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News & EventsNews & Events

Press Release

MOUNTAIN OAKS STUDENTS MAKE A GARDEN GROW

A song floats from Miss Walker's classroom window at Mountain Oaks Charter School.

"Inch by inch, row by row, we're going to make this garden grow. All you need is a rake and a hoe and a piece of fertile ground," the second and third-graders sing.

Their parents and friends, who have joined them for a spring tea, applaud the song and the poems and skits that come afterward.

They all make their way down to the school's courtyard, and the students proudly give their guests tours of their new garden - a garden they planned and planted themselves, with the help of Jessica Bean.

As part of her senior project at Prescott College, Bean developed and implemented a garden curriculum for 15 second and third-graders at Mountain Oaks Charter School.

"Miss Bean came in for eight class periods twice a week and took a plot of dirt and made it into a beautiful garden," said second and third-grade teacher Sarah Walker. "It's been a great program for my students because it helps them understand practical things. It's a really valuable lesson for them that they can start with nothing and get a wonderful garden."

The goal of the project, according to Bean, was to connect kids to their food so they understand where it comes from. She integrated many concepts she had learned while doing an internship with Common Roots, an environmental education organization in Montpelier, Vt., that designs curriculum for elementary schools that utilize gardens as a method for studying science and cultural history.

"Gardening ties our ecological and cultural landscapes together and is something easy that kids can do," Bean said. "On the first day of class, the kids all took their lunches out and we made a backward timeline to where their food originates."

In addition to lessons about the responsibilities of farmers and what foods can grow in the Prescott area, the students spent an afternoon at Sharlot Hall Museum, learning what people did before there were grocery stores.

The students then planned the garden and voted on what to plant, including carrots, eggplants, potatoes, peas, artichokes, strawberries, bee balm, corn, sunflowers, gourds, pumpkins, lettuce, nasturtiums, marigolds and various herbs. A chart hangs on the classroom wall for students to record when their crops sprout, what bugs they see in the garden and the chores they have to do to maintain the garden.

(Third-grader Adam Tucker and Jessica Bean look to see what plants have sprouted in the garden.)

"I was very surprised when they chose to plant artichokes," said Bean, "but it was a unanimous decision."

The spring tea party gives the students the opportunity to show their parents and friends around the garden and share some of the bounty they have received thus far.

"We made mint jelly out of mint leaves that we'll put on bread," explained third-grader Adam Tucker.

They also made sun tea from various herbs in the garden, explained second-grader Mark Winter.

The garden, which was planted in early April, will have to be watered and weeded over the summer. Bean hopes this is an opportunity for parents and friends to become involved in the project. During the tea, many signed up to help with summer chores.

When asked about their favorite part of the garden project, the students had a hard time choosing just one thing, mostly answering "Everything."

"I liked the whole thing," said third-grader Michelle Maxwell. "And getting muddy."

"I liked getting messy and planting the strawberries," said third-grader Patrick Davis.

"We were so lucky to have Miss Bean work with us on our garden and as a classroom teacher," said teacher Sarah Walker, adding that the garden would continue to be a class project.

For Bean, the experience was very rewarding. "These students have such incredible enthusiasm and energy. They're learning so much so fast. I've grown a lot as a classroom teacher by working with this age group."

After graduating in May with a degree in environmental education, Bean plans to continue teaching, though is unsure in what capacity. "I feel called to teaching because it's such important and rewarding work."

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