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July 10, 2019

At a New York City garden, students grow their community roots and critical consciousness

Jennifer D. Adams, Werklund School of Education, writing in Conversation Canada
Sunflowers and luffa vines ā€” related to cucumber, gourd and squash ā€” are tended by a Community Roots participant and mentor in a Brooklyn school community garden with their instructor (right).
Sunflowers and luffa vines ā€” related to cucumber, gourd and squash ā€” are tended by a Community Roots

Iris, a high school student in New York City, took a course aimed at preparing public school students for college. As part of the course, she visited theĀ , among the oldest member-owned businesses in the United States. Members work monthly shifts in return for access to affordable, ethically sourced food and goods. Students enrolled in the course ā€” called Community Roots ā€” investigated the largerĀ Ā while gardening and learning about food-related activities.

When Iris told her family of her experience, ā€œThey said, ā€˜ā€™ā€ she recalled. Irisā€™s family had emigrated from the Caribbean island of St. Vincent and had not yet heard of the food co-op. They also understood, through their lived experiences,Ā .

Iris joined the co-op, attracted by its alternative consumer model. Through her membership, Iris and her family had access to reasonably priced staples and familiar and healthy foods. Joining the co-op was one of a series of actions Iris took towards becoming an outspoken advocate for womenā€™s and immigrantsā€™ issues.

Iris later completed an undergraduate degree in critical Black feminist studies, and a law degree focused on environmental and immigrant rights.

Callaloo, a kind of amaranth used in Caribbean cuisine, is among the greens Community Roots students have grown.

Callaloo, a kind of amaranth used in Caribbean cuisine, is among the greens students have grown.

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A course grows in Brooklyn

Irisā€™s course, Community Roots, isĀ . The course is part of College Now, a free college transition program that is a partnership between the City University of New York and the New York City Department of Education. Jennifer, one of this storyā€™s authors, mentors Pieranna, the other author and the director ofĀ .

Community Roots uses the entire city as a classroom. It seesĀ as essential to teaching and learning. Urban gardening serves as a departure point for learning about land and relationships, as well as food, consumer culture and social activism.

°Õ³ó±šĢżĀ emphasis of Community Roots emerged from an actual experience of conflict between a university and a community garden. Pieranna was a member of the thriving community garden that was located on the periphery of the campus where she was working. She invited local high school students who were enrolled in College Now courses during the year to participate in unstructured gardening in the summer.

As student interest grew, Pieranna formalized the activity as a service-learning course, and thus the number of gardening students grew. A turning point in the evolution of the course came when the collegeā€™s decision to raze the garden to expand a parking lot was met by resistance from gardeners and community greening advocates. As issues ofĀ around the city, theĀ Ā to expand a parking lot captured attention.

Ultimately, the garden was razed and reinstituted as a smaller college garden on a strip of land bordering the enlarged parking lot. For several years, Community Roots had no access to the new garden. However, lessons learned aboutĀ Ā related to histories of colonization and gentrification helped re-direct the course.

³¢³Ü³¦°ģ¾±±ō²ā,Ģżand school gardens. The course accessed other urban gardens and grassroots food-related organizations such as the Park Slope Food Coop, where both Pieranna and Jennifer are members.

Community Roots students planting seeds in a Brooklyn public school garden.

Community Roots students planting seeds in a Brooklyn public school garden.

Pieranna Pieroni

Sowing seeds of change

Raven, a student who grew up in Coney Island, recalls a reading in Community Roots class from Brazilian educator and theoristĀ ā€™s bookĀ Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Freire introduced an approach called problem-posing: teachers and students teach and learn together. Their major subjects of inquiry include themselves, each other and the ideas and issues that shape their realities and relationships.

Pedgagogy of the OppressedĀ led Raven to reflect on what she experienced in high school ā€” what Freire calls the banking model of education, a one-way learning style whereby the teacher deposits knowledge in the studentā€™s mind. Raven captioned a cartoon she created about her earlier high school learning:

ā€œItā€™s like we open our skulls up and the teacher puts something in thereā€¦ā€

Community Roots digs into theorists like Freire and other traditions ofĀ . Thus the course centres on studentsā€™ lived experiences and allows for the development ofĀ .

Raven contrasted her high-school experience to the newer critically engaged style of learning. She returned to Community Roots as an undergraduate program mentor where she adeptly engaged her near-peers inĀ Ģż±š»å³Ü³¦²¹³Ł¾±“Ē²Ō.

Raven took the class on walking tours of her neighbourhood to explore how it was rebuilt in the Coney Island area in the aftermath of the 2012 Hurricane Sandy: the boardwalk and tourist attractions were renovated and developers who already had their sights on the area redoubled their efforts in a neighbourhood long in need of investment. In contrast,Ā . New luxury towers, higher rents and upscale businesses are pressing out long-term residents like Ravenā€™s family.

Raven is now majoring in sustainability, working as a school hydroponics farm manager and is committed to helping communities like hers build resilience that works for everyone.

Harvesting tomatoes and chard in one of the gardens.

Harvesting tomatoes and chard in one of the gardens.

Pieranna Pieroni

Teaching for transformation

Community Roots attracts many students like Iris and Raven: immigrants, children of immigrants and first-generation college students. Each studentĀ . Learning starts in the garden and branches out into related themes and different parts of the city. When students make connections through critical thinking and relationships, their capacities to lead in their families and communities is strengthened.

The names Iris and Raven are pseudonyms chosen by the students for confidentiality.

Sunflower, one of many flowers grown in Community Roots gardens.

Sunflower, one of many flowers grown in Community Roots gardens.

Shutterstock


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