March/April 2000 Issue
FOCUS SECTION INDEX
Millennium Focus: Children's Gardening
Growing the Next Generation
A Child's Backyard in the New Millennium
A Return to Nature's Play Equipment
Children's Gardening Resources
AHS Sows Seeds of Imagination
Youth Garden Symposium
Millennium Focus: Children's Gardening
One of the most exciting areas in
horticulture today is the resurgence of interest in children's
gardening. Recognizing the value of gardening in teaching a
broad range of subjects, schools and communities across the
country are planting gardens as instructional tools and outdoor
classrooms. Public gardens are developing innovative interactive
displays and programs that are often coordinated with state and
national educational learning objectives.
And in our home gardens we are
discovering new ways to provide an environment for children to
experience nature first hand.
Growing the Next Generation
by Norman Lownds
"Come and look at our garden!"
That's the first thing I heard when I visited Wardcliff
Elementary School in East Lansing, Michigan, last fall. The kids
couldn't wait to show me the school garden they had planted in
the spring.
The overall design was a large
circle divided into segments by a star-shaped arrangement of
stepping stones. Each grade had propriety of one segment. The
kids themselves had decided on a theme for each that related to
their studies. Why the star? The children at this school are the
"All Stars."
These children are part of one of
the most exciting trends in gardening: the development of
gardens designed to inspire, teach, and entertain kids. What can
we expect for children's gardens in the new millennium? What
forces will shape and influence future children's gardens?
And what opportunities do we, as
gardeners everywhere, have to ensure the continued success of
children's gardens? The answers to these questions lie in the
new programs, initiatives, and goals that this trend is
generating.
Access to Children's Gardens
Children's gardens are certainly not new; in 1918 Brooklyn
Botanical Garden opened the first public garden designed for
children in the United States.
Eighty years later only a handful
of other public children's gardens were in existence, notably
the Children's Garden at Longwood Gardens, The Everett
Children's Adventure Garden at The New York Botanical Garden,
the Michigan 4-H Children's Garden, and the Children's
Demonstration Gardens at the American Horticultural Society's
River Farm headquarters.
But in just the past year
children's gardens have opened or are nearing completion at the
Atlanta Botanical Garden, The Cleveland Botanical Garden, and in
Camden, New Jersey.
More are in the design or early
construction stage at Quail Botanical Garden in California, Rio
Grande Botanic Garden in New Mexico, Above and Beyond Children's
Museum in Wisconsin, and Squam Lakes Natural Science Center in
New Hampshire.
School gardens are also gaining
popularity. In the not-too-distant future the school garden may
be so vital to the educational program that it will not fall
prey to budget cuts.
The development of these school
gardens will likely happen school by school, rather than on a
statewide basis as has been the case in California, where last
fall the state legislature passed, and the governor signed into
law, Bill AB 1014-Instructional School Gardens-which encourages
every public school to include a garden as an instructional
tool, and acknowledges the value of gardens in teaching a wide
range of subjects. Increasing access to public and school-based
children's gardens will prompt interest in developing children's
gardens elsewhere in the community.
Home gardens that invite children
to explore the natural world are also critical if we are to be
successful in passing on an understanding and appreciation of
the responsibilities involved in stewardship of the earth to the
next generation.
Community Involvement
"School gardens are a great vehicle for involving the community
in non-traditional ways including business partnerships, after
school programs, and grounds beautification," says Lisa Glick, a
consultant who has been involved in garden-based learning
programs for 15 years. "The school garden as an outdoor
classroom can become a focal point of the community."
A case in point is Dryden
Elementary School in rural upstate New York, which draws from a
large geographic area. To enhance a sense of community among the
widely distributed students and their families, Marcia Eames
Sheavly and a group of parent volunteers decided to develop a
school garden two years ago.
The day the beds were prepared, a
large and supportive turnout of 120 children, parents, teachers,
and administrators joined in a "bucket brigade" to build and
fill the beds. The plantings in the beds reflect themes drawn
from the curriculum of each grade level. The garden has expanded
as the gardeners-young and not-so-young-have gained confidence
and community interest has grown.
Involving Children
If children's gardens are to be successful, they must be focused
on children's needs and expectations. What better way to achieve
this focus and to encourage a proprietary attitude toward the
garden than to involve kids as active members of the design
team?
The Wardcliff "All Stars" garden
is a good example of how well this approach works. At the AHS
Children and Youth Gardening Symposium pre-conference workshop
to be held in June, a session called "Gardens for Kids by Kids"
will have children designing their own gardens. In the school
garden, children should be given responsibility for almost
everything. It should be theirs in practice, not just in name.
In addition to planting and maintenance, children can determine
and create the presentation and programming.
Older children can 'buddy' with
younger children to explore the garden, study plants, or simply
read and write stories in the garden. Well over half of young
children in this country today spend significant time in day
care and pre-school.
