Editorial, The Daily News, originally published on 5/23/2010
Getting outside, working in a garden and growing food for needy families is not only a valuable gift for those receiving the food, it is also a learning experience for the kids growing the vegetables.
Students at Briarwood Elementary School students have joined with local organizations and The Medical Center by planting a garden at the school. Students are learning about business, teamwork and nutrition in their effort to grow and distribute vegetables for needy families.
Many of the kids in the program are refugees from Myanmar who relocated to Bowling Green through the International Center. A number of these kids participate in the school’s Backpack Program, a food assistance program for public schoolchildren through Feeding America, and will be receiving food that is grown in the garden.
It has to be very rewarding for a lot of these kids who will have a chance to eat the vegetables that they helped grow.
Many of these kids may not have had a chance to be part of a project like this one if they hadn’t come to Bowling Green from countries where the opportunity for a project of this nature may not have existed.
Along with involvement in the growing process from seed to plate, children at the school are learning a trade and taking pride in working hard on the garden. It also instills a sense of teamwork in the students as well and hopefully will help promote better nutrition.
“It has been proven that children who see fruits and vegetables grown from start to finish are at least willing to try them,” said Jenna Golden, community wellness manager at The Medical Center.
This is a valid point that Golden makes. It is important that our youth begin eating fruits and vegetables at a young age and realizing their importance for their own health.
We know the children at Briarwood are thoroughly enjoying this program and we encourage other schools in the area to get involved with these type of programs as well.