Creating a Learning Environment to Promote Food Sustainability Issues in Primary Schools? Staff Perceptions of Implementing the Food for Life Partnership Programme
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Education for Sustainable Development
1.2. Garden Enhanced Education and Farm Visits
1.3. The Food for Life Partnership
- Food leadership: promoting food reform through an action group with student, teacher, catering staff and parent representatives.
- Food quality and provenance: working with school meal caterers to procure more local, seasonal, organic, Marine Stewardship Council and higher welfare foods.
- Food education: reforming practical food education, particularly with regard to raising issues of environmental and social sustainability through gardening, cooking, visits to farms and local food producers, and classroom projects.
- Food culture and community involvement: engaging with parents and the wider community on the use of healthier and more sustainably sourced food in school and at home.
2. Methods
2.1. Methodology
2.2. School Sample
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Measures and Interview Topics
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Section 1: School ESD Related Outputs and Outcomes
Programme indicator | Baseline | Follow up |
---|---|---|
Garden-based education | ||
Facilities for growing—growing area over 10 m2 | 16 | 53 |
Staff training covering organic horticultural skills | 13 | 51 |
Food plant bio-diversity—growing over 5 out of 15 crop types | 24 | 52 |
Community participation—parents and volunteers assist in school garden | 12 | 37 |
Over 25% of students participated in school-based growing activity | 16 | 41 |
Farm-linked education | ||
School has an educational link with a working farm | 31 | 55 |
A class of students keep in touch with a local farm throughout the year, through farm visits/online links. | 2 | 32 |
Community participation—parents and volunteers assist with farm visits | 10 | 41 |
Parents/carers can buy or collect organic local farm produce at the school | 0 | 11 |
Over 25% of students participated in farm visits | 8 | 18 |
Whole school aspects of ESD | ||
Parent consultation process on food and sustainability education in school | 20 | 55 |
Home projects: growing and cooking with sustainable food ingredients | 4 | 53 |
School food policy and food action plan covering sustainability issues | 9 | 55 |
School-wide curriculum references sustainable food education | 18 | 53 |
Use of sustainably sourced ingredients in cookery classes | 7 | 55 |
School menus are seasonal and highlight in-season produce | 7 | 47 |
Over 25% of students participated in cooking at school with sustainably sourced ingredients | 30 | 45 |
A whole school vision for transforming food culture | 92% |
Provision of more local, seasonal and sustainably sourced food in school | 86% |
Setting up farm visits with clear educational value | 96% |
Setting up farm visits with a good standard of facilities | 76% |
Setting up farm visits where health and safety issues have been addressed | 87% |
Design and development of suitable sites for growing activities | 80% |
Training and advice on organic horticulture and farming | 98% |
Health, safety and practical advice on management of growing areas | 73% |
Development of areas to attract wildlife | 65% |
Provision of garden tools and equipment | 83% |
Linking growing projects to the curriculum and wider educational goals | 71% |
Actively involving students in decisions on food & sustainability in school | 75% |
Actively involving parents or wider community | 67% |
3.2. Section 2: Staff Perspectives on Implementing Farm and Garden-Based ESD
3.2.1. Making Links to the Curriculum
[The farm visit was] a fantastic experience that has had a brilliant knock on learning effect. The children in their food lessons can now describe organic farming, egg production, chicken meat production and discuss the advantages and disadvantages of various methods of production. This learning is invaluable as they learn from experience rather than the teacher saying so. (17:3)We have dedicated curriculum time every week as part of our planning. Each class has a garden plot and classes do [horticultural] research for the garden in terms of conditions needed for growth, plant families and so on. This feeds into theme weeks around the topic of food. (5:2)
Having a link with a farm means that we have more resources to work with and it makes our classroom curricula teaching come to life because they can see how food is produced in its natural setting. (42:1)
3.2.2. Underpinning the School Ethos
[FFLP’s gardening and farm link based activities have] focused and united the staff and pupils in shared vision in the development of a creative curriculum with a green ethos for our school. (29:1)The general approach of the whole food process; growing is embraced and celebrated, this then feeds in to the school dinners where a positive approach to food and eating is developed. (7:2)
3.2.3. Involving Parents and Community Engagement
Children and parents are now involved in growing fruit and vegetables, and flowers. They grow things at school and take some home. We now have a few parents with chickens at home, following our lead. (43:1)
