Home arrow Home
Have you had your dairy dose today?

dairy_bus.jpg  

 

 

 

 A visit from The Asda Dairy Bus

Consuming a healthy balanced diet is essential for good health and is particularly important to ensure healthy growth and development.  Milk, cheese and yogurt are an important source of calcium in the diet and the calcium in dairy products is more easily absorbed and used by the body than the calcium in most other foods.

dairy_bus_lowres.jpgSupported by ASDA, Arla Foods, Cheestrings and Müller, the Dairy Bus has been built to visit schools and teach children about dairy products, where they come form and how they benefit the body. The interactive road show includes hands on, fun activity and is accompanied by additional lesson resources, worksheets and teacher notes to ensure the experience is valuable and widely cross curriculum.  The additional resources can be adapted for use independently of a visit from the Dairy Bus and can be downloaded by clicking here

 

To complete a visit application form to apply for a visit from the ASDA Dairy Bus click here, for further information click here to visit the Dairy Bus website, or contact The Staging House Ltd by email at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

 

A visit from The Potato Story bus

 

potato_bus

The Potato Story bus brings to life the core elements of http://www.thepotatostory.co.uk/ website and lesson plans. This interactive learning experience has been touring primary schools since September 2007 and now into its fourth phase, has visited over 100 schools reaching out to approximately 13,500 primary pupils. The converted double-decker houses the farmer in his field upstairs and the cook in her kitchen in the lower deck who teach the children about plant growth and harvesting plus potato varieties and their place in a healthy balanced diet.

If you would like to find out about how to organise a visit from The Potato Story Bus, please contact the team via the ‘Keep in touch’ section on the website at http://www.thepotatostory.co.uk/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
© 2010 Think Food and Farming | Privacy Statement | Contact Us