Enter Your Garden in the Farm to School Census!

 

DSC_0011Did you know that school gardens are a huge part of the Farm to School movement? We didn’t realize just how huge until we attended this month’s Farm to School Conference in Columbia (which featured one of Gateway Greening’s member gardens, the Falcon Garden at Halls Ferry Elementary! Go Falcons!). Over and over again, presenters brought up examples of how school gardens factored into their school’s curriculum and cafeteria.

 

The USDA is accepting submissions for the second-ever Farm to School Census until 11/20/15. The purpose of this census is to determine what percentage of schools in the country participate in Farm to School activities. This includes– you guessed it– school gardening! If you click on the link above, you can search for your school district. If no results come up, that means your district has not yet sent their information to the USDA. Talk to your building’s principal or your district’s food service director about filling out the survey! Your school garden is playing a critical role in your students’ health and well-being, and we want the whole world to know about it.

 

In addition to the census, the USDA offers Farm to School grants.  Getting your district involved in the census now could give you the opportunity to kick your garden or cafeteria up notch in the future with these grant opportunities.

Why Should Schools Have a Garden?

A few weeks ago Classroom teacher Ms. Mayes and I gave her 3rd grade class an option to either write a piece for publication in our e-news or do some garden chores. The students who chose to write a piece were given a specific subject – Why Should Schools Have Gardens?

It was rewarding for us to see how these students have been processing some complex ideas and reasons for having a school garden e.g. global warming, ecosystem, food web, nutrition, health and importance of nature connections, school and garden economy. It was good to see these complex issues on paper as seen through the lens of our next generation.

Take a look below to get a glimpse into the heads of a few 9 year olds exposed to gardening at school.

-Punita Patel, Youth Educator

 

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Lilly:

There are many reason [sic] why schools should have a garden. One is to edgacate [sic] people in wildlife and nature. I think schools also should have a garden to make compost, and help people learn that monarch are endangered. I like plants and I think kids my age would like them to [sic]. That is why I think schools should have a garden.


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Clara:

Schools should have gardens because it will help save all the animals. Also it is good for the environment, so when we grow up we don’t have too much heat. That is why school’s should have garden. 


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David:

Schools should have a garden because it helps with making oxegen [sic]. Monarks [sic] can have a snack in the gardens. bees, humming birds and other animals can pollenate [sic]. You can get food. And you see tons of animals in a garden.


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Faith:

These are a few reasons schools should hae a garden. Garden helps Monarch Butterflies survive. Gardens provide food for the schools cafateria [sic]. Nothing like fresh picked fruits and veggies. The plant provide [sic]the air we breath. Garden teach us a lot of things about nature. We need to protect our Earth. Earth is our only home. Those are my few reasons schools should have a garden.


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Gia:

Schools should have a garden because, we can learn about nature. Also the enviorment [sic] because that’s where we live and get oxgyne [sic]. We can also learn to plant, and take care of where we live. We can learn how to do many different things, and we can learn about animals up close. This is why schools should have gardens.


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Kelsea: 

Kids should garden at school. So they can work with plants. You can also see insects. Kids can build teamwork together while having fun. That’s why kids should have a school garden.


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Quinn:

Schools should have gardens because their food could be their lunch. If they ate their food they would be healthy. They would not be sick. That is why schools should have gardens.


Garden1By Mina:

There are many reasons why schools should have gardens. One reason is to help the environment. We save many animals by planting plants that they eat. One example is monarch butterflies. We can save them by planting milkweed plants. We also have farmers markets to earn money for our school. It also inspires us to love nature and to take care of it. Those were a few reasons why schools should have garden.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

One Beautiful Fall Afternoon in the Garden

Screen Shot 2015-10-09 at 8.36.43 AMOne beautiful fall afternoon last week at Gateway Greening we had our day packed with indoor meetings. It was so refreshing when I started getting these exciting pictures and texts from one of the teachers from Mallinckrodt. Ms. Mayes was sending in the work of her 3rd grade students in the garden. It was great to see how much students were enjoying their outdoor classroom.

