The Mission of the Edible Schoolyard Project Is to Build and Share an Edible Education Curriculum for Kindergarten Through High School

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Mission of the Edible Schoolyard Project Is to Build and Share an Edible Education Curriculum for Kindergarten Through High School The mission of the Edible Schoolyard Project is to build and share an edible education curriculum for kindergarten through high school. We envision gardens and kitchens as interactive classrooms for all academic subjects, and a free, nutritious, organic lunch for every student. Integrating this curriculum into schools can transform the health and values of every child in America. This is our 2010–2012 report. EDIBLE SCHOOLYARD 2010-2012 ANNUAL REPORT 7 this delicious soda bread is also a hands-on investigation of chemical reactions for an eighth-grade science class. dear friends, “Edible Education” has now entered the mainstream. Our learning model continues to flourish from one simple idea: academic subjects such as math and science become more richly engaging when they are integrated with immersive experiences in kitchens and gardens. As young people are empowered to understand the deep connections between food and every other aspect of life, they develop a sense of global citizenship, a respect for the land, and a determination to nourish themselves and each other. Thanks to the longstanding support of Chez Panisse, our more recent kinship with dynamic programs such as Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move!, and the generous support of our donors, the Edible Schoolyard Project is at the nexus of an ever-strengthening movement. Our work holds more promise and hope now than ever before. We are so grateful for your support! alice waters katrina heron founder & president executive director In 2011, after fifteen years as the Chez Panisse Foundation, we changed our name to the Edible Schoolyard Project to better reflect our mission. We also celebrated the 40th birthday of Chez Panisse Restaurant and Café with a series of wonderful events in support of edible education. And we launched our Edible Schoolyard Network, which for the first time brings together allied efforts from around the country and the world. To date, our network represents more than 2,000 edible education programs, in all 50 American states and 29 other countries. The Edible Schoolyard Project’s seminal approach to teaching children elemental food values and environmental stewardship is now being embraced by health-care experts, environmental advocates, politicians, economists, entrepreneurs, and leaders around the world. They realize that not only our own future hangs in the balance with the current food system, but the planet’s as well. Together, we will create lasting change. 6 THE MODEL i. MODELING the MISSION 8 7 four lessons in sixth-grade humanities show how ideas, goods, and THE MODEL foods were traded along the silk road, beginning in 200 b.c.e. Our demonsTraTiOn prOgraM, the Edible Schoolyard Berkeley, is nearing its 20th year of operation. It stands today as a beacon of expertise and mentorship in the burgeoning edible education field. ESY Berkeley offers a fully integrated, standards- based curriculum at a public middle school. Students in grades six, seven, and eight acquire and apply skills in kitchen and garden classrooms that reinforce and amplify their studies in earth science, mathematics, ecology, biology, history, languages, the humanities, and art. 10 MODELing the MissiOn We provide free distribution of all ESY Berkeley course materials, To have healthy kids, we need healthy schools — and also healthy online at edibleschoolyard.org, for our member programs communities. At ESY Berkeley, we showcase a range of time-tested (including six other Founding Edible Schoolyards that we helped activities that help promote wider neighborhood engagement. to establish over the last decade). And we invite all programs to (Popular examples include plant and produce sales, gardening share their own lesson plans and resources, via an easy-to-use tool workshops, and Thanksgiving take-home “kits” with the makings on the site. of the family dinner.) Each year, we host about 1,500 visitors on public and private In 2012, we started a pilot project called Family Nights Out, a tours of the ESY Berkeley program. Tours include a stop in series of on-site evening classes that provide basic lessons in the school dining commons, where — thanks to a partnership healthful cooking and shopping for working families. In a video between the Center for Ecoliteracy, the Edible Schoolyard available at edibleschoolyard.org, we offer a representative Project, Chef Ann Cooper, and the Berkeley Unified School Family Nights Out sequence, in which students lead their parents, District — children are served a freshly prepared lunch that care-givers, and siblings in preparing and sharing a simple, includes local and organic products. seasonal, delicious meal that is easy to make at home. 12 THE MODEL ii. SPREADING the SEEDS 14 sprEaDing the seeds FOr the LasT FivE yEars, we have offered New for summer 2013 is a special Academy session designed intensive professional development in edible for FoodCorps, a national service nonprofit that places members in