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FOOD FOR THOUGHT 
GROWING BODIES; 
GROWING MINDS 
School gardens are about more than just nutrition for New Jersey’s students. 
BY JESSICA KITCHIN 
Even on a cool winter morning, amid concrete buildings and 
an overcast sky, the rooftop garden at St. Philip’s Academy in 
Newark feels full of life. Birds flutter in, visiting the apple and 
plum trees. Colorful signs designate each grade’s garden plot, includ-ing 
the pizza garden, the pumpkin patch and the fruit bowl. There 
are even a few verdant bursts—the parsley, the collards—thanks to a 
mild winter season. 
“The whole garden is accessible to all the children at the school, 
so they can explore, taste and touch,” says Frank Mentesana, direc-tor 
of the school’s EcoSPACES program. “We use the garden envi-ronment 
to get the classroom away from traditional desks, to 
approach learning in a hands-on way.” 
Gardens—whether on a rooftop, carved into school grounds or 
in simple raised beds in a parking lot—have been springing up at 
school sites all around New Jersey. They are one component of the 
Farm to School movement that has taken hold statewide, aiming to 
improve school lunches, promote locally grown produce and edu-cate 
through gardening. 
“It’s hard for schools to look at lunch as part of a curriculum, because 
they’re looking at food in a dollars-and-sense way rather than looking at 
the entire picture of a composite child,” says Beth Feehan, director of 
the New Jersey Farm to School Network, which formed in 2008 with 
the idea that schools around the state needed a central resource to help 
improve school nutrition. “That’s where the disconnect is.” 
According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 12.5 
million children and adolescents ages 2 to 19 are obese, which is 17 
percent of the population—a statistic that has tripled since 1980. 
Consequences of childhood obesity can include high blood pressure, 
diabetes, asthma, joint problems and depression. And at many 
schools, the lunchroom isn’t helping: A University ofMichigan study 
found that students who bought lunch at school had higher choles-terol, 
consumed twice as many fatty meats and sugary drinks, and 
were nearly six times less likely to eat vegetables or fruit than those 
who brought lunch from home. 
36 spring 2012 ediblejersey
Above, from left to right: Plans are underway this spring to expand the 20' x 40' garden at Alder Avenue Middle School in Egg Harbor Township; 
the garden at St. Philip’s Academy in Newark is located on the school’s rooftop; early spring beds at Littleton Elementary in Princeton; produce 
grown and harvested by students at Hopewell Elementary School is often served at lunchtime. 
ediblejersey spring 2012 37 
“It’s really pretty frightening,” says Margaret Noon, president of 
Slow Food Northern New Jersey, a group that promotes school gar-dens 
and supports food-justice programs. “One of the biggest food-justice 
issues is school lunch, and the underserved are totally relying 
on that food.” 
Although a major part of the Farm to School mission involves 
renegotiating food-service contracts with schools, the movement’s 
proponents believe that one way to better connect students to 
healthy, unprocessed food is through on-campus gardens. “I’ve come 
to believe more and more that it’s the central way to get children to 
eat better foods,” says Feehan. “It’s the main reason they will eat 
green things.” 
New Jersey has an assortment of organizations that help schools 
literally get the seeds planted. The Farm to School Network provides 
resources for starting school gardens, including grant opportunities, 
how-to checklists and seasonality charts. Slow Food has given out 
more than a dozen grants and provided guidance to jump-start 
school gardens, mainly in lower-income communities. City Green 
provides grants, direction and curricula for school gardens, particu-larly 
in urban areas such as Paterson and Jersey City. And AtlantiCare 
Health Engagement, based in Hammonton, has initiated 19 school 
gardens in its service area. 
“Gardens create opportunities for physical activity and enable 
individuals to eat healthfully,” says Samantha Kiley, director of health 
promotion at AtlantiCare. “They have a greater ability to influence 
healthy behaviors, more than any lecture we could offer.” 
Although each school has a different set of circumstances—from 
financial resources to physical space to parental involvement—“the 
teacher is the critical factor,” says Noon. Even the most passionate 
parents may stop volunteering when their children graduate from a 
school, and administrators may not have the time, but a teacher can 
work closely with students to integrate a garden into the school day. 
Of course, teachers can’t make it happen alone. “There’s a win-ning 
team that has to be in place for the long-term survival and thriv-ing 
of the school garden,” says Dorothy Mullen, cofounder of the 
Princeton School Gardens Cooperative. Combine the necessary sup-port 
inside the school with a community that buys into the idea, she 
says, and success follows. “Gardens are always optional, so each one 
is driven by passionate volunteers.” 
Mullen knows what she’s talking about. Some of the best exam-ples 
of how a school garden can thrive are in Princeton, where gar-dens 
have been established at all of the district’s schools and garden-ing 
is thoroughly integrated into the school day. 
