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Square Foot Gardening and Companion Planting

Make efficient use of space with square foot gardening and optimize growing conditions with companion planting.

Cauliflower, radishes and carrots grow in a garden bed.

In partnership with Descanso Gardens

suggested for all grades

Overview

In this three-part lesson, students will collaborate to plan and plant a garden. Students will learn to plan out a garden by dividing it into a grid and planting seeds according to variety. Each square foot of the grid will contain a specified number of seeds of one kind, based on how that plant grows. The squares will then be arranged so that companion plants, plants that grow well together,  border one another.

objectives

  • Students will begin to identify plants' needs, including space and relationships.

  • Students will participate in collaborative conversations.

  • Students will apply mathematical concepts to gardening, including measuring length and width, calculating square footage, and creating a grid.

duration

  • Part 1 & 2: 45 minutes 
  • Part 3: 45 minutes

materials

  • Square piece of paper (1 per student)
  • Garden Planning Cards (PDF Download at top of page)
  • Seeds/seedlings  
  • Colored pencils, crayons, or markers  
  • Yardstick & rulers
  • Twine  
  • Stakes  
  • Planting labels  
  • Garden journals or graph paper

Activity

Part 1: Planning Your Garden 

Before you begin planning your garden, take time to discuss with your students the purpose of planting a garden. Possible discussion points (depending on grade levels) are:  

  • What is the value of growing our own vegetables?  
  • What does the word organic mean?
  • How might a garden affect the environment around it?

Next, lead a discussion on caring for plants by asking what they need to grow (soil/nutrients, sun, water, air, and space). Use a movement activity to demonstrate that seeds and plants need space to grow. Have the class sit closely together, then invite them to imagine that they are each a tiny seed of their favorite vegetable. “Add” all of the components the students identified as necessary for healthy growth. As you add these components (e.g. You're placed in healthy soil; The sun is coming out; Clouds are forming and it’s starting to rain), students will “grow” as a plant would. Direct them to stretch out their legs like roots, raise their arms like the first sprout, stand up as a stem would grow, then stretch out and wave their arms like leaves, etc.

Ask students:

  • What do you notice about being so close together?  
  • What might happen to the plants if the seeds are planted this close together?

Explain that plants need room to grow, and that different plants require different amounts of space. You can also lead a conversation about the various ways that plants grow: some grow up or climb, some vine, some grow down (root veggies), and some spread out and up (cabbage, broccoli, etc.). 

Discussion questions:

  • Which types of vegetables might take up a lot of space?  
  • Which vegetables might take up less space?

Have students work with partners. Each pair will pick a vegetable they want to plant in the garden, choosing from the Garden Planning Cards. These cards will tell students how much space each plant needs in a 12” x 12” square. Have partners divide a 12” square piece of paper into appropriate smaller squares (either by folding or measuring). In the middle of each small square students should draw their vegetable. Make one together as an example:

A square sheet of paper divided into 9 squares, with a drawing of a red or golden beet in each square.
A sample square foot plan for beets.

Part 2: Companion Planting 

Plants can act as companions to each other. Discuss the meaning of companion and create a definition together. Think of what friends do for each other; how could plants do this for each other? Ask students to use their Garden Planning Cards to discover what their plant's companions are. Then have each pair find another pair with a companion to their plant. Once students find their companions, invite them to lay out their paper squares on the ground to form a garden bed outline (typically 4’ x 8’, 3’ x 8’, or 4’ x 4’). Make sure companion plants are next to each other. This will require collaboration among the class as a whole. Once the paper squares are in place, tape them together to form a square foot garden map.

Part 3: Creating Your Garden 

Using garden journals or graph paper to record data, students will work in groups to:

  1. Measure the length and width of the garden bed.  
  2. Determine how many inches are in a foot.  
  3. Draw a diagram representing the garden bed and create a grid to represent the square footage. 
  4. Discuss findings as a class. 
  5. Measure and mark the grid in the planting area, placing stakes every 12 inches. 
  6. Create the grid by tying twine to the stakes and running the twine between them. (Strings of twine should not run diagonally, but up-and-down and side-to-side to form squares.)
  7. Use your companion planting map from Part 2 to guide you on where you should plant each vegetable. Place planting labels in their respective spaces. You are now ready to sow your seeds or transplant your seedlings!

For Younger Students (Grades K-2)  

Add songs and books about seeds, plants, and gardens.  Prior to the activity, select bigger seeds for little hands (e.g. peas, beans, squash, nasturtiums) or the pelleted form of small seeds (e.g. carrots, lettuce, basil).  Adapt the lesson by having the 12” x 12” paper already in a grid according to the chosen plant (i.e. a grid with 4, 9 or 16 blank squares). Have students draw the plant they’ve chosen in each square; plants could be represented by shapes or colors (e.g. triangles for carrots or red squares for radishes) if it’s useful.  Pre-cut the twine and create the grid with stakes ahead of time. Instead of shovels, encourage students to use their fingers to make holes for the seeds.

For Older Participants (Grades 7 and up)  

Expanding the project:

  • Study and explore the history of companion planting through time and around the world. 
  • Experiment with different types of agriculture:
    • Monoculture: Single crop in one space.
    • Polyculture: Multiple crops in one space.
  • Consider soil science: 
    • The microscopic world of soil, including minerals, nutrients, and microorganisms.
    • Soil pH and soil types (sand, clay, silt, peat, chalk, and loam)

additional information

Companion Planting

Plants can be companions to each other in a variety of ways:

Above ground

  • Attractors are plants that attract beneficial insects (e.g. flowers), bringing them close to the garden where they will pollinate other plants.
  • Trappers are plants that attract pests, leading them away from the main crop.
  • Protectors provide shelter from sun or wind (e.g. climbing beans provide shade to lettuce) or produce an odor that deters pests from other plants (e.g. onions deterring pests from carrots).

Below ground

  • Soil Improvers naturally till the soil or supplement it with nutrients. 

Square Foot Gardening 

This method of dividing your garden into a planting grid: 

  • Makes efficient use of a small growing space.  
  • Reduces weed growth.  
  • Creates a polyculture of plants and insects.

standards

NGSS

K-LS1-1 , 1-LS1 , 2-LS2, 3-LS2, 4-LS1-2, 5-LS1-1, MS-ETS1, HS-LS2

Mathematics

K.MD.A.1, 1.MD.A.2, MP.2, 3.MD.B.4, 4.MD.A.1, 5.MD.A.1

ELA 

WHST.6-8.7