March 13, 2025

Starting a School Garden: An Outdoor Classroom

School gardens offer a unique and enriching learning experience for children, connecting them to nature, healthy food choices, and community. They transform the outdoors into a dynamic classroom where students can engage with science, history, math, and more.

The Benefits of a School Garden

A school garden provides an ideal outdoor classroom. Within a single visit, students can:

  • Record plant growth.
  • Study decomposition by turning a compost pile.
  • Learn about plants, nature, and the outdoors.
  • Make healthier food choices.
  • Learn about nutrient cycles.
  • Develop a deeper appreciation for the environment, community, and each other.

School gardens can be integrated into various subjects. History lessons can explore the community's agricultural past, while math classes can use the garden for practical measurements and calculations.

How to Begin

School gardens don't have to be grand. Even individual classrooms can start with container gardens by planting seeds in small pots, watering them daily, and placing them in a sunny corner. However, a larger, outdoor garden provides opportunities to teach children about community, plants, vegetables, and responsibility.

Key Steps:

  1. Find a Coordinator: Designate someone to oversee the garden program. This is a great opportunity to involve parents.

  2. Establish a Volunteer Committee: Assign parents specific tasks in planning, upkeep (even during summer), and funding.

  3. Incorporate Garden Activities into the Curriculum: Plan classroom lessons that incorporate the garden and its plants. Assign students garden-related jobs to introduce them to gardening, responsibility, and community.

  4. Choose a Spot: Select a sunny location close to the building for easy access. Proximity to an outdoor spigot is also ideal for watering.

  5. Consider a Garden Shed: If space permits, a shed can store gardening gloves, tools, buckets, and hoses.

Digging In

Once you've chosen your spot, it's time to start digging and planting! Both new and established gardens benefit from compost and mulch. Many schools purchase compost initially and then start making their own, offering a valuable science lesson.

Composting:

  • Use grass clippings, yard trimmings, rotten vegetables, and food scraps from the cafeteria or students' lunches.
  • Create compost piles in the garden or use worm boxes in the classroom.

Expanding the Garden

Depending on funding and the school's needs, gardens can become elaborate with fences, ponds, trellises, trees, and shrubs. However, all a school garden truly needs is a little bit of dirt and a few plants (preferably an assortment of vegetables, fruit, and wildflowers) that students can study and even eat.

Whether the school garden is established only for one class or grade level, or if it is going to be available to everyone at the school, is a factor that will determine the types of plants and the size of the overall garden. Whether big or small, complex or simple, school gardens provide a wonderful, enriching learning experience for children and their parents alike.