At Riverside Elementary, Mullen has built up the school garden 
by developing a curriculum based on it, bringing in master garden-ers 
as instructors, and preparing meals using garden produce. For 
example, she offered “Three Sisters soup,” a soup made with beans, 
corn and squash, to fourth graders while they were studying the 
Lenape Indians. “Figuring out how to make food part of the existing 
standards gives children two more senses, smell and taste, to reinforce 
those lessons,” says Mullen. 
Amy Mayer of the Princeton School Gardens Cooperative calls 
Riverside’s program “our flagship garden,” and points out that each 
of the district’s elementary schools has its own unique features. At 
Littlebrook, where Mayer is co-coordinator of the garden, the PTO 
funds a garden educator, every student has garden lessons, and each 
grade has a horticultural project that links to their classroom curricu-lum 
from year to year. At Johnson Park, parents volunteer at the 
school garden twice a week so students can visit the garden during 
recess. And at Community Park, lab-science teacher John Emmons 
has expanded the edible garden and created several themed spaces, 
such as a colonial herb garden and a prairie habitat area. There, he 
Photographs:Alder Avenue Middle School photos courtesy of AtlantiCare; all other photos courtesy of the respective schools.
says, the lessons go further than science or history. “Being a part of 
creating and maintaining something beautiful, living, and special 
also builds community and civic pride,” he says. “Is there a better a 
way to teach character education?” 
Mayer says the schools work toward having as many students as pos-sible 
have a sustained experience in the garden. “A lot of people put the 
effort into making that happen. These are really community ventures.” 
Down the road at the Waldorf School of Princeton, an acre-sized 
garden has been an integral part of the school for decades. “The gar-den 
is really a focal point of the campus,” says communications asso-ciate 
Jamie Quirk. “It’s not in any way an ‘extra’ or a side program; 
it’s at the core of what we do.” 
Waldorf ’s garden includes a collection of spaces, from vegetable 
garden beds to compost piles to a rain garden. Gardening teacher 
Suzanne Ives Cunningham says it’s been rewarding to see the stu-dents 
work in the soil and watch them discover new ways to interact 
with the plants. Second graders, for example, plant broomcorn seeds 
in the spring and, as third graders, harvest the plants and use them 
to make brooms with a local artisan. Seventh graders studying the 
age of exploration learn about native foods and invasive species. 
“It’s not just about healthy eating and taking care of the land, 
although that’s important,” Cunningham says. “These kids can be 
studying ancient history and realize how much work it took to culti-vate 
food and manage water. They’re seeing the practical side of 
things and making a connection.” 
Students are also learning that the word “garden” is about more 
than just pretty flowers. “There’s the potential for the term to be 
something passive,” says Quirk. “But the children in our garden real-ly 
38 spring 2012 ediblejersey 
work. And it’s not just a place to grow vegetables, it’s a place where 
they can really take apart and examine the science of life.” 
Gardens are also places where children can learn that produce isn’t 
“dirty.” “It’s so important for kids to learn that soil is alive,” says 
Noon. “Soil isn’t dirt, it’s a good, healthy, living thing, and your food 
comes from it. That’s an important lesson.” 
In 2007, a group of Hopewell residents started Real Food for 
Thought with the goal of establishing school gardens and improving 
nutrition in Hopewell’s public schools. The result has been the intro-duction 
of gardens to students district-wide, and the opportunity for 
students to graze on fresh vegetables. “It’s a fun place for the chil-dren,” 
says garden co-coordinator Tish Streeten, who says she sees 
the excitement in children when, for example, there’s a harvest of car-rots 
to pass around. “They’re really making the connection.” 
The district has already become a shining example, as has the state. 
On Farm to School Day in October, Hopewell Elementary hosted 
Rep. Rush Holt, who sponsored national legislation designating 
October as National Farm to School Month. “The garden really is a 
classroom,” Holt said that day. “Schoolchildren in America are going 
back to knowing where their food comes from. We were forgetting 
New Jersey is the Garden State, and now we’re leading by example.” 
Jim Harmon, director of special nutrition programs for the USDA 
Mid-Atlantic region, says New Jersey is ahead of the curve with school 
gardens. “I’d say we’re one of the up-front states. Schools here are really 
finding a way of incorporating agriculture into the curriculum.” 
But not all schools have the resources, or even any obvious place 
to put a school garden. That’s where groups like Slow Food and City 
Green come into play, giving grants, providing advice, and gathering 
the tools and equipment necessary to get started. 
“People just keep calling us and we keep saying yes, because you 
want to capture the momentum while it’s there,” says Jennifer Papa, 
founder of City Green. The group started creating community gar-dens 
in cities and has since branched out to help dozens of schools 
create green spaces, some of them in areas plagued by urban blight. 
