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May 6, 2002
Life Lab unveils new Garden Classroom at grand opening June 1
By Jennifer McNulty
The popular Banana Slug String Band will headline the grand opening Saturday, June
1, of the Life Lab Garden Classroom at UCSC. The public is invited to celebrate the
creation of this new children's educational facility from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Garden
Classroom is on the UCSC Farm, and all grand opening events are free.
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| Taylor Henry, a kindergartener at Pacific School in Davenport, above, has fun
learning about science on a recent visit to the Garden Classroom. Erika Perloff,
who helped design the outdoor classroom, shows some of Taylor's classmates around,
below. Photos: Jennifer McNulty |
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Four years in the making, the Life Lab Garden Classroom is a model outdoor classroom
designed just for children, where youngsters can explore scientific concepts through
garden-based exhibits and activities.
School groups and teachers will visit the facility on organized tours and workshops,
and the Garden Classroom will be open to community visitors for self-guided tours.
Highlights of the new facility include an outdoor kitchen funded by Chez Panisse,
the "Rot Zone" featuring 10 different composting systems, a weather station,
a pollination garden, a water garden, and the "Sensual Spiral" that highlights
plants with different textures, smells, and colors.
Opening-day festivities will include performances by the Banana Slug String Band
at 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m., outdoor cooking demonstrations, seed sowing, and "worm
bingo." In addition, young visitors will be issued "passports" to
encourage them to get the most out of the day by touring the garden and visiting
"countries" such as "Seedlandia" and "Vegetopia." Fun
activities will be set up at each stop, where visitors can have their "passports"
stamped before moving on.
"This is a place where children can discover the science of nature,"
said Life Lab Science Program educational director Erika Perloff, who helped design
the outdoor classroom. "The Garden Classroom is a model for the natural world,
where children can take apart flowers and find seeds inside, hold worms for the first
time, pat chickens, and get a much closer look at the cycles of nature."
Adjacent to UCSC's 25-acre organic Farm, the 2-acre Garden Classroom features
engaging, hands-on stations that focus on areas like decomposition, adaptation, wildlife
habitats, and the weather.
"In the decomposition station, kids can gather leaves, build a compost pile,
check the temperature of piles that have begun to heat up, look at the creatures
that break down the organic matter, sift compost and add it to a garden bed, and
plant seedlings," said Perloff. "They get an up-close and personal understanding
of how nutrient-rich soil helps plants grow. It's all right there for them to see
and experience."
Life Lab's hands-on approach to science education has received acclaim from the
U.S. Department of Education, the National Science Foundation, and the National Academy
of Sciences. Affiliated with UCSC, Life Lab integrates life, Earth, and physical
sciences in ways that make learning fun. Gardening is also a nonthreatening approach
to science for teachers, many of whom lack formal science training. The Garden Classroom
will host training workshops for veteran teachers as well as those entering the profession.
"When used as living laboratories, gardens provide accessible sites for scientific
investigation," said Perloff, adding that all Santa Cruz city schools have incorporated
Life Lab gardens into their curriculum.
The facility hosts field trips for children in grades 2 through 5 in the spring
and fall, with separate themes offered for each grade level. Teachers will receive
pre- and post-visit classroom activities and are encouraged to bring their students
for two visits each year to capitalize on curriculum changes that vary with the seasons,
said Perloff. "Classes in the fall focus on the harvest, while spring tours
will focus on planting, growth, soil, and habitat," she said.
"The Garden Classroom has been part of our vision from the beginning, and
it will probably always be a work in progress," said Perloff, noting that plans
are in the works to create a human sundial and develop a unit on solar energy. The
garden was designed by the local landscape architecture firm Joni Janecki and Associates,
which donated much of the labor.
Since its inception in 1978, Life Lab has provided instructional workshops in
nearly 30 states. Hundreds of teachers around the country have turned to Life Lab
for an innovative approach to science education. Support for the Garden Classroom
included grants from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Santa Cruz County
Board of Supervisors, the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund, the Gabilan Foundation,
and the Stocker Foundation. The Garden Classroom is a joint project of Life
Lab and the UCSC Center for Agroecology
& Sustainable Food Systems.
For more information about Life Lab or the grand opening of the Garden Classroom,
call (831) 459-2001.
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