I remember vividly how reluctant Mrs. Mayes had been when we first started out gardening last fall. In just a year, she has become a strong supporter and a frequent flyer in the garden. Her students are often spotted outdoors with their journals and notebooks. It brings a smile to my face to see her so comfortable using the garden not only as an extension of her classroom but also as a tool for educating her students.

Picture below of Mrs. Mayes and Mrs. Yaksic as they pair up their classrooms and bring the students in the garden to ‘buddy up’.

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In the garden last week, Mrs. Mayes class was learning about garden haiku- a lesson in language arts. I wonder if students would have showed the same zeal for learning this Japanese poetic art form, as they seem to show out here in the garden.

-Punita Patel, Gateway Greening Youth Educator
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Garden Haiku

The essence of haiku is “cutting”. This is often represented by the juxtaposition of two images or ideas cutting word between them. Here are a few garden haikus students produced out in the garden during their lesson as shared by Mrs. Mayes.

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Fall

The leaves are changing

They fall every day and night

The plants are dying.

by Olivia Finley 3rd grade, Mallinckrodt Academy

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Bushes

Pricaly bushes,

With red and green berries please,

On the greenish trees

By Amelia Marquart 3rd grade, Mallinckrodt Academy

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Autumn

Autumn time is here.

Leaves are starting to appear.

The days will get short.

By Lillian Jena Baptiste 3rd grade Mallinckrodt Academy

 

 

Seeds

 

With fall approaching faster than a speeding squirrel, Clay 1st graders explored the trees, vegetables, flowers, and grasses at Clay Elementary that are going to seed in our garden this week. The class remembered many facts about seeds from garden class last year. One student raised her hand and said solemnly, “You only get one chance to plant them. If you don’t take care of them and they die, it doesn’t come back.” Other students talked about the tiny leaves (cotyledons!) hidden inside the seeds that pop up when you plant them. After asking them where seeds can be found (one student, straining to reach into his memory for several minutes, finally burst out, “KIWIS HAVE SEEDS!”), we determined that seeds can be found inside fruits, and that not all of those fruits are ones people can eat.

 

Then we sent them out on their own to fill up plastic cups with all the different kinds of seeds they could find. The first place they wanted to look was in the dirt. They ran to the dirt pile and started looking for seeds already in the ground, with no success. We had to show everyone how to shake seeds out of coneflower heads, and scramble into the woods to find acorns. We squeezed honeysuckle berries and pokeberries to see if there were seeds inside. As you can see, we ended up with quite a haul:

 

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As the students lined up to go back inside, they did something they wouldn’t have known to do an hour before. Passing by some dried up flower heads, they absent-mindedly shook them into their hands and pocketed the seeds. I felt a rush of pride, watching the ancient knowledge of seed saving trickle into the consciousness of a new generation.

Tolerations

What’s driving you crazy in your school garden? For this 1st grader, it’s a giant weed that refuses to be pulled out.

 

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There’s a difference between the ongoing tasks of a school garden– mulching, watering, everyday weeding– that cause us stress, and the individual stressors that I like to call ‘tolerations’.

 

A toleration is something annoying or stressful that’s easily fixed, and once fixed, doesn’t need to be revisited again for a long time. For example, at Clay Elementary, we only could only have one hose running from our water spigot at a time because we didn’t have a splitter. Once we took half an hour to run to Lowe’s and buy the splitter, we never had to think about it again, and we can now water far-flung corners of our garden at the same time.

 

What are your garden’s tolerations? Is there a hole in your rain barrel? Does the head of your shovel keep falling off? Do kids repeatedly trip over an inconveniently located raised bed? Have everybody involved with your school garden make a list. For bonus points, you can mark which tolerations will take 10 minutes or less to fix.

Asset Based Community Development (ABCD)

According to LaManda Joy the author of Start A CommunityFood Garden, Asset Based Community Development (ABCD) is an approach that helps communities and groups focus on what they do have instead of what they don’t. The ABCD approach is very powerful because instead of creating anxiety about what a community may be lacking it encourages group to celebrate their strengths.

