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Curricula
Gardening
Basic and Popular Eduponics
Elementary, secondary and adult learners will learn how to cultivate vegetables for home consumption and review how urban economics can be used to improve diets and urban economic development. All courses are intended for adaptation by the teacher for the preparation level of the students.
We anticipate that participants will benefit in the following ways.
By working in teams they will gain appreciation for skills of others.
By having specific objectives they will learn future orientation.
By having a reporting requirement they will acquire a sense of achievement.
By earning a Certificate of Completion.
STEM Eduponics
Advanced and professional learners will probe more deeply into cultivation, production and business aspect of hydroponic farming. Here are some goals for teachers, students, public, and institutions.
Methodology
We teach hydroponic gardening as part of a curriculum that considers diet, nutrition, food production and distribution, technology, business development, marketing and sales, all in the context of observed inequalities and how socio-economic development and status affect food distribution and well-being in a system. We work with individuals, entrepreneurs or non-profit organizations interested in addressing issues of food production and equitable distribution in the context of worldwide and localized hunger, sometimes called food deserts.
Students will come away with an understanding of possible solutions to problems in contemporary food systems and ways they might participate therein, as well as with some practical skills in gardening and food handling. Our training program is "STEM" based, the usual STEM acronym* to which we add "(A)griculture" and by which we mean a broad array of communication skills that build awareness of our indoor urban gardening objectives. We have worked with both certified and uncertified non-profit partners and have concentrated in programs of re-engagement of disaffected students who are restarting their education or careers and on issues affecting immigrants. We also encourage teachers to include language arts by requiring peer and public reports on activities at "the farm." Our STEAM curriculum is unique in the industry. * Science, technology, engineering, mathematics, + agriculture.
We operate on a mastery-learning model, and each student's activity will be tracked with respect to specific skills attempted and mastered. We draw upon our own long experience and that of our sponsoring organizations, which are ethnically diverse and community based. We attempt to address several objectives.
InstructionPrograms are designed to fit into traditional 10-15 week academic terms, or they can be configured for other time frames or self-paced learning. Equipment must be ordered and delivered with up to six weeks lead time. Regarding stated specific goals, the project
The local program host must provide floorspace. The minimum configuration is 600 square feet. Recruitment
Each of our partner organizations will distribute information about the program to its constituency. We anticipate this will reach several thousand households. We will request PSA time on local radio and publicize in neighborhood news organs and on affiliated websites.
Multi-culturalismWe currently provide curricular tools in English; we developing a Spanish curriculum in cooperation with a licensed hispanic vocational training school, and we can already supply Spanish interpretation. The presence of interpreters is encouraged—to the extent that floor space allows and does not impact the experience of other learners. The project team is culturally diverse and is drawn from a professional organization that has agreed to provide teaching and support for this project at discounted rates. We apply the principles of affirmative action in the selection of staff and management. Our principals worked together for decades and have strong personal commitments to fair and open hiring. Several past projects have been based in ethnic communities affected by food deficits, both economic and cultural. As a group we have individually or collectively worked with minority youth to teach work skills, adaptive and collaborative behavior, and intercultural understanding. The team brings decades of experience dealing with youth and education. Nothing in the curriculum prevents development of local programs emphasizing culturally relevant diets and foodstuffs. We encourage developers to include their techniques and products in our teaching mix by creating appropriate course content for publication here. Programs led or managed by principals have included
Covid-19
We have and will continue to utilize applicable policies to prevent contagion, including masking and extra hygiene as required. We also note that due to the food-handling aspects of our activities, both required and voluntary, we are probably more attuned to these matters than most other projects.
Courseware
Visitors see only sample course; registered users see full list. Contact Eduponics for access.
Samples
General InstructionAuthorized users only.
Contact Eduponics for access.
Teacher TrainingAuthorized users only.
Contact Eduponics for access.
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