Using candy, students mimic the effects of advanced fishing methods on the population sizes of fish.
KELP
Kids Environmental Lesson Plans
KELP are free, downloadable marine science activities that encourage curiosity in kids and help them explore their surroundings. With simple materials and minimal preparation, these dynamic lesson plans address important ocean health issues including plastic pollution, overfishing and climate change.
KELP Activity Spotlight
Join the thousands of organizations and families across the globe who have inspired children to learn the importance of preserving healthy and abundant oceans through Sailors for the Sea Powered by Oceana's KELP program.

A creative game that shows the effects of longline fishing on the health of the ocean ecosystem.

A simple matching game for visually identifying fish and gaining an understanding of which can be sustainably harvested.

A fun scavenger hunt that gives students understanding of what can be found on beaches, giving an introduction to beach ecology and the role of manmade objects.

Students create mini-coastal environments and introduce nutrients to see what happens in the estuaries where fresh and salt water meet.

Students learn about the water cycle and the principles of filtering water by designing and building their own filters, then testing them with "dirty water."

A hands on activity that illustrates the different sources of sand including biological, geological and man-made.

This activity demonstrates Thermohaline Circulation throughout the world's oceans and the relative densities of cold and warm waters.

Students create a simple scientific instrument and learn about the role of sediment in their local waters.

A fun board game designed to learn the three ways rocks can form.

Students create a watershed model using a plastic shower curtain, a spray bottle and themselves!

Students construct a beach in a pan and investigate the effects of wind and waves on beach shape

Using materials and sand found on the beach, kids can create pieces of art

Learn about what is found in your coastal environment with this fun matching game.

Kids will discover their natural surroundings by playing an interactive game of bingo with items that can be found at your beach or shoreline

Create a shoreline scavenger hunt utilizing local identification books for shells, seaweed, birds and other coastal things.

An activity that plays with light at different depths of the ocean and discusses adaptations organisms have made for different light conditions.

A hands on activity that illustrates how marine creatures have adapted to survive the extreme conditions between the rocky shoreline tide marks

A fun game teaching students how fish and other ocean creatures camouflage into their surroundings.

Students create a "blubber glove" to mimic the importance of blubber to whales living in frigid water.

An activity that demonstrates how baleen whales, such as Right Whales, use skim feeding to capture their prey.

Students build monoculars to view their surroundings from the prespectivie of a whale.

In this fun matching game, kids will learn about the symbiotic relationship between different marine creatures.

Did you know that sharks have a sixth sense? Using magnets, kids can mimic how sharks use a unique sensory system to locate their prey.

Discover one of the ways marine mammals are able to hold their breath for long dives underwater.

With a slinky, discover how dolphins and whales use echolocation to navigate and find food.

A game of freeze tag that gives an understanding of the interaction of oyster reefs and toxic waste (pollution) in the water.

A tag inspired game that demonstrates how plastics and the chemicals in plastics are biomagnified to reach our dinner plates.

Students illustrate the effects of the land use in a watershed by simulating development of their own riverfront property.

This activity uses an interactive narrative to illustrate the different sources of pollution, historic and modern, to a body of water.

Students carry out a beach transect, learning about the prevalence and sources of plastic pollution in the oceans.

In this simulation, students are challenged to find and remove a baking soda contaminant from a plastic shoebox filled with damp sand

In this eye-opening activity, students discover how long it takes for different materials to degrade by putting items (i.e. orange peel, plastic straw) along a timeline.

Students learn about the variation of size and type of marine organisms in the local marine and freshwater environments by building dip and plankton nets.

Students create a cutout model of a clam to investigate the anatomy and physiology of these animals.

Students will learn about the anatomy of coral and the unique symbiotic relationship between corals and zooxanthellae by building an edible coral polyp.

Students build a globe to demonstrate a mass coral spawning event.

Students create plankton with craft materials and race them in a large container of water. Slowest plankton wins!

Students will learn about the importance of oysters to estuarine ecosystems and to the community with live oysters.

Through a "musical chairs"-like game, learn about hermit crabs and the challenges they face when they need to find a new shell home

With just a simple rope, students can gain perspecitive on how big some of our ocean's largest animals are.

Students will explore their outdoor surroundings to discover and learn about local flora and fauna.

Students will mimic how boats can quickly spread invasive species to new bodies of water.

A game of Jenga that demonstrates the marine food web and the impacts humans have on the food web.

Students identify what kind of consumer their marine animal is by examining the prey items they find in a Jell-O filled "stomach".

An interactive game where students cycle as carbon between the living and nonliving parts of the ecosystem.

Students figure out what season it is based on maps of sea surface temperature and phytoplankton growth.

Which type of ice causes a rise in sea level when it melts: formations on land, like glaciers, or formations in the water, like icebergs?

An interactive activity demonstrating the effects of ocean acidification on shelled marine organisms, the ocean food web and to humans.

Students use thier own exhaled breath and a red cabbage pH indicator to visualize how our oceans are becoming more acidic.

Learn why the ocean is salty and why it's easier to float in seawater.

Through word searches, matching and other fun games learn about these bustling cities of marine life and how to protect them.

Learn about our polar regions' unique habitat and wildlife through crossword puzzles, word searches and other fun activities.