neater. In the end, an untended garden is still better for the environment than a lawn or mulch. Creating a sustainable future for our children starts with stewardship of the land and a more ecologically sound approach to raising crops. Children with a new understanding of and relationship with gardening and landscaping will help build a better, more sustainable future.

About the Author


The Benefits of Gardening with Preschoolers (1)

V. Kulikow is a former Montessori teacher and youth services librarian. She currently works as a UX designer and enjoys content creation both with words and images.

Interested in writing a guest post for our blog? Let us know!

The opinions expressed in Montessori Life are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the position of AMS.

The Benefits of Gardening with Preschoolers (2024)

FAQs

Why garden with preschoolers? ›

Time in the garden allows for team building and promotes communication skills. Planning a garden, planting the seeds and watching them grow give kids a sense of purpose and responsibility. Making sure that the plants get enough fertilizer, water and sun fosters mindfulness.

What are the benefits of having preschool and/or school age children raise their own vegetables at school? ›

School gardening affects eating habits, too. Research shows that children are significantly more likely to eat vegetables they have grown. Schools often incorporate garden harvests into lunch programs, so students benefit from the added nutritional value of school-grown produce.

How does gardening help children learn? ›

Sensorial lessons are found throughout the garden; preschoolers can practice color recognition, identify fragrances, and learn how fresh food tastes. Emotionally, gardening reduces stress while cognitively it improves attention and memory.

How do you introduce gardening to preschoolers? ›

Encourage exploration in the dirt.

Let your child get messy, dig in the dirt, hold earthworms, turn compost, and make mud pies. Part of the fun of gardening is the sensory exploration involved. Child-sized shovels, hoes, rakes, and wheelbarrows are available and encourage children to work alongside you.

How does gardening help a child's emotional development? ›

Gardening allows children to connect with nature and each other. They are touching, seeing, smelling, hearing, and at harvest time, tasting nature. And throughout all of these acts they are building confidence. Children who engage in gardening become immersed in a world that does not judge.

Why are vegetables important for preschoolers? ›

Why eating vegetables is important for children. Vegetables give your child energy, vitamins, anti-oxidants, fibre and water. They also help to protect your child against chronic diseases later in life, including heart disease, stroke and some cancers.

How does gardening benefit students? ›

Gardening supports academic achievement, helps students develop a healthy lifestyle, makes them more aware of their environment and helps them develop a sense of community.

What are the benefits of Montessori gardening? ›

One of the primary benefits of Montessori gardening is its contribution to physical development. The act of gardening involves a range of motor skills, from gross motor skills to fine motor skills. When children carry gardening tools or water plants, they're developing their gross motor skills.

What is the summary of gardening? ›

Gardening is the growing of plants such as flowers, shrubs and trees as a hobby or recreation. Some people also grow vegetables or fruit in their gardens. People do gardening outdoors in the soil in their backyard, or in pots or containers on their balcony or on their patio. Some people do gardening on a roof.

How does gardening benefit you? ›

Why does gardening seem to be so beneficial to health? It combines physical activity with social interaction and exposure to nature and sunlight. Sunlight lowers blood pressure as well as increasing vitamin D levels in the summer,42 and the fruit and vegetables that are produced have a positive impact on the diet.

Why is teaching like gardening? ›

Just as gardeners create the right conditions for plants to flourish, educators can foster environments where students feel safe, curious, and motivated. It's not about micromanaging every detail but setting the stage for organic, meaningful learning. It's not just about the content; it's about the context.

Why do children love the garden? ›

Gardening gives children a sense of self-accomplishment. They learn by caring for their plants and watching them grow from seedlings to food or flowers. Children learn that their hard work pays off, boosting self-esteem. Those with positive self-esteem are more likely to try new things.

What questions should I ask my preschooler about gardening? ›

Questions to Ask Your Child

What part of plants (like trees and flowers) helps them get the water and nutrients that they need? What else do plants need to survive and grow? What are different ways that plants are helpful to animals? Why do you think many plants wait until springtime to start growing?

What should preschoolers know about plants? ›

As you take care of the plants together, talk about what plants need — like water, sunlight and a safe space to live and grow — and listen to your child's ideas. Ask questions like Do you think all plants need those things? What about trees? Encourage your child to think about what she needs to grow healthy and strong.

How do preschoolers develop through outdoor play? ›

During unstructured outdoor play, kids invent new games, explore their surroundings and become more independent. In addition to their newfound self-reliance, they also develop their decision-making skills and organizational abilities.

Why gardening is important in Montessori? ›

One of the primary benefits of Montessori gardening is its contribution to physical development. The act of gardening involves a range of motor skills, from gross motor skills to fine motor skills. When children carry gardening tools or water plants, they're developing their gross motor skills.

What are the benefits of garden play? ›

Playing outdoors allows children to develop self-confidence, independence and self-esteem. They also become aware of limits, boundaries and challenge in their play. When children are used to playing outdoors, they are more likely to: try new activities.

Why is it important to grow a garden? ›

Trees, hedges, and other plants counter climate change by trapping carbon and emitting oxygen; and worldwide, forests may offset a quarter of man-made carbon dioxide. They also improve the environment by reducing noise, heat, glare, wind, water run-off, erosion and dust.

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