In Paterson, one such garden was created in a small space behind a 
school, alongside a retaining wall that supported heavily trafficked 
freight-train tracks. 
“We see potential in these spaces,” says Amy Jolin, the group’s 
education director. “Sometimes it takes some work to convince peo-ple, 
but we work with what we have.” 
Most of the year, City Green coordinates with interested schools 
and helps create lesson plans centered on the garden. In the spring 
and fall, the boots hit the ground and the lumber, soil, plants, trees 
and benches are hauled in. “It’s challenging work, but over and over 
again we get invited back and the garden is thriving and the kids are 
so happy,” Papa says. “We have those inspirational moments where 
we think, ‘Wow, this is working!’” 
Back at St. Philip’s, the rooftop garden wasn’t something that was 
adapted into a space; it was planned into the layout when the school 
moved into a renovated factory in 2007. “This was very intentional,” 
says Mentesana, adding that the space isn’t used exclusively for hor-ticulture 
work—students and teachers do yoga, read and hold art 
classes there. 
Learning about sustainability and savoring nutritious food is 
something that St. Philip’s tries to integrate throughout the day. 
Students eat salad greens grown in the science lab topped with 
items from the garden at lunchtime, where they sit family style at 
a table with a mixture of students from different grade levels. They 
go to the school’s test kitchen and pickle vegetables gathered from 
WHAT’S ONTHE FARM-TO-SCHOOL 
MENU IN NEW JERSEY? 
By the numbers 
80% of schools indicate that they are either 
participating in or have an interest in participating 
in the Farm to School movement. 
73% of schools are purchasing Jersey-grown food. 
11% of schools purchased Jersey-grown food directly 
from a farmer. 
Top types of Jersey-grown produce served in school cafete-rias 
during the 2009–2010 school year were apples and 
tomatoes, with more than half the total amount served com-ing 
from in state. Other Jersey produce offered in schools 
were peppers, cantaloupe, watermelon, blueberries, salad 
greens, carrots, broccoli, peaches and nectarines. 
Statistics from the 2012 Rutgers New Jersey Agricultural 
Experiment Station Farm to School Survey Report
HOW DOESYOUR GARDEN GROW? A snapshot of school gardens around the state 
Catawba Project at Alder Avenue Middle School 
Location: Egg Harbor Township 
Size: Currently 20 feet by 40 feet, but expanding to 40 feet by 40 feet 
What is Grown: Tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, and a Three Sisters garden 
Leadership: John Jones (teacher and Catawba adviser) and Natalie 
McCullen (health teacher) work with AtlantiCare on the grant, and 
parents volunteer with children during the summer. 
Funding Partner: AtlantiCare 
Involvement in School Curriculum: Garden project incorporated into the 
science curriculum (variety of living things, plants science, body systems). 
Connected to math curriculum through organizing planting rows and and 
through calculating price per pound when harvesting tomatoes.The stu-dents 
use mapping skills to plan the garden.The school created a website 
(thecatawbaproject.org) this year with the help of a former student, and 
the students write articles about events and updates. 
Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: School has been working 
with the director of food services to find ways to get the food from 
the garden into the cafeteria. Last year, the kitchen staff used all the 
tomatoes picked over the summer to make tomato sauce, which was 
used on the pizza during the school year. 
Community Park Elementary School 
Location: Princeton 
Year Started: Approximately 2002, with expansion in 2010 
Size: Edible Garden is about 1/10 acre, with additional raised beds 
for themed habitat spaces. 
What is Grown: A large variety of seasonal fruit and vegetable crops, 
herbs, grasses, fruit trees, vines and other plants that fit themed spaces 
Leadership: Science teacher John Emmons and a community of 
volunteer staff, students and parents 
40 spring 2012 ediblejersey 
the roof, learning about canning in the days before refrigeration 
and the antibacterial properties of vinegar. “The idea is that they 
dance through the day, interacting with these concepts,” says 
Mentesana. “It’s much more fun that way.” 
Fun, of course, is essential for students to connect with the school 
garden movement. But the stakes can be serious. Lunch trays with 
processed meat, sugary drinks, and fried foods don’t just set children on 
a pace toward obesity and poor nutrition; they also remove students 
from the natural environment and may reduce attentiveness in class. 
Nationally, the movement toward healthier eating is taking off, 
helped along by advocates such as celebrity chef Jamie Oliver and 
Funding Partners: Community Park School Garden Club, PTO, 
Princeton Regional School District and Grounds, Princeton School 
Garden Cooperative, CP staff and students, Z Organic Farm, 
Boy Scout Eagle Project/Girl Scout Project, staff and students 
Involvement in School Curriculum: All grades.The garden is used for 
many purposes, including science, history, writing lessons, art classes and 
world language instruction. 
Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: Garden produce has been 
enjoyed by students and staff and used in class lessons; some used in cafe-teria, 
but not much yet. 