After assessing its strengths Mallinckrodt Academy School Garden joined hands with Gathsemane Lutheran Church across the street from them.  Pr. Kendra Nolde embraced the idea of holding the student and parent organized Farmers Market with open arms. Fontbonne University students also partnered up with school students to provide nutrition based handouts and attached recipe cards to the produce school students were selling. This summer project allowed students to learn many life skills that couldn’t be taught in classroom. Along the way, students raised approximately $600, which went toward purchasing Journals for 100 students.

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Most of all, this project allowed for community building. It was great for school parents and students to get to know the kind folks over at the church. It was great for churchgoers to see the faces of the students that attend the school in their neighborhood and meet the parents.

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After the end of 6 weeks of Sunday farmers market, Pr. Kendra reached out to see if many curious folks at the church could get a tour of the garden. This past Sunday Corbin and Davin from the 3rdgrade volunteered to lead the garden tour. Parents and students are a great asset and wonderful advocates for a school garden.  Cobin and Davin were so proud they were picked to give a tour. They were a bit nervous about talking to a group of people but did a fabulous job when the time arrived. Isn’t this how great leaders start out?

In the pictures below, the students are showing off their school garden.

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They found a monarch chrysalis hanging outside the cafeteria door

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Peppers Maybe Hot

I couldn’t care less about the school garden.

That’s what I would have told you when Brian and I first toured Mallinckrodt, in the fall of 2011, looking for a school for our son, Milo. You’ve maybe seen that Facebook meme, “I’m outdoorsy in the sense that I like drinking wine on patios”? That’s me. I reluctantly keep alive a few houseplants, and every spring I really, really mean to keep some basil and cilantro and mint going through the summer in containers on my porch, but it just never quite works out. Death comes early to the neglected herb “garden.”

So when we were shown what was then just a shadow of the glorious oasis we see outside our school these days, I think it’s fair to say both of us went, “Meh.”

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Here’s what we didn’t notice then: it’s not about the garden. What’s growing out there is a community — not just our kids and teachers, but the little siblings who like to play out there before pickup, the families who volunteer to water over the summer (and take home some mint for summertime Mallinckrodt Mojitos!), the neighbors who are free to come and harvest what they wish, the congregants at Gethsemane Lutheran who host (and shop) our weekly farmers’ market at their church. Our garden, now expanded and lush, accented with inviting seats and shade and a beautiful fence and trellis, provides a landmark along Hampton and gives us an identity beyond “it’s the school just north of Target.”

And also: it’s totally about the garden. The enthusiasm and joy with which almost all of the teachers have embraced the garden as an outdoor learning space, as a place where it’s so much more interesting to learn math and environmental science than sitting at a table, have grown at remarkable speed. From Spanish to regular old second grade, teachers have risen to the occasion and developed curricula specifically because our garden is there. When Punita and other Gateway Greening folks are leading our kids through a very Socratic approach to learning about food (and through food, about sustainability and justice and consumption and free markets and equity and our fractured city and so much more), they are soaking it in while they chomp on veggies some of them wouldn’t otherwise touch with a ten-foot pole. They’re examining the migrating monarchs (thanks, milkweed!) and the creepy-crawlies (thanks, healthy soil!) and the paver stones (thanks, painting coordinator volunteers).

We visit the garden often these days, just to check what’s growing, to read the signatures of fellow class gardeners and the sometimes-funny signage in the beds. We grab a few handfuls of basil or a cucumber to go with dinner. We try to keep our second kid from eating too much mulch. (How much is too much, I wonder?) And when I give school tours, or talk to anyone about our school, I make sure to point out the garden.

-Amanda Doyle, Mallinckrodt Parent

 

 

Gateway Greening Garden Class Volunteer: Information & Guidelines

Gateway Greening Garden Class Volunteer

Information & Guidelines

Garden Class Program

What is Gateway Greening’s Garden Class?

Garden Class is an effort started in 2013 by Gateway Greening and SLPS to get students learning outdoors for an hour every week. Each participating school gets a dedicated Gateway Greening educator, who teaches garden-based science and other subjects. Classes have set times every week for the whole year—for example, 2nd grade comes out to the garden every Wednesday at 2pm.

What are the benefits of Garden Class for students?

