Upper Elementary

Alta Elementary

The Alta Elementary Whole School Garden Project will build and sustain a community garden that will allow students to better understand and participate in their food production.

Aspen Heights Elementary

The goal of our Outdoor Classroom is to educate and inform our students and community about establishing a healthy urban environment to grow and produce fresh ,locally grown vegetables and plants. Students, and parents will be exposed to the methods needed to grow a healthy garden. Rain Harvesting will be initiated to assist in the proper watering and irrigation of the Outdoor Classroom. The development of a Community Garden will help establish a positive relationship with our community. Students will have access to fresh vegetables in the fall that will provide a healthy food choice.

Montessori School of Florence

Our basic goal is to teach standards in an outdoor classroom with garden materials - with the ultimate goal of nurturing each child's appreciation of the natural world by involving them in the processes of gardening. With a garden we can study plant life cycles; we can also measure plant growth rate, calculate soil volume, read garden myths, and create healthy foods / snacks. We know that gardening at school can reduce ADHD symptoms and obesity, improve fine and gross motor skills, and increase creativity, imagination, and social skills.

Paint Rock Valley High School

We are a small, rural school with 100 students preschool through 12th grade. Our garden is a component of a larger project to develop an agriculture and agribusiness curricula with aquaponics and integrate these with a home economics curriculum. We hope that this will provide our students with viable alternatives to or to augment row crops and teach them to grow, prepare and eat healthy, locally-grown food. We plan to build greenhouses for the garden and fish tanks so that the programs can proceed throughout the year.

Ellsworth Elementary School

This grant request has its roots in three students who approached me and asked if we could plant a vegetable garden at our school. The students gave up countless recesses to plan an informational meeting. The students’ vision, drive, and passion are what has allowed the seed of an idea grow to a new club that has at least fourteen interested students so far (there are 54 total fifth grade students at our school).

Luther School

Our goal is to get all our students closer to their healthy food: planning, planting, caring for, harvesting, preparing and eating vegetables from or garden. Last year we were able to fundraise for and build three 4x4 raised beds. During a work session with our Extension Office and local volunteers, the students built a simple soaker hose watering system and planted the beds using the square-foot gardening method. We also planted micro-greens in small plastic clamshell containers and sprouted seeds in CD cases to study their growth.

Lucy Daniels School

The Lucy Daniels Center Therapeutic Teaching Garden is both an outdoor classroom and a horticultural therapy site for children and their families who are being served through one of the Center’s mental and emotional health programs including the Lucy Daniels School. Horticultural therapy uses live plants and horticulture activities to improve an individual’s mental, physical and emotional well-being.

Agnes L. Mathers Elementary Secondary

The community of Sandspit consists of approximately 250 people. The school is an integral part of the community and many community members have helped to volunteer with the construction and maintenance of the garden. The garden and greenhouse are an integral part of the school community and are greatly supported by the community. We would love to be able to upgrade our current garden site. We are hoping to extend the current size of the garden and repair the plastic that has been damaged. As well, we are looking to purchase plants and seeds that can be grown in our garden area.

Saint Augustine Academy

Our garden goals are:
* To teach our students to love and enjoy good food.
* To teach our students the skills to feed themselves and others.
* To awaken our students' love of being outside with nature as they experience the thrill of watching their plants grow into food.
* To teach our students how to successfully and responsibly maintain a sustainable garden.

Alternative Family Education

We have five raised beds that students currently use to grow vegetables and edible herbs. We want to expand our garden teaching to include more urban agricultural techniques by building vertical gardens, using low-cost, easily-accessible materials. We also want to incorporate a rainwater harvesting system to irrigate both the existing raised beds as well as the proposed vertical gardens. Irrigation with the rainwater would be powered by two treadle pumps, which would be built by students and their families as a science project.

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