schools around the country to work on edible education and education at the ESY Berkeley site. Our summer school lunch reform initiatives. The ESY Academy training will ESY Academy covers such topics as garnering prepare FoodCorps Fellows (those with one year of experience support for launching a program; site and soil at a site) to become peer supervisors to incoming members. analysis; garden and kitchen budgets and The ESY Network invites edible education programs from all over maintenance; classroom management and lesson the country and the world to connect with us and each other online. planning; staffing and volunteer coordination; The network makes it possible for educators, administrators, and in-kind giving and fundraising strategies. community advocates, and parents to exchange ideas and offer Since its launch, the ESY Academy has welcomed feedback on best practices. Our 2,250 member programs (to date) have proven eager to support and inspire one another. 235 individuals from 143 schools, representing more than 150,000 students nationwide. Demand In 2012, we completed year two of a thriving partnership with for trainings far exceeds capacity: in 2012, more UC Berkeley to institutionalize edible education studies at the than 250 educators applied for 90 spaces, a pattern university level. In collaboration with Michael Pollan and the Graduate School of Journalism, we created an introductory course we saw repeated in 2013. on the challenges and opportunities of the food system, explored from a variety of perspectives. Classes were open to graduate and undergraduate students as well as members of the public. Guest lecturers have included Eric Schlosser, Marion Nestle, Carlo Petrini, Dan Imhoff, Frances Moore Lappé, and Kelly Brownell. All lectures are available for viewing at edibleschoolyard.org. 16 THE MODEL iii. FORGING the FUTURE 18 forging the FuTurE The EDible schoolyarD prOjEcT intends to We will also expand our professional development offerings, create, curate, and evaluate curriculum for building from the FoodCorps prototype, to provide additional Academy sessions and training that is customized to specific grades K through 12 and to offer this material — locales and circumstances, such as healthcare, childcare, and organized into rich, video-enhanced suites of corporate-wellness initiatives. tools — via a dedicated online distribution platform. We will continually update our ESY Network map as we welcome Curriculum specialists will ensure that we align new programs and expand our support services for members. This with the new Common Core standards, which first-ever alliance of edible education programs will increasingly mirror our learning model by emphasizing “whole engage in information-sharing and become a unified voice on child” mastery of concepts like interdependency, behalf of the integrated learning model and school-lunch reform. resilience, and systems thinking. We will move forward with our UC Berkeley course collaboration, editing lecture videos and offering them in the now-standard MOOC format. Lastly, we will continue to collaborate with new partners, adding them to a roster that currently includes FoodCorps, Whole Kids Foundation (Whole Foods’ nonprofit entity), the National Farm to School Network, Slow Food USA, Slow Food International, Jamie Oliver’s foundations (in the US and the UK), and the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Foundation (in Australia). 20 the edible schoolyard network represents and connects thriving THE MODEL partner programs in all 50 states and 29 other countries. locations around the world hawaii alaska 22 THE MODEL Our GRATITUDE 24 Our graTiTude 24 7 in math class, sixth-graders operate a cider press while estimating Our graTiTude and calculating volume and displacement with solids and liquids. AlicE WaTErs was already imagining the Edible Schoolyard Project on the day more than 40 years ago when she opened the doors of Chez Panisse and launched the farm-to-restaurant movement. Both endeavors are based upon the conviction that real food can change your life. Your support is at the heart of this work. So many of you have shared meals at Chez Panisse, joined farm and Edible Schoolyard tours, generously contributed funding, and created a tight-knit community that has literally raised the idea of edible education from the ground up. All of us at the Edible Schoolyard Project can never thank you enough. We extend our unending gratitude to everyone who participated so joyfully in the events celebrating Chez Panisse’s 40th birthday, and are delighted to welcome those who are joining us now. 26 Our graTiTude 2011-12 DONORS CELEBRATING the 40TH BIRTHDAY of CHEZ PANISSE 40TH BirtHday Hosts Cecilia Chiang Patty Curtan & Stephen Thomas Hilary & Daniel Goldstine Sam Hamilton & Jennifer Chaiken Anne Isaak Peggy Knickerbocker & Robert Fisher Lauren McIntosh & Steven Walrod Daphne Miller & Ross Levy Michael Pollan & Judith Belzer Boz & Dominique Scaggs Orville Schell & Baifang Liu Fanny Singer & Alice Waters Daniella & Anthony Sueuga Sylvie & Michael Sullivan Patty Unterman & Tim Savinar Jane White 28 Our graTiTude 40TH BirtHday CHefs 40TH BirtHday Collaborators Nathan Alderson Bill He Cal Peternell Berkeley Art Museum & Knight Program in Science & Rock Field Co., Ltd.