Hopewell Elementary School 
Location: Hopewell 
Year Started: 2008 
Size: 14 raised beds of approximately 12 feet by 3 feet 
What is Grown: Kale, garlic, potatoes, tomatoes, beans, peas, carrots, 
spinach, peppers, eggplant, chard, lettuce, herbs, flowers and more 
Leadership: Initially a few parent volunteers, led by Pam Flory, with an inter-ested 
group of teachers; now mainly run by parent volunteers with the sup-port 
and involvement of the principal, David Friedrich, teachers, and the PTO 
Funding Partners: Real Food For Thought and grants from other 
organizations 
Involvement in School Curriculum: After-school garden club (run by 
parent volunteers); teachers sometimes bring their classes into the garden 
for various subjects. School currently working on creating ”lessons in a 
box” to make it easier for teachers to apply the curriculum to the garden. 
Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: Students enjoy the fruits, vegeta-bles, 
herbs and flowers whenever they are in the garden. Carrots, lettuce, 
spinach, tomatoes, peppers, radishes and more are harvested by parent 
volunteers, teachers and students to serve to the students at lunchtime. 
Below, from left to right: 
Congressman Rush Holt visits the school garden at Hopewell 
Elementary School during last fall’s NJ Farm to School Week; 
each grade at St. Philip’s Academy has its own themed garden; 
trellis at the Waldorf School of Princeton stands ready to support 
this season’s beans and gourds; the Alder Avenue Middle School 
garden is closely tied to science, math, and other curriculums; 
colorful rain barrels were the result of a student contest held in 
collaboration with Alder Avenue Middle’s art department.
DOES YOUR SCHOOL HAVE A GARDEN? 
The New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services, 
Division of Family Health Services, Child and Adolescent Health 
Program is compiling a list of school gardens, which will be post-ed 
on their website in the spring of 2012 and will link to the New 
Jersey Farm to School Network website. School officers interest-ed 
in having their school garden listed should email program 
manager Marsha Fields at Marsha.Fields@doh.state.nj.us. 
ediblejersey spring 2012 41 
First Lady Michelle Obama. Statewide, schools have made gains 
working with food vendors to bring fresh, local food to cafeterias. 
But the school garden is the centerpiece of the Farm to School mis-sion; 
it is the place where children see, firsthand, that real food is 
colorful and crisp, and doesn’t come in a package or from a drive-through 
window. 
“The solutions are really elegant in their simplicity,” says 
Mullen. “All we need to do is return to the foods and the behav-iors 
that predated the [obesity] epidemic. It’s not the kids who cre-ated 
these problems, but with these gardens, they can help get us 
back on track.”n 
Jersey City Public Middle School 4 
Location: Jersey City 
Year Started: Spring 2010 
Size: Eight 6-foot beds on a rooftop terrace outside a science classroom 
and greenhouse, six tree planters, one 40-foot annuals garden 
What is Grown: Pumpkins, tomatoes, cucumbers, corn, peppers, 
herbs, carrots, lettuces, radishes, annual flowers, and fruit trees 
(including apricots, apples, sour cherries and peaches) 
Leadership: Science teacher Melissa Khiry with a garden club 
of middle school students 
Funding Partners: City Green, 21st Century 
Involvement in School Curriculum: The gardens are fully integrated 
into the science and environmental science curriculum. 
Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: No cafeteria involvement, 
but students harvest from the garden for classroom celebrations. 
Paterson Public School 3 
Location: Paterson 
Year Started: 2010 
Size: Nine 15-foot beds on a huge, city-owned corner lot 
What is Grown: “Three Sisters” garden (corn, beans and squash), pizza 
garden, garlic, onions, collards, salad fixin’s, herbs, strawberries and native 
plants in a surrounding butterfly garden 
Leadership: Science teachers Maureen Bruins and Bernadette Bryant 
Funding Partners: City Green, New Jersey Agricultural Society 
Involvement in School Curriculum: The gardens are fully integrated 
into the K–8 science curriculum. 
Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: No cafeteria involvement, 
but students harvest from the garden for classroom celebrations. Produce 
is also harvested during the summer for the nearby homeless shelter. 
St. Philip’s Academy 
Location: Newark (Rooftop) 
Year Started: 2007 
Size: 4,600 to 4,800 square feet 
What is Grown: Themed gardens for each grade, 
plus “the farm” for 7th and 8th grade students 
Leadership: Faculty member Frank Mentesana, director of EcoSPACES, 
plus considerable teacher involvement 
Funding Partners: School fundraising provides capital 
Involvement in School Curriculum:Woven into entire curriculum 
for all grade levels. 
Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: Salad greens grown in 
science lab space; produce grown in garden used in school 
salad bar. 
