Middle School

Stewpot Community Services

Through participation in a community garden program, we hope to achieve the following: 1)Teach our children where food comes from, the work it requires and how to grow things themselves. 2) To provide fresh, nutritious foods to our children, their families and our community. 3) To inspire others in our community to start their own foods gardens either individually or as a community.

Jacob Beidler Elementary

Jacob Beidler is located in Garfield Park, a Chicago neighborhood on the west side. It’s a school that has flourished in this neighborhood; where gang activity and violence are sometimes a day-to-day reality. As a new first year science teacher at the school, I see a great need for students living in a city to develop genuine connections with nature and the foods that they consume. On a daily basis, I see students snacking on processed, high sodium junk foods.

ST Luke's School

The Outdoor classroom construction has nowhere else to go but up! We would like to use all levels of STEM studies to create a fully functional vertical garden which includes water, nutrients and monitoring devices and equipment. As with so many schools, our space is limited by the excessive amount of blacktop that schools from the 1950's and 60's coated most properties with. We now realize that these surfaces provide little shade, will not let any water through and offer little creative space for children and nature.

Speyer Legacy School

This grant will help us bridge healthy eating and a healthy lifestyle with the wonders of botany. If we receive the funds, we plan on installing tower gardens in our science lab and our school cafeteria that allow the students to grow and harvest fruits and vegetables. This will allow the students to see the process from seed to plate and appreciate the journey of a plant before we consume it.

El Camino Real

El Camino Real is a brand new school on the south side of Santa Fe, NM. The south side of Santa Fe has historically been an area absent of gardens, farmers' markets, and a culture of eating from the garden. Our school would utilize the garden to teach students about where our food comes from, and how a seed can grow into something that can feed a whole family. We have incorporated gardens into our science curriculum and have even planned trips to the Santa Fe's Botanical Gardens for students to have a better concept of how educational, peaceful and beautiful a garden can be.

Dr. Albert F. Argenziano School at Lincoln Park

The Argenziano garden is an outdoor garden classroom that will be utilized by over 200 students during the 2014-15 school year. The space is hands-on outdoor classroom where students will partake in a variety of math, science, and nutrition lessons that are focused around the plants and vegetables that grow in the school’s garden. Students will be given the opportunity to sprout, plants, maintain, and harvest a variety of plants and vegetables and will oversee the process from start to finish.

Christ the King School

To develop a working environmental laboratory in which students will participate in real life experiences, build cross-curricular skills, develop respect for the environment and experience God's creation as stewards of the land.

Annette St P.S.

Our Food Garden provides hands-on learning in ecology, biology, agriculture, nutrition, history, language and the arts. But new teachers often lack the confidence and knowledge to weave the Food Garden into their classroom teaching. This grant supports skill building through workshops, nurturing positive relationships around food and the environment.

Eastern Middle/High School

Eastern Local Schools will use this grant to enrich the lives of our students in many ways.The most important thing this grant will do is teach our students how they can grow food to assist in feeding their families and possibly learn to generate income as Pike County has a farmers’ market and produce auction. The grant will also be used to provide fresh vegetables for the students of our district. At each harvest we will be able to disperse the vegetables to students and families who need and desire them.

Cony School

The Cony School garden serves as a “living laboratory” that provides healthy learning opportunities for students. Across the disciplines, the garden enables students to connect with nature, see the relevance of their education, and examine the origin of their food. Currently, the size of the garden limits the number of students that can access the gardens, both in terms of classes using the garden and produce in taste tests.

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