{"title":"The Blossoming of the Library Garden: How One Library Is Engaging Families Outdoors","authors":"M. Trivisonno, Beate Van der Schalie","doi":"10.5860/CAL.19.1.13","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"As twenty-first-century libraries create programming, they are finding innovative ways to engage children and families in lifelong learning through hands-on experiences.Outdoor nature spaces and gardens at public libraries are ideal environments for both formal and informal learning. In underserved, urban communities where greenspace is limited, providing a learning garden as a resource is especially valuable.Using Cuyahoga County Public Library’s (CCPL’s) Warrensville Heights (WVH) branch library as a case study, this article explores how a library in a low-income inner-ring suburb installed a children’s garden that led to numerous positive impacts. In October 2015, Sari Feldman, then executive director of Cuyahoga County Public Library in suburban Cleveland, Ohio, approached the staff of the WVH branch with the idea of developing a children’s garden at the branch. In Warrensville Heights, a community with a population of roughly thirteen thousand, many families live in apartments and lack access to green space. The area is aptly described as a “food desert,” where residents have little access to fresh produce.","PeriodicalId":90139,"journal":{"name":"Children & libraries","volume":"42 1","pages":"13"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-04-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Children & libraries","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5860/CAL.19.1.13","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
As twenty-first-century libraries create programming, they are finding innovative ways to engage children and families in lifelong learning through hands-on experiences.Outdoor nature spaces and gardens at public libraries are ideal environments for both formal and informal learning. In underserved, urban communities where greenspace is limited, providing a learning garden as a resource is especially valuable.Using Cuyahoga County Public Library’s (CCPL’s) Warrensville Heights (WVH) branch library as a case study, this article explores how a library in a low-income inner-ring suburb installed a children’s garden that led to numerous positive impacts. In October 2015, Sari Feldman, then executive director of Cuyahoga County Public Library in suburban Cleveland, Ohio, approached the staff of the WVH branch with the idea of developing a children’s garden at the branch. In Warrensville Heights, a community with a population of roughly thirteen thousand, many families live in apartments and lack access to green space. The area is aptly described as a “food desert,” where residents have little access to fresh produce.
21世纪的图书馆在创造节目的同时,也在寻找创新的方式,通过亲身体验让儿童和家庭参与终身学习。公共图书馆的户外自然空间和花园是正式和非正式学习的理想环境。在服务不足的城市社区,绿色空间有限,提供一个学习花园作为一种资源特别有价值。本文以凯霍加县公共图书馆(CCPL)沃伦斯维尔高地(WVH)分馆为例,探讨了一个低收入内环郊区的图书馆如何安装一个儿童花园,并产生了许多积极的影响。2015年10月,萨里·费尔德曼(Sari Feldman),当时俄亥俄州克利夫兰郊区凯霍加县公共图书馆(Cuyahoga County Public Library)的执行主任,找到WVH分馆的工作人员,提出在分馆开发一个儿童花园的想法。在沃伦斯维尔高地,一个大约有1.3万人口的社区,许多家庭住在公寓里,没有绿色空间。该地区被恰当地描述为“食物沙漠”,那里的居民几乎无法获得新鲜农产品。