Lesson 6

Can Community Farms Feed People?

Learning Objectives (share with students)

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  • Evaluate whether community farms can feed local populations
  • Explain how population density, diet, and land use affect food supply
  • Identify limitations of community farming in the UK
  • Describe how hydroponics and vertical farming could increase food production
  • Suggest realistic adaptations to improve food security

Lesson Structure

0–5 min | Starter – Recall &Framing the Question

Quick recap (teacher-led):

  • From last lesson: What is a community farm?
  • What types of food do they usually grow?

Key question on board:

Can community farms realistically produce enough food for all local people?

Students vote yes / no / maybe and one reason.

5–15 min | Section A: Scaling Up Food Production

Teacher Input – Limits of Community Farming (5 mins)

Explain:

  • Community farms often focus on:
    • Fruit and vegetables,
    • Some raise livestock or are mixed farms
  • They usually:
    • Use smaller areas of land
    • Prioritise sustainability and education over profit

Key limitation:

Even very productive community farms usually cannot supply enough food for everyone in towns or cities.

Video: TED-Ed – Can We Create the “Perfect” Farm? (7 mins)

🎥 TED-Ed animation (7:09) Introduces how high tech, small-scale/community farms plus a move to a plant-based diet offers potential solutions for feeding the population and protecting the planet. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFqecEtdGZ0

While watching, students identify:

  • One challenge with current food systems
  • One idea for improving food production

15–25 min | Can Community Farms Feed Local Populations?

Guided Discussion (10 mins)

Teacher explains (KS3-appropriate):

  • In rural or less densely populated areas, community-scale farming can sometimes:
    • Feed local people
    • Be more self-sufficient
  • In the UK:
    • There are almost 70 million people and limited land
    • Most land is already used for:
      • Animal farming
      • Animal feed crops

Important clarification:

  • The UK imports about 40-50% of its food. Self-sufficiency has declined from highs in the 1980s. The UK could theoretically support food needs only under specific conditions, such as:
    • Diets shifting towards more plant-based foods
    • Efficient use of land and growing crops for humans/not raising animals
    • Reduced food waste

Prompt: If land is limited, how else could food production increase?

25–35 min | Section B: Farming Adaptations for Food Security

Introducing Technological Solutions (5 mins)

Hydroponics

  • Growing plants without soil
  • Nutrients delivered through water
  • Uses less space and water
  • Faster growth
  • Year-round production

Vertical farming

  • Growing crops in stacked layers
  • Maximises production in small areas
  • Often used indoors
  • Controlled environment
  • Less affected by weather

👉 These systems are often combined to increase yield.

Video: Farming Indoors (5 mins)

🎥 BBC World Service – The Farmers Bringing Their Fields Indoors (4:27) For an introduction to indoor vertical farms watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0PheK2_flU

Students note: One advantage, One limitation (e.g. energy use, cost, crop types)

35–45 min | Activity – Designing a Food System Solution

RHS Challenge (10 mins)

Using the RHS resources, in pairs or small groups, students choose one challenge either:

Option A:  Develop a Hydroponic Garden : https://www.rhs.org.uk/education-learning/school-gardening/resources/gardening-skills/growing-crops-with-hydroponics

  • Where would it be used (school, city, warehouse)?
  • What crops would be grown?
  • How does it save space?

Option B:  Small Vertical Garden (using upcycled materials): https://www.rhs.org.uk/education-learning/school-gardening/resources/planet-friendly/vertical-gardening

  • What materials could be reused?
  • Where could it be built?
  • Who could benefit from the food grown?

Students sketch or bullet-point ideas.

45–50 min | Sharing & Realism Check

Groups briefly share:

  • Our current farming system is harming our environment, and no single solution is likely to work alone
  • Food security may require multiple approaches. 

On their tables, students rank these 8 ideas to most and least desirable: *Reduce meat consumption, *Adopt a vegan diet, *Join or support community farms, *Grow your own food at home, *Reduce food waste, *Support regenerative/ organic type farms, *Buy seasonal, local fruit and veg, *Change nothing.

50–55 min | Final Plenary – Exit Question

Students answer in writing:

Can community farms alone feed local people, or must they be part of a wider food system? Explain your answer using evidence from the lesson.

Encourage reference to:

  • Population size/culture
  • Land use
  • Diet
  • Technology

🧠 Assessment Opportunities

  • Starter written response
  • Video note-taking
  • Group planning task
  • Exit question

📌 Further Opportunities / Project-Based Learning

  • Link plant growing to:
    • Photosynthesis, Nutrients, Water transport
  • Explore:
    • Pollinators and outdoor farming limits, Energy use in indoor farming
  • Extended project:
    • School hydroponic or vertical growing trial

FURTHER RESOURCES

VIDEO – [12:29] – Building the world’s first vertical farm city in Philadelphia USA – vegan certified – TED Ex – Jack Griffin is the founder or the world’s first vertical farming school and the architect behind the ultra-efficient “Revolution Technology” that powers Metropolis farms. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7K-FPkhSF6Y

VIDEO -How Singapore is using tech to grow food without farmland [8:45] FEBRUARY 2025 CNBC INTERNATIONAL – In the heart of Singapore, Artisan Green, an indoor vertical hydroponics farm, has redefined agriculture through technology and innovation to maximize productivity in a land-scarce nation. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKZwMdxNerU

OAK NATIONAL ACADEMY – KS3 -The future: hydroponics and aquaponics           Lesson slides, lesson details, video, worksheet, quizzes https://www.thenational.academy/teachers/programmes/geography-secondary-ks3/units/natural-resources-can-we-meet-the-earths-needs/lessons/the-future-hydroponics-and-aquaponics

CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCEKS3 levelVertical Farming Video and Activities (2017)

A 2-minute video explores a potential innovation in agriculture, vertical farming. Discussion questions and accompanying activities to help students think critically as they weigh the pros and cons of this method of farming. https://www.calacademy.org/educators/vertical-farming

POLLINATION

OAK NATIONAL ACADEMY – KS3 -Pollination and fertilisation

Lesson slides, lesson details, video, worksheet, quizzes

CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCE – KS3 level Why Protect Pollinators?

Video 4:41 – Pollinators like bees, birds, and bats contribute to the biodiversity and resilience of ecosystems and benefit people.  What can we do to protect them? Discussion questions and accompanying activities.

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