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The Outdoor Classroom

Spring 2006, Number 17 The Learning Grounds Newsletter on school ground transformation

For Henry
On Christmas Day 2005, the school ground greening Henry taught many teachers how to establish mini-
Inside movement in Canada lost a friend, mentor and force nurseries on their school grounds so students could
of nature. Henry Kock, renowned horticulturalist experience the humbling and rewarding process
2 Centre Wellington at the University of Guelph’s Arboretum, of growing plants from seed. And the sparks
Memory Garden succumbed to brain cancer after a gutsy that emanated from his vision and
18-month battle. He was 53. Along knowledge are now torches being
3 Teaching and with many others who knew him, carried by hundreds of educators
learning with I’ll never forget the first time I and landscape designers.
Monarch butterflies met Henry: In a basement hall
in Peterborough, I listened to Two months before Henry’s
4 Is that a fact? this gentle giant explain death, we spent a weekend
with great wisdom, subtlety together in a small cabin
and passion how one of the by a lake. We talked and
most compelling gardening walked, and I came away
projects he’d ever seen was astonished by the elegance
on a school ground. It was of his spirit. He had
a talk that changed my life. cultivated peace with
whatever the future would bring.
Henry was a master at native- n It was the wisdom of the forest
se
plant propagation, his own backyard Han embodied in a human being, moving
e
Ann
a living laboratory. The last time we through the cycle of life and death with
stood in his garden together, he bent down grace and acceptance.
to the ground and his long fingers gently moved
aside the thick leaf litter to reveal an abundance of I miss him deeply, but find healing, as he did, in the
seedlings, crouched in waiting for the coming spring. power, wonder and exquisite beauty of nature.
He reiterated how possible and important it is to
create these living landscapes for our children to
connect to and learn from.

Toyota Evergreen Learning Grounds Program Manager

Research Bulletin: Green School Grounds Get Kids


Moving
Evergreen just conducted a national survey of 60 schools to investigate the
impact of green school grounds on levels and types of active play. Funded by
the Public Health Agency of Canada, the study shows that natural landscapes
enhance the quality of active play and strengthen the link between play and
Our New Look learning. Here are some highlights:

We’re excited to introduce a new design • 85 percent of respondents said green school grounds support
a wider variety of play activities
to The Outdoor Classroom. Derived from • 49 percent said they encourage more vigorous physical activity
nature and fresh as the spring air, it’s playful, • 71 percent said they promote more moderate/light physical activity
• 89 percent said school food gardens increase opportunities for
innovative and engaging — just like Toyota physical activity
Evergreen Learning Grounds.
One in 10 Canadian children is overweight and one in three is obese. The results
of this new research underline the role green school grounds can play in combat-
ing this disturbing trend. Look for the full report on our website later this year.
A Garden
to Remember Photos by Sylvia Galbraith, Silver Creek Photography

More than 30 kids showed up on two separate weekends


last May to dig up and plant the garden. They moved 20
tonnes of dirt by hand over six hours and then replaced
it with two truckloads of triple mix.

The new school was the catalyst the


community needed to make the garden
happen. Led by Galbraith, an avid gardener
and professional photographer, the project
quickly gained momentum. “One of the
construction and landscape design classes
did the plan and made a scale model of it,”
says Galbraith. “It gave the kids a chance
to create something practical. They came
The garden has become an oasis for students, and there has been no vandalism – not even a footprint in a flowerbed.
up with the idea of a ‘living rock’ and they
One parent even saw a couple of boys sitting on one of the benches playing guitars at 7:30 in the morning!
wanted a vertical shape to symbolize life.”

In September 2004, century-old Centre The idea of a memory garden had actually This hunk of granite, shot through with
Wellington District High School in Fergus, been floating around for some time, for by amethyst, came from Thunder Bay and was
Ontario started a new life in a new building strange circumstance this school of 1,500 donated by parent John Eisen. As you can
at the edge of town. Planted in the corner kids had lost several children to accidents see, the rock is the centerpiece of this project
of a farmer’s field, the new school was all and illness over the course of 10 years. and has become a powerful teaching and
perfect angles and fresh pink brick, a stark “The tragedies had touched everyone,” learning tool for geology studies.
contrast to the rich character and mature says Sylvia Galbraith, co-chair of the
landscaping of the old site. It needed school council and the leader of the project. Students also designed and built the arbours
warming up. It needed humanity. And the “The guidance counselor told me kids would at the entrances (with donated lumber),
community needed healing. come into the office and say, ‘What can I and a special education class planted the
do?’ They felt so helpless in the face of four trees in the corners and helped put in
these deaths.” 300 bulbs last fall. “This class doesn’t often
Soil Stewards
hip
Activity: If the Earth Was an Apple
Worldwide, 25 billion tonnes of agricultural Show them the apple and give the following
topsoil are swept away every year — that’s 7 demonstration:
percent of the globe’s good growing land • Let’s say this apple is the Earth. (Cut the apple into
every decade. Use an apple to demonstrate quarters and set three of the quarters aside.)
the need for soil stewardship (you’ll need a • Three quarters of this apple represents all the
large apple and a knife). Ask the students oceans on Earth. The remaining quarter represents
what they know about soil. What is it? Why all the land on Earth. (Cut the remaining quarter in
do plants need it? How does it help humans? half and set one piece aside.)
• One half of the land is unfit for humans; it’s
either too hot, like a desert, or too cold like the
north and south poles. (Cut the remaining piece into