These environments can be vital
catalysts for learning. Children's gardens must respond to the
needs and interests of these children. Seats in the Storybook
Garden at the Michigan 4-H Children's Garden are only 10 inches
tall. Pint-sized visitors may encounter Winnie the Pooh, Tigger,
and their buddies-characters they can relate to-while they climb
over the Billy Goats' Gruff bridge or hide beneath the branches
of a weeping mulberry. Exposure to engaging children's gardens
and natural interactive discovery experiences can influence
attitudes that will last a lifetime.
State
and National Educational Standards
A garden-both its content and context-offers unique
opportunities to address and meet new educational standards.
Children's gardens can help achieve the national science goal
established by the National Research Council in 1996 that
students "experience the richness and excitement of knowing
about and understanding the natural world."
What better place to gain such
experience than in a garden, exploring plants and the
interactions among plants, animals, insects, weather, and
people? Public children's gardens are successfully addressing
the need to relate their programs to state and national
educational standards. "School gardens are not just for teaching
science, they can be used to teach any subject," says David
Pippin, education coordinator at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden
in Richmond, Virginia.
He explains that their children's
garden reflects state standards for Virginia schools beyond the
science curriculum. Since ancient Egypt is part of the second
grade social studies curriculum, the garden established an area
reflecting plants-including dill, papyrus, bay laurel, melons,
and basil-grown by ancient Egyptians. Woodcuts depicting
Egyptian gods that relate to children and agriculture were
constructed on plywood, and placed in the garden.
By combining history, art, and
science into the lesson, children are provided a richer
educational experience, and teachers are assisted in their
efforts to meet state educational standards.
Children's Garden Information
Information on all aspects of children's gardens from the very
first planning steps to developing programming and integrating
technology are becoming more available (see "Resources," page 23
of American Gardener
magazine). The
AHS Children and Youth Gardening symposia and regional
workshops are expanding their outreach. In addition, there is an
extensive range of resources available on the Internet. The
"Growing Gardens" program of the Michigan 4-H Children's Garden
is a summer workshop designed for children and adults interested
in children's gardens. It includes instruction on: planning and
designing, fundraising, constructing, and maintaining the garden
as well as suggestions for garden curricula.
Computer Technology
Today, children use computers in almost every facet of their
daily lives. Children's gardens must take advantage of the
opportunities technology offers to enhance and expand garden
experiences.
Through programs like the
Michigan 4-H Children's Garden's "Connected Classrooms" children
will soon be able to link directly with scientists and garden
experts for assistance with their questions. Children will take
digital photographs of their activities, create Web pages of
information, explore increasingly complex problems, and work on
individual assignments or group projects in ways that were not
possible until recently.
Technology will allow exciting
linkages and interactions among children's gardens in
communities, states, the nation, and the world, helping to grow
a new generation of gardeners who have access to resources,
information, and experiences we never imagined.
Shaping
Our Future
Children's gardens-garden spaces designed to engage children and
meet their specific needs-are important components of the
gardening landscape today and in the future. Through these
gardens children will experience the beauty, wonder, and
importance of plants and will establish long-lasting attitudes
about gardens and nature. Children's gardens throughout the
country are shaping the next generation of American gardeners
and citizens!
Norman Lownds
is curator of the Michigan 4-H Children's Garden at Michigan
State University in Lansing and chairman of the AHS National
Youth Garden Advisory Panel.

A
Child's Backyard in the New Millennium-A Return to Nature's Play
Equipment
By Molly Dannenmaier
A century ago, most kids
navigated the land freely. They climbed trees, swam in creeks,
built ramshackle huts in the woods. Swing sets, sliding boards,
and other manufactured outdoor children's play equipment had yet
to become a part of the American backyard. Children had to call
upon their own ingenuity and the playthings nature provided to
amuse themselves. Parents, comfortable and familiar with the
outdoors, rarely attempted to shield children from the possible
dangers of playing there.
Today, a myriad of inventions and
lifestyle changes is creating a young generation with far less
intimate knowledge of the physical world. School buses,
television, radio, CD players, video games, the internet, and a
myriad of after school lessons all conspire to keep children
away from the "dangers" of unsupervised outdoor life. When they
do play outdoors, it's often on a sterile playground, field, or
flat, chain-linked yard where all the botanical complexity has
been stripped away in favor of "safety" and "ease of care."
But children need to learn about
nature from nature itself, asserts Herb Schaal, designer of the
new Children's Garden at the Cleveland Botanical Garden, who has
observed a conscious backlash against the pervasiveness of
simulated materials. "As fewer natural experiences are a part of
people's everyday lives, the more they crave the chance to get
back to environments that are not recreations or simulations of
nature but are the real thing itself."
And who, if not the adult
passionate about his or her own relationship with nature, is
best equipped to pass on a legacy of intimate outdoor experience
to the next generation of children? Who will the next generation
of outdoor stewards be if we raise children unfamiliar with the
joy of nature's everyday caresses?
How Adults Can
Pass on a Love of Gardens to the Next Generation?