Waldorf School of Princeton 
Location: Princeton/Montgomery border, on 20-acre semirural campus 
Year Started: Circa 1990, with formal garden teacher hired in 1995 
Size: About one acre of garden, greenhouse, orchard and compost area 
What is Grown: Vegetables, herbs, fruit, and plants related to 
grade-specific projects, such as broomcorn or cover crops 
Leadership: Gardening teacher Suzanne Ives Cunningham, with assistants 
Funding Partners: None, though the school occasionally applies for and 
receives grants 
Involvement in School Curriculum: Projects supplement and reinforce 
academic lessons at every grade level, across all subjects. 
Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: No formal cafeteria 
program. Food grown in school garden is routinely incorporated 
into snacks and other offerings enjoyed in each classroom 
throughout the year. 
Photographs:Alder Avenue Middle School photos courtesy of AtlantiCare; all other photos courtesy of the respective schools.

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Growing Bodies; Growing Minds: School Gardens Are about More Than Just Nutrition for New Jersey’s Students

  • 1. FOOD FOR THOUGHT GROWING BODIES; GROWING MINDS School gardens are about more than just nutrition for New Jersey’s students. BY JESSICA KITCHIN Even on a cool winter morning, amid concrete buildings and an overcast sky, the rooftop garden at St. Philip’s Academy in Newark feels full of life. Birds flutter in, visiting the apple and plum trees. Colorful signs designate each grade’s garden plot, includ-ing the pizza garden, the pumpkin patch and the fruit bowl. There are even a few verdant bursts—the parsley, the collards—thanks to a mild winter season. “The whole garden is accessible to all the children at the school, so they can explore, taste and touch,” says Frank Mentesana, direc-tor of the school’s EcoSPACES program. “We use the garden envi-ronment to get the classroom away from traditional desks, to approach learning in a hands-on way.” Gardens—whether on a rooftop, carved into school grounds or in simple raised beds in a parking lot—have been springing up at school sites all around New Jersey. They are one component of the Farm to School movement that has taken hold statewide, aiming to improve school lunches, promote locally grown produce and edu-cate through gardening. “It’s hard for schools to look at lunch as part of a curriculum, because they’re looking at food in a dollars-and-sense way rather than looking at the entire picture of a composite child,” says Beth Feehan, director of the New Jersey Farm to School Network, which formed in 2008 with the idea that schools around the state needed a central resource to help improve school nutrition. “That’s where the disconnect is.” According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 12.5 million children and adolescents ages 2 to 19 are obese, which is 17 percent of the population—a statistic that has tripled since 1980. Consequences of childhood obesity can include high blood pressure, diabetes, asthma, joint problems and depression. And at many schools, the lunchroom isn’t helping: A University ofMichigan study found that students who bought lunch at school had higher choles-terol, consumed twice as many fatty meats and sugary drinks, and were nearly six times less likely to eat vegetables or fruit than those who brought lunch from home. 36 spring 2012 ediblejersey
  • 2. Above, from left to right: Plans are underway this spring to expand the 20' x 40' garden at Alder Avenue Middle School in Egg Harbor Township; the garden at St. Philip’s Academy in Newark is located on the school’s rooftop; early spring beds at Littleton Elementary in Princeton; produce grown and harvested by students at Hopewell Elementary School is often served at lunchtime. ediblejersey spring 2012 37 “It’s really pretty frightening,” says Margaret Noon, president of Slow Food Northern New Jersey, a group that promotes school gar-dens and supports food-justice programs. “One of the biggest food-justice issues is school lunch, and the underserved are totally relying on that food.” Although a major part of the Farm to School mission involves renegotiating food-service contracts with schools, the movement’s proponents believe that one way to better connect students to healthy, unprocessed food is through on-campus gardens. “I’ve come to believe more and more that it’s the central way to get children to eat better foods,” says Feehan. “It’s the main reason they will eat green things.” New Jersey has an assortment of organizations that help schools literally get the seeds planted. The Farm to School Network provides resources for starting school gardens, including grant opportunities, how-to checklists and seasonality charts. Slow Food has given out more than a dozen grants and provided guidance to jump-start school gardens, mainly in lower-income communities. City Green provides grants, direction and curricula for school gardens, particu-larly in urban areas such as Paterson and Jersey City. And AtlantiCare Health Engagement, based in Hammonton, has initiated 19 school gardens in its service area. “Gardens create opportunities for physical activity and enable individuals to eat healthfully,” says Samantha Kiley, director of health promotion at AtlantiCare. “They have a greater ability to influence healthy behaviors, more than any lecture we could offer.” Although each school has a different set of circumstances—from financial resources to physical space to parental involvement—“the teacher is the critical factor,” says Noon. Even the most passionate parents may stop volunteering when their children graduate from a school, and administrators may not have the time, but a teacher can work closely with students to integrate a garden into the school day. Of course, teachers can’t make it happen alone. “There’s a win-ning team that has to be in place for the long-term survival and thriv-ing of the school garden,” says Dorothy Mullen, cofounder of the Princeton School Gardens Cooperative. Combine the necessary sup-port inside the school with a community that buys into the idea, she says, and success follows. “Gardens are always optional, so each one is driven by passionate volunteers.” Mullen knows what she’s talking about. Some of the best exam-ples of how a