Search results
Our Fairtrade resources for primary schools and secondary schools include an updated version of the Banana Split Game and an interactive story of Fairtrade bananas told by Pablo the banana. Use these activities to explore fair and unfair trade for producers around the world in your classroom.
Banana Split game. Aim. To introduce the banana chain (what happens to a banana before it reaches the consumer) and to discuss the reality of ‘who gets what’ from the sale of bananas. How to play the game. Divide into five groups to represent each of the different jobs in the banana chain. e Caribbean Islands. First round. Allocate the roles.
Let’s see how the real cost of a banana is split, and how we can be good global neighbours by making bananas fair. ROUND ONE: The banana split 1. Roles: o Banana worker o Plantation owner o Shipper o Importer o Supermarket buyer Display the Banana Split diagram. Divide pupils into five groups, one per role, explaining that each has a part in
Try this team version of the board game to help students learn about Fairtrade, Coobana and the banana trade. You can print the board attached or draw your own one with chalk in your school playground/outside area at home. Remember to ask a grown up first!
This game supports learners to explore how the cost of a banana is split down the supply chain, and to discuss the fairness of this.
Primary Fairtrade Banana Split Game - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free. Suitable for Key Stage 2 and above Banana Split game. Traces the path of the banana as it is exported from its plantation to your fruit bowl.
The resources for secondary schools include some great ideas for a Fairtrade Enterprise Day, while the Banana Split is popular in primary schools. CHRISTIAN AID Resources include The Chocolate Game – a simulation game that looks at cocoa farming and the cocoa trading chain.