Lesson 2
Selective Breeding & Food Chains
Learning Objectives (share with students)
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
- Explain what selective breeding is and why it is used
- Describe advantages and disadvantages of selective breeding in farmed animals
- Understand basic food chains and energy transfer
- Explain how farmed animals fit into human food chains
- Evaluate whether animal farming is an efficient and ethical food system
Download the lesson slides below
Lesson Structure
0–5 min | Starter Activity – Think & Pair
Question on board:
Why do farm animals look very different today compared to animals in the wild?
- Students write one idea
- Pair and share
- Teacher collects responses (growth, size, milk, eggs, meat)
5–25 min | Section A: Selective Breeding of Farmed Animals
1️⃣ What is Selective Breeding? (5 mins)
Teacher explanation (KS3 level):
Selective breeding is when humans choose animals with certain characteristics to breed together, so their offspring show those traits.
Common traits selected for:
- Faster growth, More meat, milk or eggs, Specific body shape, Calm behaviour
2️⃣ Video: Overview of Selective Breeding (5 mins)
Play:
🎥 Overview of Selective Breeding (GCSE Biology) – Cognito (4:04) VIDEO https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=In6Rl3Q2THQ
While watching – students note:
- One benefit of selective breeding
- One problem caused by selective breeding
3️⃣ Impacts of Selective Breeding – CIWF Case Studies (10 mins)
Replay 2 sections from the CIWF video [4:15 seconds in total]
https://www.ciwf.org.uk/education/films/farm-animals-us/:
- Intensive chicken farming – selective breeding (@5:47)
- Intensive dairy farming – effects of selective breeding (@9:02)
Teacher-led discussion using CIWF Teacher Notes: https://www.ciwf.org.uk/media/5262846/Science-worksheets-compilation-booklet.pdf
Pros of selective breeding:
✔ More food produced ✔ Cheaper food prices ✔ Predictable animal traits
Cons of selective breeding:
✖ Health problems (e.g. weak legs, breathing issues) ✖ Reduced genetic diversity
✖ Animal welfare concerns ✖ Animals bred beyond natural limits
🔍 Mini Check Question:
Is selective breeding always harmful, or does it depend on how it is used?
25–30 min | Plenary Question (Section A)
Whole-class discussion:
Should animal welfare come at the expense of cheap food?
Encourage: Evidence from videos, Balanced viewpoints, Respectful discussion
30–40 min | Section B: Food Chains & Farmed Animals
1️⃣ Introduction to Food Chains (3 mins)
Teacher explanation:
A food chain shows how energy moves from one living thing to another.
Key terms: Producer, Consumer, Predator, Energy loss
2️⃣ Video: KS3 Food Chains (2 mins)
🎥 BBC Bitesize – Food Chains (52 seconds) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfLHMmsftG4
Quick recap:
Energy decreases at each level of the food chain.
3️⃣ Farmed Animals in Food Chains – CIWF Video (5 mins)
Replay 2 sections from the full video: https://www.ciwf.org.uk/education/films/farm-animals-us/
- Food chains & efficient food production (Starts @13:30)
- Alternative systems & personal choices (Starts @14:45)
Key teaching points:
- Animals eat plants → humans eat animals
- Energy is lost at each step
- Feeding crops to animals is less energy-efficient than feeding humans directly
40–50 min | Applying Food Chains to Farming Systems
Comparison Discussion (Teacher-led) Teachers Notes, lesson plan and worksheet https://www.ciwf.org.uk/media/5262846/Science-worksheets-compilation-booklet.pdf
Animal-based food chain:
Plants → Animals → Humans
- More energy loss
- More land, water, and crops needed
Plant-based food chain:
Plants → Humans
- Fewer steps
- More energy efficient
- Less resource use
Link to sustainability:
- Climate impact
- Land use
- Global food security
50–55 min | Final Plenary – Exit Quiz – Answers:
- B
- A
- B
- B
- D
- D
- B
- A
- C
- B
Further Opportunities / Extension
📌 Students can further research one of the following options:
OPTION A: Selective Breeding
BBC Bitesize KS3 – Species & Selective Breeding
Includes short quiz and revision tasks – https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/zqpfn9q
OPTION B: Food Chains & Big Picture Thinking – Can the world go plant-based
🎥 TED-Ed: What Would Happen If Everyone Stopped Eating Meat Tomorrow?
(4:36, animated, balanced exploration) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAyuHIthHco&t=12s
🎥 Animal Aid: From Farm to Fork (11:00) ideal for stimulating discussion and debate about the way we rear animals for food in Britain today, includes a vegan perspective. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qyduvdCMFDs
Suggested task:
Students list: One challenge, One benefit. One unanswered question
🧠 Assessment Opportunities
- Exit questions, CIWF worksheets, Short written paragraph, Debate contribution
COPYRIGHT & USAGE
© 2026 VinE (Veganism in Education) & Ministry of Eco Education. All resources are provided for educational use only in classrooms, schools and related teaching settings. Content may not be reproduced for commercial purposes without written permission.