school garden can thrive are in Princeton, where gar-dens have been established at all of the district’s schools and garden-ing is thoroughly integrated into the school day. At Riverside Elementary, Mullen has built up the school garden by developing a curriculum based on it, bringing in master garden-ers as instructors, and preparing meals using garden produce. For example, she offered “Three Sisters soup,” a soup made with beans, corn and squash, to fourth graders while they were studying the Lenape Indians. “Figuring out how to make food part of the existing standards gives children two more senses, smell and taste, to reinforce those lessons,” says Mullen. Amy Mayer of the Princeton School Gardens Cooperative calls Riverside’s program “our flagship garden,” and points out that each of the district’s elementary schools has its own unique features. At Littlebrook, where Mayer is co-coordinator of the garden, the PTO funds a garden educator, every student has garden lessons, and each grade has a horticultural project that links to their classroom curricu-lum from year to year. At Johnson Park, parents volunteer at the school garden twice a week so students can visit the garden during recess. And at Community Park, lab-science teacher John Emmons has expanded the edible garden and created several themed spaces, such as a colonial herb garden and a prairie habitat area. There, he Photographs:Alder Avenue Middle School photos courtesy of AtlantiCare; all other photos courtesy of the respective schools.
  • 3. says, the lessons go further than science or history. “Being a part of creating and maintaining something beautiful, living, and special also builds community and civic pride,” he says. “Is there a better a way to teach character education?” Mayer says the schools work toward having as many students as pos-sible have a sustained experience in the garden. “A lot of people put the effort into making that happen. These are really community ventures.” Down the road at the Waldorf School of Princeton, an acre-sized garden has been an integral part of the school for decades. “The gar-den is really a focal point of the campus,” says communications asso-ciate Jamie Quirk. “It’s not in any way an ‘extra’ or a side program; it’s at the core of what we do.” Waldorf ’s garden includes a collection of spaces, from vegetable garden beds to compost piles to a rain garden. Gardening teacher Suzanne Ives Cunningham says it’s been rewarding to see the stu-dents work in the soil and watch them discover new ways to interact with the plants. Second graders, for example, plant broomcorn seeds in the spring and, as third graders, harvest the plants and use them to make brooms with a local artisan. Seventh graders studying the age of exploration learn about native foods and invasive species. “It’s not just about healthy eating and taking care of the land, although that’s important,” Cunningham says. “These kids can be studying ancient history and realize how much work it took to culti-vate food and manage water. They’re seeing the practical side of things and making a connection.” Students are also learning that the word “garden” is about more than just pretty flowers. “There’s the potential for the term to be something passive,” says Quirk. “But the children in our garden real-ly 38 spring 2012 ediblejersey work. And it’s not just a place to grow vegetables, it’s a place where they can really take apart and examine the science of life.” Gardens are also places where children can learn that produce isn’t “dirty.” “It’s so important for kids to learn that soil is alive,” says Noon. “Soil isn’t dirt, it’s a good, healthy, living thing, and your food comes from it. That’s an important lesson.” In 2007, a group of Hopewell residents started Real Food for Thought with the goal of establishing school gardens and improving nutrition in Hopewell’s public schools. The result has been the intro-duction of gardens to students district-wide, and the opportunity for students to graze on fresh vegetables. “It’s a fun place for the chil-dren,” says garden co-coordinator Tish Streeten, who says she sees the excitement in children when, for example, there’s a harvest of car-rots to pass around. “They’re really making the connection.” The district has already become a shining example, as has the state. On Farm to School Day in October, Hopewell Elementary hosted Rep. Rush Holt, who sponsored national legislation designating October as National Farm to School Month. “The garden really is a classroom,” Holt said that day. “Schoolchildren in America are going back to knowing where their food comes from. We were forgetting New Jersey is the Garden State, and now we’re leading by example.” Jim Harmon, director of special nutrition programs for the USDA Mid-Atlantic region, says New Jersey is ahead of the curve with school gardens. “I’d say we’re one of the up-front states. Schools here are really finding a way of incorporating agriculture into the curriculum.” But not all schools have the resources, or even any obvious place to put a school garden. That’s where groups like Slow Food and City Green come into play, giving grants, providing advice, and gathering the tools and equipment necessary to get started. “People just keep calling us and we keep saying yes, because you want to capture the momentum while it’s there,” says Jennifer Papa, founder of City Green. The group started creating community gar-dens in cities and has since branched out to help dozens of schools create green spaces, some of them in areas plagued by urban blight. In Paterson, one such garden was created in a small space behind a school, alongside a retaining wall that supported heavily trafficked freight-train tracks. “We see potential in these spaces,” says Amy Jolin, the group’s education director. “Sometimes it takes some work to convince peo-ple, but we work with what we have.” Most of the year, City Green coordinates with interested schools and helps create lesson plans centered on the garden. In the spring and fall, the boots hit the ground and the lumber, soil, plants, trees and benches are hauled in. “It’s challenging work, but over and over again we get invited back and the garden is thriving and the kids are so happy,” Papa says. “We have those inspirational moments where we think, ‘Wow, this