...the very process of restoring the land to health
is the process through which we become attuned to Nature and through Nature,
with ourselves. Restoration forestry, therefore, is both the means
and the end, for as we learn how to restore the forest, we heal the forest,
and as we heal the forest, we heal ourselves.
CHRIS MASER IN THE FOREST PRIMEVAL

y er
C oll
Cam

Teaching and
Learning
with Monarch
have the opportunity to help with projects
like this, and the kids were so happy with Butterflies!
their input,” says Galbraith.
Looking for inspiring summer training?
The garden, funded in part by Evergreen, has This three-day workshop for K - 8
had a strong impact on the students, giving teachers is a combo of classroom
them a sense of pride and ownership in their and field experience. Teachers learn
school, enriching their daily experience, and the life cycle, ecology and conservation
demonstrating that they can do something of monarchs; how to raise and release
real and positive in response to senseless them; provincial curriculum connections;
death. It has also, unexpectedly, connected how to create a school butterfly garden
three of the families who had all lost sons. and more. There are three workshops
“They showed up to plant last May and, this summer and the cost is $75 per
after being introduced, have become person: Winnipeg Aug. 1-3; Ottawa
The power of a garden to heal is legendary
friends,” says Galbraith. “The support they Aug. 9-11; and Orillia, Ontario Aug.
and miraculous. Perhaps it’s as simple as
have received from each other has helped 14-16.
Shakespeare’s insight that “One touch of
them immensely.” nature makes the whole world kin.”
For more information, go to
www.monarchcanada.org or email
monarchteacher@msn.com.
For other teacher training opportunities,
check out Teacher’s Corner on
evergreen.ca.
quarters and set three of them aside.) has to be produced on this small bit of land
• Of the land that humans can live on, only to feed all of the people of the world.
this small piece is land that we can grow
food on. The rest is too rocky, or there isn’t With so little soil in the world, what
enough sun for plants to grow. (Peel the should people be doing to take care
remaining piece). of it? (From Patterns Through
• This thin peel represents the thickness of the Seasons,
the soil in which we grow our food. It’s only LifeCycles and
about 1 m deep. This tiny portion is the only Evergreen,
area of the whole Earth where all the right 2003, p. 19)
conditions exist to grow food. Enough food
t hat a Fact
s ?

I
The Red-breasted Nuthatch. Have you ever caught
sight of this little guy hopping down a tree trunk
head first, and wondered why it likes the world
upside down? Turns out clever Sitta Canadensis
is on the prowl for tiny organisms in the nooks
and crannies of bark that other creatures have
overlooked on their way up. The Nuthatch’s big
hind toe and stubby tail provide secure footing
while he forages with his beak. And he also uses
his beak as a nutcracker (hence the name nut-hack

m
co
w. or nuthatch), wedging nuts in crevices and hammering
cca
m
ert them apart. Look for this busy bird in mixed-wood and
rob
coniferous forests.
Source: Hinterland Who’s Who, a partnership of the Canadian Wildlife Federation and the Canadian Wildlife Service, www.hww.ca

New Online Discussion Forum!


Infinitely expandable, unfathomably deep, informative, entertaining and inspiring — it’s a
new community of school ground greening folk, the place to connect with like minds across
Canada and internationally. From maze gardens to maintenance strategies, food projects to
fencing plans, you’ll find topics galore, with more added daily. It’s an easy-to-use bulletin
board where you can post questions, comments, documents, photos and videos. Dive in.
Join the discussion. It’s potluck, but it’s powerful. Go to evergreen.ca and click on Learning
Grounds. You’ll find the Discussion Forum in the menu bar at the top right of the page.

We Crave your Feedback!


A reminder to all schools that received funding or expert help from one of our Associates
this year that our evaluations are now online. Please take a few minutes to fill them out; it
will help us make the program better. Log in to Evergreen.ca and click on the link “Evaluate
the Learning Grounds Program”.

The Outdoor Classroom is a biannual newsletter published by Evergreen and distributed free of charge to schools across
Canada. No portion of The Outdoor Classroom may be reproduced, stored or transferred, electronically or otherwise, with-
out the express written permission of Evergreen.

Printed on paper recycled from 100% post-consumer waste that is processed chlorine free (PCF), acid free and with environmentally sound dyes.

www.evergreen.ca
1-888-426-3138
Evergreen Head Office 355 Adelaide St. W., 5th Floor, Toronto, ON M5V 1S2
Evergreen adheres to the Fundraising and Financial Accountability Code of Imagine Canada.
Donations and membership are tax deductible. Charitable registration Number: BN 131815763 RR0001.

Evergreen and Toyota Canada Inc. and its Dealerships are working together to ensure that children’s school environments are nurturing, learning environments. The Toyota Evergreen
Learning Grounds Program represents a commitment to contribute positively to the health and well-being of future generations by educating children about the importance of restoring and
preserving the environment. Teachers, students and community members are invited to participate in a nationwide effort to reclaim Canada’s school grounds and to create healthy learning
environments.
Check out the Toyota Evergreen Learning Grounds Charter on Evergreen’s web site — www.evergreen.ca/en/lg/lg-charter.html

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