Free Pinggang Pinoy Activity Kit Printable | Healthy Eating Worksheets for Preschool to Grade 2
Free Pinggang Pinoy Printable Activity Kit for Kids
Build Balanced Filipino Meals Through Play
A fun Nutrition Month activity for preschool, kindergarten, Grades 1–3, homeschool, tutorials, and Filipino health lessons.
About This Activity
This Pinggang Pinoy Printable Activity Kit helps children learn how to build a balanced Filipino meal through a hands-on cut-and-place activity. Learners choose food cutouts and place them in the correct section of the Pinggang Pinoy plate.
Instead of only memorizing food groups, children can see how vegetables, fruits, carbohydrates, and protein foods work together to create a healthier meal. The kit also includes reflection and classification worksheets that help children connect the lesson to the foods they eat at home.
Learning Objectives
- Identify the four main sections of the Pinggang Pinoy plate.
- Distinguish Go, Grow, and Glow foods.
- Build a balanced Filipino meal using food cutouts.
- Explain why a food belongs in a particular section of the plate.
- Recognize foods that may be eaten regularly and foods that should be eaten only sometimes.
- Practice cutting, sorting, placing, writing, and fine motor skills.
What’s Included

- Teacher’s Guide
- Pinggang Pinoy Plate
- 8 Go Food Cutouts
- 8 Grow Food Cutouts
- 8 Glow Vegetable Cutouts
- 8 Glow Fruit Cutouts
- Mealtime Extras: spoon, fork, napkin, and glass of water
- “Ang Pinggang Pinoy Ko” Worksheet
- “Healthy or Sometimes?” Worksheet
Materials Needed
- Printed pages, preferably on cardstock or thick bond paper
- Scissors
- Cardboard, illustration board, or foam board, optional
- Reusable adhesive, sticky tack, or Velcro dots, optional
- Laminating sheets, optional
- Pencil, crayons, or colored pencils for the worksheets
Before the Lesson
Print the Pinggang Pinoy plate, food cutout pages, mealtime extras, worksheets, and teacher’s guide. Cut out the food pieces along the dotted lines.
For a reusable classroom activity, laminate the plate and food cutouts. Mount the plate onto cardboard, illustration board, or foam board. Attach reusable adhesive, sticky tack, or Velcro dots to the food pieces so children can build different meals more than once.
Teacher Abi’s Tip
Do not begin by showing children a completed plate and asking them to copy it. Let them choose and place the foods first. Ask them to explain their choices before correcting anything.
Questions such as “Why did you place the fish there?” or “What is missing from your meal?” help children understand the food groups instead of simply memorizing where each picture goes.
Suggested 35-Minute Lesson Plan
1. Warm-Up: What Did You Eat?
Ask the children:
- What did you eat for breakfast?
- What food do you usually eat with rice?
- What fruit do you like?
- What vegetable do you eat at home?
- What do you usually drink with your meal?
2. Introduce the Pinggang Pinoy Plate
Show the empty Pinggang Pinoy plate and point to its four sections:
- Gulay
- Prutas
- Kanin at iba pang pagkaing may carbohydrates
- Isda, karne, itlog at beans
Explain that the sections are not equal in size. Vegetables take up the largest part of the plate, while fruits, carbohydrates, and protein foods fill the remaining sections.
3. Build-a-Plate Activity
Place the food cutouts where the children can see them. Invite learners to choose food pieces and place them on the correct sections of the plate.
Teacher says: “Pumili ng isang gulay.”
Child: Places a vegetable cutout in the green section.
Teacher says: “Ano ang maaari mong idagdag na prutas?”
Child: Chooses a fruit and places it in the fruit section.
Teacher says: “May Go food at Grow food na ba ang iyong meal?”
Child: Checks the plate and adds any missing food group.
4. Discuss Go, Grow, and Glow Foods
Use the cutouts to introduce or review the three groups:
- Go Foods give us energy.
- Grow Foods help build and repair the body.
- Glow Foods provide vitamins and minerals that help protect the body.
Explain that the Pinggang Pinoy plate shows where the foods are placed, while Go, Grow, and Glow describe what the foods do for the body.
5. Complete the “Ang Pinggang Pinoy Ko” Worksheet
Ask children to think about the foods they commonly eat at home. They draw foods in the correct sections of the plate, write examples of Go, Grow, and Glow foods, and reflect on what may still be missing from their meal.
6. Complete the “Healthy or Sometimes?” Worksheet
Children decide whether each food is suitable for regular meals or is better eaten only sometimes. Use the worksheet as a discussion activity rather than treating every food as simply “good” or “bad.”
Explain that foods such as cake, candy, soft drinks, fries, donuts, and chips may be enjoyed occasionally, but they should not replace fruits, vegetables, water, and balanced meals.
7. Reflection
End the lesson by asking:
- What food group was easiest to identify?
- What food was difficult to place?
- What is missing from the meal you usually eat?
- What healthy food would you like to try next?
Extension Activities
Build a Breakfast Plate
Ask children to create a balanced Filipino breakfast using the available cutouts.
Complete the Meal
Place only two food groups on the plate. Ask children what needs to be added.
Mystery Food
Show one cutout and ask which section it belongs to and whether it is a Go, Grow, or Glow food.
Family Dinner Check
Ask children to observe one meal at home and draw it using the Pinggang Pinoy sections.
Healthy Meal Challenge
Give children a set of food cutouts and challenge them to build a complete meal.
Food Group Hunt
Ask children to find one Go, one Grow, and one Glow food from the cutout pages.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this suitable for preschool?
Yes. Preschool learners can focus on naming familiar foods, choosing cutouts, and placing them in the correct colored sections. An adult may handle the cutting if necessary.
Can older children use this activity?
Yes. Kindergarten and Grades 1–3 learners can explain their choices, compare meals, classify Go, Grow, and Glow foods, and complete the worksheets more independently.
Do I need to laminate the pages?
No. Laminating is optional, but it helps make the plate and food cutouts stronger and reusable for classroom centers, tutoring sessions, and homeschool activities.
Do I need Velcro dots?
No. Children may simply place the cutouts on the plate. Sticky tack, reusable adhesive, or Velcro dots are helpful only if you want the pieces to stay in place.
Is this a Go, Grow, and Glow worksheet?
The kit teaches Go, Grow, and Glow foods through the food cutouts and discussion. The main hands-on activity follows the sections of the Pinggang Pinoy plate, while the worksheets reinforce balanced meals and healthy food choices.
Can this be used for Nutrition Month?
Yes. This activity is suitable for Nutrition Month because it combines balanced eating, Filipino foods, food-group classification, reflection, and hands-on learning.
Download the Free Pinggang Pinoy Printable Activity Kit
Print, cut, build balanced meals, complete the worksheets, and learn through play.
Download Printable Here
Looking for more nutrition activities? Check out my Bahay Kubo Activity Kit — another free printable for teaching kids about Filipino food and healthy eating.

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