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Theme: Service-Learning: Helping Kids and Communities Grow

Introduction

Across the country, garden and habitat projects are inspiring students to connect with and serve their communities. They create "ethnic" plantings that reflect a community's cultures, build intergenerational partnerships, involve neighbors in schoolyard planning, teach citizens about recycling waste, share harvests with populations in need, and create urban oases for respite and renewal. And that's just for starters.

When learning is linked to the real world, it's naturally more rewarding. When students have a chance to address genuine community needs, cultivate partnerships, and see that their own actions can improve the quality of life for others, education becomes meaningful and empowering, and self-esteem flourishes.


Photo courtesy Volunteer Hampton Roads National Youth Service Day

The concept behind this vision – dubbed service learning – is gaining momentum at the national, state, and local level. The practice goes beyond students simply doing community service; it explicitly weaves community service with curriculum goals so that learning; personal, social, and civic skills; and communities are strengthened. Read on for project ideas, inspirational stories, and resources for integrating growing experiences, educational goals, and community service.

Classroom Stories and Advice

Page 2 Service Learning: Helping Kids and Communities Grow - Explore how garden- and habitat-related projects can bring learning and neighborhoods to life.

Page 3 Nurturing Literacy and Community - When at-risk first graders asked, "Why can't we give some of our harvest to poor people?" learning blossomed.

Page 4 Creating a Cultural Connection - Students, parents, teachers, and community members collaborated to design the "spirit of nature schoolyard," which celebrates and preserves local cultural history.

Page 5 Growing Hope - In a historical "garden of peace and healing," students and visitors learn to respect diversity and the virtues that make a community healthy.

Page 6 Nutritious Lessons: Snack Food Garden - Students, families, and local food businesses keep this exemplary snack program going year round.

Page 7 Cross-Grade Buddies Plant Garden Companions - Cross-grade mentors grow food and friendships and give back to the community.

Page 8 Planning Learning Landscapes: Students Lead the Way - A student-led project borne of a desire to make the "prisonlike" grounds more attractive and useful for the school and community.

Page 9 Growing Good Citizens - Fourth and fifth grade Environmental Empowerment Club members take action in their neighborhood.

Page 10 Learning to Give, Giving to Learn - A school garden and nutrition study inspired eighth graders to launch a district-wide "grow a potato for hunger" challenge.

Page 11 Resources Web sites and grants to support your growing entrepreneurs.

Author: Eve Pranis

 
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