High School

Pavilion High School

The Pavilion School Community Garden Program will address New York State education standards in science, health, food and nutrition, math, technology and social studies.

Fort Bragg High School

Noyo Food Forest (NFF) is a grassroots organization founded in the fall of 2005 to create lasting, positive change on our rural Northern California coast by developing and maintaining school and community gardens. Our flagship Learning Garden, located at the Fort Bragg High School, is a unique on-site Farm to School program and center for education in organic, community-based agriculture. NFF not only cultivates fresh food, we cultivate healthy minds and habits.

Transitions school of ISD 916

Two schools involved include: the Transitions School, a 7-12 Special Education for 80 students with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), emotional/behavioral disorders (EBD) and other neurobiological disorders and the WELS North Summer Program (a Special Education program for 18-21 year olds). Their broad goals are to enable students to internalize positive values necessary for positive life outcomes, while making progress with specific academic outcomes. We see our School Garden as at the core of each school

Mountain Road School

The goal of our garden is to immerse our students in the natural process of growing food and working in partnership with the earth in a balanced and nurturing way. Mountain Road School has recently renovated an historic home which has presented us with opportunities and challenges. The opportunity before us is the creation of garden space- designed by teachers, parents and students in collaboration. The challenge comes from years of corn crops grown in the soil.

Morris Elementary School

The overall goal of the school garden is to be able to teach the younger students the importance of eating healthy food. With the obesity problem growing each year in the United States and especially in Oklahoma we must do everything we can to combat it. In Morris we have a very successful vo-ag program that currently has over 200 students (approxiamately 25%) but it is only available to the older students. Having a school garden the younger students can take pride in what they grow and we hope that they are more likely to try and enjoy foods that they grew.

Sligo Creek Elementary

The goal of the school garden is that it will become the centerpiece of a new outdoor classroom, which will be located in an enclosed courtyard shared between Sligo Creek Elementary School and Silver Spring International Middle School. The space currently houses lawns and some plants but has not been consistently used as an instructional resource. The garden will afford our students the opportunity to see and personally experience plant lifecycles (and associated lifecycles of animals that depend on them) with their own senses rather than simply reading about them in books.

St. Bedes Catholic School

The Littles Road Community Garden has already completed one successful growing season. Our dedicated team of volunteers helped to plan and implement the garden from the ground up and has been integral in the daily operation of the site. Next year we hope to develop the Malvern Community Greenhouse and Learning Centre which will offer community members and students from surrounding schools the space and opportunity to learn about the growing cycle from seed to harvest.

Monterey Peninsula Unified School District - Extended Learning Opportunities

The one-acre organic garden/orchard on the grounds of the Hilton Bialek Habitat (at Carmel Middle School) has long serviced students from the Carmel Unified School District and the underserved communities in our broader community. Our garden goal is to bring the organic garden's bounty to high school students of the Extended Learning Opportunities Program of the Monterey Peninsula Unified School District (MPUSD) to teach them to understand sustainable food choices, harvest from the garden, learn about food safety and preparation, and prepare snacks and a family meal.

John Marshall Metro High School

John Marshall Urban Farm is less than 2 years old, part of the new John Marshall Campus Park dedicated in 2011. With vision, planning, design, coordination and hard work it is a school wide service- learning project. During spring break ,after school, during classes and summers the farm was restored and features added. The goal and look of the garden is sustainability.

Mansfield High School

At the Mansfield School District, we strive to provide a high-quality education that will provide our students with practical skills and help them to become well-rounded individuals. Through this community garden, students will have the opportunity to learn gardening techniques while integrating math, science, and history. Students will gain an appreciation for fresh, healthy foods and learn how to grow produce at their home. Through taste tests and contributions to the community, students will have the opportunity to eat what they grow.

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