This case report describes a 45‐min active learning lesson plan that engages 4th–5th and 6th–8th grade school students in spatial reasoning through a review of medical imaging. The lesson plan reviews different planar orientations and cross‐sections of computed tomography (CT) images of familiar objects. The lesson is designed to introduce students to the idea that scientists are key contributors to healthcare, including in medical imaging technologies that facilitate the visualization of internal structures of patients without invasive procedures. The lesson demonstrates the three standard anatomical planes, axial, sagittal and coronal, by guiding students through CT image datasets of various objects. Students then are led in an interactive “dissection” of fruit to compare internal structures with medical images. The lesson plan aligns with key aspects of Next Generation Science Standards and aims to spark interest in the field of medical physics among a young student population through an introduction to imaging technologies. Worksheets and imaging datasets are included as supplementary materials to facilitate interested physicists adapting this work for educational purposes in their own communities, with minimal repeated effort.