Showing posts with label Goethe elementary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goethe elementary. Show all posts

5.17.2010

THIS IS ONLY THE BEGINNING

So I am really excited to tell of the recent news:

There seems to be a more concrete fabrication of the garden which is extremely amazing!

After we met with Alderman Joe Moreno about two weeks ago and asked him for his letter of support, there was a bit of a wait in regards the letter's legality.
So today I finally received a call from his office asking what the garden will be called what community groups the garden would be under.

Sally then got a call from Michele Rhymes from the Zoning and Land Use Planning Dept of the City of Chicago regarding the same questions, the name and the groups of support.
And she also got this message from Julie Samuels at Openlands:

"Would your group be able to start the garden project this season...soon? We have access to some resources - possibly - I am working on a wish list of donations..."

The garden is MATERIALIZING BEFORE OUR EYES!

There are a few more steps of course, some of them can get a bit messy, but the garden is surely being born!

We are having another community garden committee meeting this Thursday!

1.13.2010

Writing proposals for the garden

100 Projects for Peace
Goethe Elementary Esperanza Community Garden
Michelle D. Villarreal
The School of the Art Institute of Chicago

Imagine a school that has no art curriculum. As unimaginable as it may seem, due to Chicago Public School’s lack of funding, Goethe Elementary, located in the Logan Square Chicago neighborhood, has no art curriculum. The Goethe Elementary Esperanza Community Garden project will be a creative endeavor located on a large, underutilized lot across the street from the school, specifically intended to fill this void.
As a creative response to several identified needs in my neighborhood, I am working to support the minds and bodies of the children, by starting a community garden with and for Goethe Elementary School. In keeping with the first language of 87.3% of the students in this school, we will be entitling the garden project, Esperanza, which means ‘hope’ in Spanish. The purpose of this garden will be to emphasize the connections between people and food, their natural surroundings, questions of ecological restoration, and a creative place to cement relationships within the neighborhood and school.
The school is nestled within the neighborhood of Logan Square, a neighborhood known for its unity and advancement in ecological awareness. This is just the beginning of similar projects within the city, with given opportunity. Relationships have been established within the school and surrounding community, including the Local School Council of Goethe Elementary, the 1st Ward where the school and lot are located, Logan Square Association, and Greater Goethe Neighborhood association, among others. It is evident in the desire to bring this garden to life, the missing element being funding. The funding would be able to provide:
• Hoop house, green house for winter months
• Soil that is adequate for planting and wood chips
• Seeds, trees, native plants
• Tools and water hose
• Shed for storage, with rules on one side, and rotating art mural on the street side
• Topiary making materials for the children, art materials
• Two benches for the two entrances, to be decorated by the children
• Sign for the garden as well as information regarding the garden, i.e. hours, volunteer information, etc.
• Fence made out of sustainable materials
• Vermicomposting materials
• Educational website to foster a curricular link between Goethe’s classes and the garden.

With projects such as this, it is a possibility to begin to nurture students’ curiosity about how nature works and about food production, something that children in urban environments are not likely to encounter nor able to connect with. Urban agriculture can be seen as a means to combat rising food prices due to transportation to grocery store, but not compromising nutrition. As well improve access to quality food in cities by creating local sources of fresh produce. Sustainable, local food systems are not only a way to ensure food security but also a means of addressing social justice issues and to get youth involved in food production.
Ideally a youth program will be created within the Goethe Elementary Esperanza Community garden that teaches children about food production, media literacy, sustainable development and community education and organizing, and a place where their artistic capabilities and problem solving can grow. The garden will serve as the classroom and be supplemental to artistic creativity within the topiary area.
Building upon the work of other urban farms and community garden projects in the Chicago area, such as City Farm by Ken Dunn, Wood Street Urban Farm on the Chicago South side, Maypole lot(s), Waters School and Community garden, and many others, Esperanza will involve both the grade school and the surrounding neighborhood in the production and maintenance of the garden.
All volunteers will have the added incentive of being rewarded with a portion of the produce. Bringing nature to the city, offering educational opportunities to children who attend Goethe Elementary, but not exclusively, and cultivating a self-help ethos in a democratic space will be evident in the garden. It is important to see gardens such as this proposed garden be created, the necessity is derived from our imminent ecological impact on the earth, there is a definite need to teach better stewardship to youth, and to create a positive space for conversation on such topics, such as ecology of food, bring youth back to nature, and education in ecological design would foster the ability to see things in their ecological context, integrating first hand experience and practical competence with theoretical knowledge about how nature works, thus enhancing the learning resources of students of Goethe Elementary and giving them opportunity to see the world they live in with better judgment of what is ecologically sound as they are able to grow to be better and more creative beings within their surroundings.
Creativity sparks any little ember that is lit. My 100 Projects for Peace proposal is a request for the starter funding that would allow this vacant lot to become an exceptionally creative urban garden that can positively effect this Logan Square neighborhood, like a forest fire of hope. In keeping with the meaning of Esperanza, we are hoping for a means to find the wings for flight; that would allow the young students at Goethe and their families, the tangibility of increased food security and the actualization of a few of their dreams, to insure the belief in even more possibility.



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I met tonight with two lovely ladies from the Logan Square, both activists, and part of MAPA (http://mapachicago.org) Jennie Dye and Sally.
I was very much moved and happy that this is a feasible project, with people who support such projects as their dedication to the neighborhood is evident.

11.19.2009

Advancements

I met with the Local School Council of Goethe Elementary tonight with the lovely Sociology major Kathryn Haedo.
I am so happy and excited that she is accompanying my in this project. This will be a community effort that I feel will be most fruitful and wonderful when the garden has been established.
We were listening to the LSC deliberate on different important issues within the school- budget, fund raising, funding, school uniforms, quality of education, curriculum, extracurricular activities, etc. The Group was small with the attendees of about 5 parents and three faculty members.
We made a presentation for them to view with our intentions and their responses were very positive.
They offered their support and considerations.

I will write more about the meeting tomorrow!
Thanks.