is working!’” Back at St. Philip’s, the rooftop garden wasn’t something that was adapted into a space; it was planned into the layout when the school moved into a renovated factory in 2007. “This was very intentional,” says Mentesana, adding that the space isn’t used exclusively for hor-ticulture work—students and teachers do yoga, read and hold art classes there. Learning about sustainability and savoring nutritious food is something that St. Philip’s tries to integrate throughout the day. Students eat salad greens grown in the science lab topped with items from the garden at lunchtime, where they sit family style at a table with a mixture of students from different grade levels. They go to the school’s test kitchen and pickle vegetables gathered from WHAT’S ONTHE FARM-TO-SCHOOL MENU IN NEW JERSEY? By the numbers 80% of schools indicate that they are either participating in or have an interest in participating in the Farm to School movement. 73% of schools are purchasing Jersey-grown food. 11% of schools purchased Jersey-grown food directly from a farmer. Top types of Jersey-grown produce served in school cafete-rias during the 2009–2010 school year were apples and tomatoes, with more than half the total amount served com-ing from in state. Other Jersey produce offered in schools were peppers, cantaloupe, watermelon, blueberries, salad greens, carrots, broccoli, peaches and nectarines. Statistics from the 2012 Rutgers New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Farm to School Survey Report
  • 4. HOW DOESYOUR GARDEN GROW? A snapshot of school gardens around the state Catawba Project at Alder Avenue Middle School Location: Egg Harbor Township Size: Currently 20 feet by 40 feet, but expanding to 40 feet by 40 feet What is Grown: Tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, and a Three Sisters garden Leadership: John Jones (teacher and Catawba adviser) and Natalie McCullen (health teacher) work with AtlantiCare on the grant, and parents volunteer with children during the summer. Funding Partner: AtlantiCare Involvement in School Curriculum: Garden project incorporated into the science curriculum (variety of living things, plants science, body systems). Connected to math curriculum through organizing planting rows and and through calculating price per pound when harvesting tomatoes.The stu-dents use mapping skills to plan the garden.The school created a website (thecatawbaproject.org) this year with the help of a former student, and the students write articles about events and updates. Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: School has been working with the director of food services to find ways to get the food from the garden into the cafeteria. Last year, the kitchen staff used all the tomatoes picked over the summer to make tomato sauce, which was used on the pizza during the school year. Community Park Elementary School Location: Princeton Year Started: Approximately 2002, with expansion in 2010 Size: Edible Garden is about 1/10 acre, with additional raised beds for themed habitat spaces. What is Grown: A large variety of seasonal fruit and vegetable crops, herbs, grasses, fruit trees, vines and other plants that fit themed spaces Leadership: Science teacher John Emmons and a community of volunteer staff, students and parents 40 spring 2012 ediblejersey the roof, learning about canning in the days before refrigeration and the antibacterial properties of vinegar. “The idea is that they dance through the day, interacting with these concepts,” says Mentesana. “It’s much more fun that way.” Fun, of course, is essential for students to connect with the school garden movement. But the stakes can be serious. Lunch trays with processed meat, sugary drinks, and fried foods don’t just set children on a pace toward obesity and poor nutrition; they also remove students from the natural environment and may reduce attentiveness in class. Nationally, the movement toward healthier eating is taking off, helped along by advocates such as celebrity chef Jamie Oliver and Funding Partners: Community Park School Garden Club, PTO, Princeton Regional School District and Grounds, Princeton School Garden Cooperative, CP staff and students, Z Organic Farm, Boy Scout Eagle Project/Girl Scout Project, staff and students Involvement in School Curriculum: All grades.The garden is used for many purposes, including science, history, writing lessons, art classes and world language instruction. Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: Garden produce has been enjoyed by students and staff and used in class lessons; some used in cafe-teria, but not much yet. Hopewell Elementary School Location: Hopewell Year Started: 2008 Size: 14 raised beds of approximately 12 feet by 3 feet What is Grown: Kale, garlic, potatoes, tomatoes, beans, peas, carrots, spinach, peppers, eggplant, chard, lettuce, herbs, flowers and more Leadership: Initially a few parent volunteers, led by Pam Flory, with an inter-ested group of teachers; now mainly run by parent volunteers with the sup-port and involvement of the principal, David Friedrich, teachers, and the PTO Funding Partners: Real Food For Thought and grants from other organizations Involvement in School Curriculum: After-school garden club (run by parent volunteers); teachers sometimes bring their classes into the garden for various subjects. School currently working on creating ”lessons in a box” to make it easier for teachers to apply the curriculum to the garden. Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: Students enjoy the fruits, vegeta-bles, herbs and flowers whenever they are in the garden. Carrots, lettuce, spinach, tomatoes, peppers, radishes and more are harvested by parent volunteers, teachers and students to serve to the students at lunchtime. Below, from left to right: Congressman Rush Holt visits the school garden at Hopewell Elementary School during last fall’s NJ Farm to School Week; each grade at St. Philip’s Academy has its own themed garden; trellis at the Waldorf School of Princeton stands ready to support this season’s beans and gourds; the Alder Avenue Middle School garden is closely tied to science, math, and other curriculums; colorful rain barrels were the result of a student contest held in collaboration with Alder Avenue Middle’s art department.
