Kindergarten

Garden land

We have read in the Sacramento Bee that The Edible Schoolyard is expanding to Sacramento and would be interested in participating, particularly if the San Juan Unified School District joins the expansion.  We have a pasture, slightly less than one acre (and adjoining our own garden), that shares a fence with the large playing field at Albert Schweitzer Elementary School in Carmichael.  Please keep us in mind.

 

Nadine Calder

Palos Verdes School Gardens

Palos Verdes School Gardens is a non-profit organization that seeks to make our schools models of sustainability on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.

We want our kids to learn about conservation, smart energy use, how to grow food organically and responsibly and to care for their environment on the school campus. We want our kids to grow up knowing that their actions and decisions have an impact on the world around them.

Orcas Island Farm to Cafeteria Program

Orcas Island is located off the coast of Washington State in the San Juan Islands.  We have had an active and vibrant farm to cafeteria program since 2005 which includes our newly expanded garden, our K-8 Farm to Classroom, and fresh scratch-cooked meals in the school cafeteria using locally grown organic produce and meats.  

Open Futures

Open Futures is a schools’ curriculum programme that brings learning to life for young children. It champions a fundamental shift in how the National Curriculum in the UK is delivered, by re-focusing education on intuitive approaches that ignite children’s passion for learning. The programme inspires children through purposeful activities that develop practical skills and enquiring minds – awakening confidence, instilling responsibility and sparking the desire to get the most from their education and transform their prospects in life.

St. Benedict the Moor Fuel Up Garden

St. Benedict the Moor School is in a brand new building and has a space available for a small student-managed garden.  This garden will supply produce for the new salad bar, purchased with funds from the Fuel Up to Play 60 program, a program directed toward improving diet to promote increased physical activity.

The Khabele School

Every elementary student attends gardening class once per week, which are led by our on-staff Gardening Teacher, Scott Dubois. Our gardening classes focus on cultivating ecoliteracy, good nutrition, mindfulness, and persistence. These classes maintain our garden classroom and receive hands-on lessons with sustainability, nutrition, botany, weather, and ecology. The majority of the garden space is allocated to annual vegetables and cut flowers, which are either eaten during class or sold by students at a makeshift farm-stand to raise money for the garden.

Hidden Villa

Hidden Villa is a nonprofit educational organization that uses its organic farm, wilderness, and community to teach and provide opportunities to learn about the environment and social justice. Hidden Villa stretches over 1600 acres of open space in the foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains, about 40 miles south of San Francisco. Our mission is to inspire a just and sustainable future through our programs, land and legacy.

Washington Open Elementary

Washington Open Elementary is a parent participation school. Our garden group consists of parents, teachers, students and community members who support an edible garden. The group also supports a native Butterfly garden and a variety of special purpose planters that illustrate different aspects of the curriculum for students at the school. This group supports the parents who are assigned the classroom job of gardener.

Pages