  • Hands-on instruction in core curriculum helps students to better retain classroom teaching
  • Increases student willingness to try fresh vegetables & fruits
  • Gives students a sense of responsibility and care over other living things
  • Cultivates students’ social and emotional skills, through sharing tools, cooperating on tasks, taking turns, and learning to express disagreement respectfully
  • Introduces students to the joy of growing and eating healthy food!

How do we utilize volunteers?

Volunteers are critical to the success of our Garden Class programming. They help to provide the individual and small-group learning opportunities that appear in the garden, and assist with classroom management. They also bring their own unique skills—if a volunteer is an artist, a musician, or knows a lot about birds, for example, we love working to incorporate those strengths into our garden classes.

  • We prefer that volunteers commit to consistently volunteering with the same classes for at least an entire season (Fall or Spring). For example, you could volunteer with 2nd grade at 2pm every Wednesday from August-October. Some volunteers choose to assist the Gateway Greening educator for an entire teaching day every week—from about 10am to 3pm. However, we are flexible.
  • To get more information on class schedules, and to set up a time to volunteer, contact us!
    • Carolyn Cosgrove Payne – (763) 227-1450 (Clay Elementary)
    • Punita Patel – (314) 560-8823 (Mallinckrodt & Cote Brilliante Elementary)
  • If you are unable to make it, please make sure to call and cancel
  • If you ‘no-call, no-show’ 2 times, you will no longer be eligible to volunteer with school gardens.

Ready to get started? Attend the youth volunteer orientation on November 11th from 12pm-1:30pm at Gateway Greening’s Main office. 2211 Washington Avenue, 63103.

What Makes a School Garden Successful?

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Why are school gardens good? One can wake up everyday with a new reason for why they are an invaluable school and community resource. Even then, through the summer, most school garden go fallow. Do you wonder what you could do for your school garden?

Mallinckrodt School Garden is a good place to turn to see what works and how they do it. The last four years, parents have used Signup Genius to divide up the work of weeding, watering and other garden maintenance issues. Parents are encouraged to come and harvest the produce even if they are not helping with garden maintenance. Last year they had a free yoga class in the evenings for school families and also invited people from the community. This year they have a Farmers’ Market that students set up across the street at Gathesemane Lutheran Church on Sunday mornings. Students who are able to participate learn how to make change, how to set prices, if and when to lower the prices and how to make the customer’s experience meaningful. The money they raise goes to buying the garden journals that a few teachers are using as a tool for outdoor education.

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Mallinckrodt School has also developed partnerships with area universities to use the garden as a platform for student teaching and learning. Fontbonne University’s dieteticts students help with the farmers market during the summer and bring nutritional classes to the students during school year. SLU biology students come with Dr. Gerardo Camillo to study native bees in the garden. This team’s excitement and enthusiasm around bees rubs off like pollen on to the school community. Students and teachers always end up learning the most fascinating things about the bees from them. Gateway Greening is another community partner of the school garden. We focus on doing year round education around the garden and work with teachers to provide needed support. Dig It crew – High school Youth Employment Program of Gateway Greening- helped with a lot of weeding and maintenance to keep the garden looking great this summer.
IMG_7999 IMG_8721 IMG_8728 IMG_8767Key to Mallinckrodt Garden’s success is the fact that people have many reasons to come to the garden for a meaningful experience. What can you add to your garden to make it a meaningful place?

 

 

Cotton’s Greening

IMG_20150722_081223Playing a particularly athletic morning game.

My name is Myra and I’m a recent graduate from Career Academy High School. I’m a crew member of Gateway Greening’s Dig It STL program, which is an eight week youth employment program that educates and strengthens teens while beautifying the community through urban agriculture. At Dig It we lead and assist volunteer groups and tours and learn hands on basic agriculture and construction skills to help the gardens that Gateway Greening supports. We also take field trips to other gardens and farms. The best part of all? We cook with Chefs using the food we harvest from Bell Garden. Throughout the program, I have learned, grown and networked with plants, animals and people in my community. Im honestly considering to further my education in urban farming because of my wonderful experience at Gateway Greening. Maybe one day I will own an organic farm and name it “Cotton’s Greening”.

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Eating guest chef tacos (Myra on the left).

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Thom leading a field trip group at the compost station.

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Michael leading a field trip group in harvesting herbs.