  • 5. DOES YOUR SCHOOL HAVE A GARDEN? The New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services, Division of Family Health Services, Child and Adolescent Health Program is compiling a list of school gardens, which will be post-ed on their website in the spring of 2012 and will link to the New Jersey Farm to School Network website. School officers interest-ed in having their school garden listed should email program manager Marsha Fields at Marsha.Fields@doh.state.nj.us. ediblejersey spring 2012 41 First Lady Michelle Obama. Statewide, schools have made gains working with food vendors to bring fresh, local food to cafeterias. But the school garden is the centerpiece of the Farm to School mis-sion; it is the place where children see, firsthand, that real food is colorful and crisp, and doesn’t come in a package or from a drive-through window. “The solutions are really elegant in their simplicity,” says Mullen. “All we need to do is return to the foods and the behav-iors that predated the [obesity] epidemic. It’s not the kids who cre-ated these problems, but with these gardens, they can help get us back on track.”n Jersey City Public Middle School 4 Location: Jersey City Year Started: Spring 2010 Size: Eight 6-foot beds on a rooftop terrace outside a science classroom and greenhouse, six tree planters, one 40-foot annuals garden What is Grown: Pumpkins, tomatoes, cucumbers, corn, peppers, herbs, carrots, lettuces, radishes, annual flowers, and fruit trees (including apricots, apples, sour cherries and peaches) Leadership: Science teacher Melissa Khiry with a garden club of middle school students Funding Partners: City Green, 21st Century Involvement in School Curriculum: The gardens are fully integrated into the science and environmental science curriculum. Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: No cafeteria involvement, but students harvest from the garden for classroom celebrations. Paterson Public School 3 Location: Paterson Year Started: 2010 Size: Nine 15-foot beds on a huge, city-owned corner lot What is Grown: “Three Sisters” garden (corn, beans and squash), pizza garden, garlic, onions, collards, salad fixin’s, herbs, strawberries and native plants in a surrounding butterfly garden Leadership: Science teachers Maureen Bruins and Bernadette Bryant Funding Partners: City Green, New Jersey Agricultural Society Involvement in School Curriculum: The gardens are fully integrated into the K–8 science curriculum. Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: No cafeteria involvement, but students harvest from the garden for classroom celebrations. Produce is also harvested during the summer for the nearby homeless shelter. St. Philip’s Academy Location: Newark (Rooftop) Year Started: 2007 Size: 4,600 to 4,800 square feet What is Grown: Themed gardens for each grade, plus “the farm” for 7th and 8th grade students Leadership: Faculty member Frank Mentesana, director of EcoSPACES, plus considerable teacher involvement Funding Partners: School fundraising provides capital Involvement in School Curriculum:Woven into entire curriculum for all grade levels. Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: Salad greens grown in science lab space; produce grown in garden used in school salad bar. Waldorf School of Princeton Location: Princeton/Montgomery border, on 20-acre semirural campus Year Started: Circa 1990, with formal garden teacher hired in 1995 Size: About one acre of garden, greenhouse, orchard and compost area What is Grown: Vegetables, herbs, fruit, and plants related to grade-specific projects, such as broomcorn or cover crops Leadership: Gardening teacher Suzanne Ives Cunningham, with assistants Funding Partners: None, though the school occasionally applies for and receives grants Involvement in School Curriculum: Projects supplement and reinforce academic lessons at every grade level, across all subjects. Involvement in School Cafeteria/Lunches: No formal cafeteria program. Food grown in school garden is routinely incorporated into snacks and other offerings enjoyed in each classroom throughout the year. Photographs:Alder Avenue Middle School photos courtesy of AtlantiCare; all other photos courtesy of the respective schools.