Prepare the Environment. Like
every good teacher knows, planning is crucial. Think about what
your child likes to do: Cut? Draw? Dig? Water? Hunt for slugs?
Gather the equipment necessary-scissors, chalk, a trowel, a
watering can--to let him choose from a variety of independent
adventures during your joint outdoor enterprise. Let him give
the weeds a haircut. Let him draw on your garden walls or
walkway with chalk. Let him water your plants. Let him dig a
hole, fill it with water, and float leaves. Let him hunt through
the firewood for invertebrates. Go on with your own gardening
activities while he explores through play.
Be
Patient. Don't be disappointed if your well-crafted
plan to plant a moonflower patch with your three-year-old turns
into a free-for-all of flying dirt and spilled seeds. She will
have a wonderful time just being outdoors with you if you can
maintain a sense of whimsy and flexibility.
Let Your
Teaching Follow the Child. While planning is
important, sometimes it's more effective to let the child's
discoveries and moments of excitement dictate where the lesson
will flow. If the child finds a ladybug while watering a tomato
plant, tell her how ladybugs help in the garden by eating up
aphids, then see if you can find some aphids and tell her what
they do. If the child digs holes close to your lemon balm or any
other fragrant plant, rub its leaves or pull its head forward
and let her smell. Take her to other fragrant spots in the
garden. Appeal to the child's senses, and she will eventually
seek knowledge on her own.
Provide
space for experiments. Set aside room so kids can
grow their own unusual plants. Atlanta landscape architect Mary
Palmer Dargan says many of the families with whom she works have
started plots of miniature vegetables like 'Tom Thumb' lettuce,
'Bambino' eggplant, and 'Sugarbaby' watermelon. If you have
trouble sharing your garden space, it may be best to designate a
specific area as "the kids' garden." It doesn't have to be huge;
a window box or large planter, filled with pungent herbs,
luscious tomatoes, or colorful flowers can be very rewarding for
a child, and won't require hours of weeding. And if they decide
to grow crabgrass and dandelions, well, see "Be Patient" above.
Garden Elements that Capture
Children's Imagination
Water.
The urge to seek water is a deep, defining human drive-as
children's outdoor explorations of alley puddles, gutter
streams, ditches and mudholes consistently proves. Washington,
D.C. landscape architect James van Sweden predicts many more
ponds, manmade streams, and innovative fountains will enliven
family gardens in the new century.
Creatures. Children and animals are soul mates.
Steve Martino, a landscape architect who champions the use of
native plants in his desert Arizona landscape, sees the 21st
century as a time when families will embrace native plants as
garden worthy, especially since they attract native animals.
"Backyards will become havens that reflect a family's
environmental values," says Martino.
Refuges. Children love to hide. Outdoor structures
that create a sense of enclosure-especially those made from
unmilled timber or bent saplings-introduce a feeling of
wildness and mystery to a family garden. Herbalist Jim Long's
book Making Bentwood Trellises, Arbors, Gates, and Fences,
offers an array of designs that a parent and child could make
together in one weekend. "People are inundated by
mass-produced products," says Long, "Making a simple arbor
together is much more rewarding than buying a plastic
playhouse."
Dirt.
Children are messy. They need the chance to dig to China, make
mud pies, scoop out elfin rivers and build mud mountains. In
the new century backyards need space for children to express
themselves in the medium of mud. Kibbe Turner, a Maryland
landscape designer who specializes in ecological family
gardens, often creates naturalistic "beaches" of sandy soil
alongside his manmade streams, where children can dig and
create to their heart's content. "Too many people think of
dirt as unsanitary-something to be avoided," says Turner.
"Children know better."
Heights. No aspect of children's outdoor play
became more endangered during the 20th century than climbing.
There's always the jungle gym of course, but safety-minded
adults have eliminated nearly all other climbing possibilities
that entail ingenuity and imagination--and an element of
danger. Florida landscape architect Raymond Jungles, who built
a tree house for his own kids in their backyard fiddle-leaf
fig, discourages parents' overzealous fearfulness for kids'
safety. "It's a great victory to peer up into a tree,
calculate how to get up into its branches, and then actually
propel your body up there," he says. "Kids need freedom to
discover their environment from more than one angle."
Movement. Kids need lots of movement-climbing,
running, jumping--for their brains to develop as fully as
possible, says neuroscientist Marion Diamond, author of Magic
Trees of the Mind. But this movement, she says, should ideally
take place in an "enriched environment," in which a child is
constantly encountering new and unexpected elements to
mentally assess and physically negotiate. An "enriched" play
garden should include many shapes, sizes, and varieties of
plants and climbing trees, as well as an open grassy space for
free, exuberant movement.
Make Believe Whimsical
outdoor art that often does double duty as play equipment will
enliven family outdoor spaces in the new millennium says San
Francisco landscape designer Topher Delaney. Her latest home
garden includes a big red rubber sandbox that twirls around
like a lazy Susan juxtaposed with a skinny woods made of
timber bamboo for the children to harvest for their own
building projects.