• A group opportunity. Invite your friends.
  • 2 people are interested
 

Get your hands dirty in a school garden.

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ORGANIZATION: Gardeneers

  • A group opportunity. Invite your friends.
  • 2 people are interested


On Wed, Nov 5, from 1pm-630pm, we need 10-20 people to help us put the school garden to bed at Hay Community Academy in Chicago's Austin neighborhood.
Volunteers will be pushing wheelbarrows and shoveling soil and compost. Please wear comfortable clothes that you don't mind getting a little dirty If you have some good work gloves and a water bottle, those would be good to bring as well. (Feel free to bring a shovel and/or wheelbarrow as well, but don't feel required. We have a good number of those already.)
Please sign up using the following link:
http://www.volunteerspot.com/client/invitation/777484e0d6188a080ed5f662db369fc09a5d8936/887268/false
Contact adam@gardeneers.org if you have any questions. (For more info on Gardeneers, check out their website: www.gardeneers.org or their Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/gardeneers?ref=hl You can read about them i n these articles from the Chicago Sun-Times , Food Day , or Food Tank .) Please forward this request widely. Thanks so much for your support!

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About Gardeneers

Location:

Multiple Sites, Chicago, IL 60647, US

Mission Statement

Gardeneers are dedicated leaders who sustain school gardens in order to enable students to enrich their knowledge of nutrition, to connect with their community, and to become stewards of the environment.

Description

Gardeneers was co-founded by May Tsupros and Adam Zmick, both Teach For America alumni. During their years in the classroom, May and Adam saw first-hand how poor nutrition was affecting their students in terms of behavior, academics, and beyond. Before meeting each other, both May and Adam worked on school gardens and witnessed the multitude of positive effects that they had on students. Being science teachers, they both studied the existing research relating to school gardens and found a myriad of benefits: improved test scores on science, better dietary decisions, and improved social-emotional skills. Gardens were even related to increased property values and decreased crime. With so many obvious benefits, they asked, why weren’t there more active school gardens?

While there are a handful of successful school gardens here in Chicago, they are vastly outnumbered by schools with unused garden infrastructure - raised beds full of weeds and debris instead of engaged learners. What was the key factor that separated the successful school gardens from the unsuccessful ones? The key factor was a Gardeneer - a leader with expertise working with both kids and crops that goes the extra mile to make everything happen.

The mission of Gardeneers is to identify and train these leaders to sustain school gardens and lead garden-based lessons that enable students to enrich their knowledge of nutrition, connect with their community, and become stewards of the environment. Founded in January 2014, Gardeneers now sustains 9 school gardens, serving more than 400 students with garden-based lessons every week in schools in low-income neighborhoods across Chicago.

CAUSE AREAS

Children & Youth
Community
Education & Literacy
Children & Youth, Community, Education & Literacy

WHEN

Wed Nov 05, 2014
01:00 PM - 06:30 PM

WHERE

1018 N Laramie AveChicago, IL 60651

(41.899296,-87.75572)
 

SKILLS

GOOD FOR

  • Kids
  • Teens
  • People 55+
  • Group

REQUIREMENTS

N/A

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