Parents tell us that invariably they remake the meal as soon as they get home because their child is so keen to demonstrate what they have just learnt. Testament to this is the fact that the local supermarket ran out of filo pastry after children made home grown potato and pea samosas one week. (27:1)
We never used to able to attract parents into the school: I don’t know why. But with the events like the Growing Day the response from parents has been absolutely amazing. We seem to have attracted a lot more parents in just lately. (14:2)
3.2.4. Extending the Educational Sphere
I take the children out into the garden to pick the veg and show them how it’s prepared in the kitchen. I find that because they’ve actually been helping grow the stuff they’ll actually eat it. I notice that when we have one of the other lettuces bought in they won’t eat it, but they want to eat the one that they’ve grown. We gave them mizuna [an oriental salad] to taste...they loved it (laughs)...the next day they asked whether they could have it again at lunch. (29:4)
3.2.5. Challenges: Funding, Capacity and Risks
Composting is a challenge because of the health and safety implications and staffing challenges for the children to manage our waste daily. As a result we are reliant upon the caretaker moving compost waste with the exception of reception children who manage their own fruit and veg waste. (49:2)
3.2.6. Challenge of Sustainability Messages
We used the assembly to raise the idea of making small changes. We’re very aware that all families are on a budget. So we proposed that if one family buys one fair trade item a week, then that would be over 400 items in our school. If another school does the same that figure becomes 800. So small changes can make a big effect. (38:2)
I took [into class] sunflowers, tomatoes…and some of the other things we were growing. We talked [about where the produce came from]. I said it would be cooked at lunchtime and most of them wanted to try it. [Later] most of them were saying “it’s lovely.” Even if they hated the veg they said they’d give it a go. (51:2)
3.2.7. Opportunities for Participation in Programme Activities
[With] so many children in the school it has presented a real challenge. We have allocated dedicated slots in which we take groups of children into the garden during the week. At the moment we have a potato competition. Every class has sacks, potato seeds and compost and we are going to see who can grow the heaviest yield. So we’ve tried to include every child in the school. (27:1)
4. Discussion and Conclusion
- involvement of external experts and resources, possibly provided by specialist support agencies or as part of national schemes, such as the Eco-Schools initiative
- highlight the importance of planning and support schools to identify ways to integrate these into the curriculum or other school activities
- help schools to identify ways to facilitate the involvement of the wider community in the programme
- facilitate sharing of good practice between schools, through partnership links and development of progressive skills based learning approaches.
- Freeing up staff time for programme implementation and to take full advantage of opportunities for greater depth of educational engagement
- lack of funds, facilities and equipment to support an integration of ESD across school life
- difficulties communicating complex concepts and issues related to food sustainability
- reliance on under-supported community volunteers, which can place aspects of the programme at risk or lead to dilution of ESD messages
- equality of access for all students in cases where some activities are restricted to certain groups of children
Acknowledgements
Conflict of Interest
References and Notes
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Share and Cite
Weitkamp, E.; Jones, M.; Salmon, D.; Kimberlee, R.; Orme, J. Creating a Learning Environment to Promote Food Sustainability Issues in Primary Schools? Staff Perceptions of Implementing the Food for Life Partnership Programme. Sustainability 2013, 5, 1128-1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5031128
Weitkamp E, Jones M, Salmon D, Kimberlee R, Orme J. Creating a Learning Environment to Promote Food Sustainability Issues in Primary Schools? Staff Perceptions of Implementing the Food for Life Partnership Programme. Sustainability. 2013; 5(3):1128-1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5031128
Chicago/Turabian StyleWeitkamp, Emma, Mat Jones, Debra Salmon, Richard Kimberlee, and Judy Orme. 2013. "Creating a Learning Environment to Promote Food Sustainability Issues in Primary Schools? Staff Perceptions of Implementing the Food for Life Partnership Programme" Sustainability 5, no. 3: 1128-1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5031128
APA StyleWeitkamp, E., Jones, M., Salmon, D., Kimberlee, R., & Orme, J. (2013). Creating a Learning Environment to Promote Food Sustainability Issues in Primary Schools? Staff Perceptions of Implementing the Food for Life Partnership Programme. Sustainability, 5(3), 1128-1140. https://doi.org/10.3390/su5031128