From chopping to confidence

Cooking Class days at Magpie Primary School quickly became the highlight of the week. Each Tuesday, the art room transformed into a lively kitchen filled with sizzling pans, excited chatter and the joy of kids discovering something new. Over four weeks, students built confidence, learnt practical skills and found that food literacy can be fun, creative and empowering.

Knife‑skills day set the tone. What began with furrowed-brow concentration soon turned into lifted-chin pride as students realised they could prepare food safely and independently. Each recipe became a chance for personal expression. 

Mia declared rice paper rolls her favourite, okonomiyaki introduced new flavours, and pancake week turned the room into a mini test kitchen. Tyler added fruit to his batter; Jack mastered flipping; Toby quietly produced perfect circles every time.

The program strengthened the school community just as much as it built skills. One staff member shared, “The program enabled the families to build closer and more positive relationships with each other and socially with other families. They enjoyed trying new recipes together and spending one‑on‑one time doing something their children were excited about”. 

A grandparent rearranged his Tuesdays just so he and his grandson could attend, telling us: my grandson ”wanted us to put our names down, so I made myself available every week.”

Parents noticed changes at home too.

 “My child doesn’t usually try different foods, and she surprised me by tasting different veggies.”

 “After the first week, my son showed me all the chopping techniques he’d learnt – he even corrected me.”

Food hampers were also appreciated, with several families recreating class recipes at home each week. For many, this helped build confidence and connection beyond the school gates.

In a heart‑warming act of kindness, a staff member attended each session with a Grade 2 student whose parents couldn’t come. Every week the attentive and thoughtful youngster made sure to take enough food home for all his siblings, capturing the spirit of food as an act of care.

The program aligned beautifully with the school’s wellbeing goals. It created a safe, inclusive space where students built confidence, learnt healthy habits and experienced success. Families connected socially and supported one another throughout the program. As the school Cooking Classes key contact, Karen, reflected, “Students have learnt valuable life skills, healthy eating habits and have grown their confidence in the kitchen – all while having fun.”

By the final week, the students weren’t just cooking, they were creating, tasting, sharing and laughing. They were building memories and skills that will stay with them long after the last pancake had been flipped. 

Karen summed it up perfectly: 

“This program teaches families about healthy cooking and eating while supporting students’ wellbeing through spending quality time together.”