
February is Heart Health Month. Your hallway is likely covered in construction paper hearts, but your standards say you need to teach actual system interactions. Here’s how to do both without losing your mind.
Heart Health & Circulatory System DIY Activity (3-8)

Most circulatory system projects involved making projects only centered around the heart. Get your students curious about the circulatory system.
🚀 All Grades : Human Digestion Model DIY Activity
This easy science DIY activity is no-to-low cost and runs around 3-45 minutes.
Start Here: The Misconception That Ruins Everything
Ask your students what color the blood inside their body is when it’s “out of oxygen.” Write down what they say.
Most will tell you it’s blue. They’ll point to the veins in their wrists as “proof.” They’re wrong—and if you don’t surface this belief before teaching, it’ll still be there in June.
Here’s the fact that makes them pay attention: Your blood is never, ever blue.
It’s always red. It just changes from a bright, “cherry red” when it’s full of oxygen to a deep, “maroon red” when it’s headed back to the lungs. The blue you see in your arm? That’s just a trick of the light hitting your skin and fat.
That’s the whole thing. Everything else is details.
Heart Health Resources by Grade

| Resource | Best For | Prep Level |
| Human Body Systems | Grades 3-5 | Zero prep |
| Circulatory & Respiratory Systems | Grades 3-8 | Zero prep |
| Human Body Systems Q&A | Grades 3-5 | Zero prep |
| DIY: Human Digestion Model | All grades | Low prep |
Grades 3-5: The Big Picture
At this age, kids treat body parts like they’re independent roommates who happen to live in the same house. They need to see that the heart is actually a pump that’s obsessed with delivery. If the heart stops moving, the “packages” (oxygen) don’t get to the “customers” (the rest of the body). Students actually love the analogy—it makes a complex system feel like a logistics problem they can solve.
Human Body Systems Video for Kids
Grades 6-8: System Integration
Middle schoolers are ready for the “messy” truth: the heart doesn’t work alone. This is where we talk about the closed-loop relationship between the lungs and the heart. We focus on the pressure and the valves. They won’t call it cringe because it actually explains why they feel the way they do when they’re nervous or sprinting.
Multicellular Organisms Video for Kids
The “I Have 20 Minutes Before the Assembly” Version
No time to prep? Here’s exactly what to do:
Minutes 1-5: Ask the “Is blood ever blue?” question. Let them discuss. Watch the chaos.
Minutes 6-15: Play the Circulatory & Respiratory Systems or Human Body Systems video.
Minutes 16-20: Have them jump in place for 60 seconds, then find their pulse. Ask: “Where is the oxygen going right now?”
That’s it. You taught a core standard while the rest of the hallway is probably watching a movie that has nothing to do with science.
Heart Health Month is more than just a calendar event. It’s the best time to show kids that their bodies are the most complex machines they’ll ever own.
Don’t let the construction paper hearts win. Use the videos, grab the lesson plans, and get them actually interested in their own anatomy.
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