Recommended publications
  • American Masters 200 List Finaljan2014
    Premiere Date # American Masters Program Title (Month-YY) Subject Name 1 ARTHUR MILLER: PRIVATE CONVERSATIONS On the Set of "Death of a Salesman" June-86 Arthur Miller 2 PHILIP JOHNSON: A SELF PORTRAIT June-86 Philip Johnson 3 KATHERINE ANNE PORTER: THE EYE OF MEMORY July-86 Katherine Anne Porter 4 UNKNOWN CHAPLIN (Part 1) July-86 Charlie Chaplin 5 UNKNOWN CHAPLIN (Part 2) July-86 Charlie Chaplin 6 UNKNOWN CHAPLIN (Part 3) July-86 Charlie Chaplin 7 BILLIE HOLIDAY: THE LONG NIGHT OF LADY DAY August-86 Billie Holiday 8 JAMES LEVINE: THE LIFE IN MUSIC August-86 James Levine 9 AARON COPLAND: A SELF PORTRAIT August-86 Aaron Copland 10 THOMAS EAKINS: A MOTION PORTRAIT August-86 Thomas Eakins 11 GEORGIA O'KEEFFE September-86 Georgia O'Keeffe 12 EUGENE O'NEILL: A GLORY OF GHOSTS September-86 Eugene O'Neill 13 ISAAC IN AMERICA: A JOURNEY WITH ISAAC BASHEVIS SINGER July-87 Isaac Bashevis Singer 14 DIRECTED BY WILLIAM WYLER July-87 William Wyler 15 ARTHUR RUBENSTEIN: RUBENSTEIN REMEMBERED July-87 Arthur Rubinstein 16 ALWIN NIKOLAIS AND MURRAY LOUIS: NIK AND MURRAY July-87 Alwin Nikolais/Murray Louis 17 GEORGE GERSHWIN REMEMBERED August-87 George Gershwin 18 MAURICE SENDAK: MON CHER PAPA August-87 Maurice Sendak 19 THE NEGRO ENSEMBLE COMPANY September-87 Negro Ensemble Co. 20 UNANSWERED PRAYERS: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF TRUMAN CAPOTE September-87 Truman Capote 21 THE TEN YEAR LUNCH: THE WIT AND LEGEND OF THE ALGONQUIN ROUND TABLE September-87 Algonquin Round Table 22 BUSTER KEATON: A HARD ACT TO FOLLOW (Part 1) November-87 Buster Keaton 23 BUSTER KEATON:
    [Show full text]
  • Vorwort Was Uns Bewegt Aminatta Forna Amber Heard Safia Shah
    Vorwort Aminatta Forna Kanchan Sins;h Was uns bewegt Amber Heard Linda Sarsour Safia Shah Linda Biehl Fereshtch Forough Molly Biehl Dana Donofree Renee Montaigne Nokwanele Mbewu Rokhaya Diallo Ellen Bryant Voigt Louise Nicholas Cleo Wade Helene Grimaucl Ronni Kahn Chimamanda Nj'.o/i Adichie Jodi Peterson Josefine Co> Pushpa Basnet Imany Allison Havey Deana Purcio Jan Owen NomvLIIa Sikhnk.hrinc Inge Haselsteiner Eva Oiuer Sabila Khalun Gillian Caldwell Ruth Reichl Jessica Graro Stnith Lara Bergthold Marama Fox Tabitha St. Bernard Jacobs Nicole Turn: Marilyn Waring Rosemary Jones Camille Crosnier Ynssmin Abdel-iVun'.ied Katarina Pira< Sikku Embeth Davidt/ Esther Duflo Zamaswa/i Dlamirn-iv'iandc Sasha Marianna Salzmann Laurence 1 lennot- Hei :"ien* Zoleka Mandela Gillian blovo Collette Dinnigan Loii-Ji S.ilcs Karen Walker Roxane G;iy Dominique Attias ElisatxMh M.isc Kristcn Visbai Sliiimi Ch<iki,il)aiti Sarah Outen Alicia Gai/a Danielle Brooks Cl(;mentine Ra[i|iapor; Isabel Allende S(i|)bie M.ithisrii Kaylin Whittmgham Claudi«1 I laii'.nrir Stephanie Alexander K.ithy Lldmi Justina Machado Amy I Idon luilclt.Mib Florence Aubenas Vidya ['[il.in Sharon Brous (]!<]( <i M.K hei Jutta Speide Ale'-'.iiufM f'au Inna Modja Ivy Ro'A Julia Leeb KJ m b f, i Karen Maltison C (' I 111, ] ( M 1,1! 1;' Inhalt Gillian Anderson 118 Deborah Santana 16? ; Maria Shriver 216 Alexandra Zavis 120 Jane Caro 169 : Christine Parker 217 Pauline Nguyen 120 Winnie Madikizela-Mandela 170 i Jude Kelly 217 Nadya Tolokonnikova 121 Mithu Ghosh 172 i Elif Shafak 218 Hodan Isse
    [Show full text]
  • What's Cooking at the White House
    What's cooking at the White House First lady Michelle Obama shops with Sam Kass, assistant chef at the White House, in September at a farmers market two blocks from the White House. The Obamas recruited Kass from Chicago, where he had worked with such chefs as Paul Kahan and had cooked for the family in their Kenwood home. (Win McNamee, Getty Images / September 17, 2009) By Katherine Skiba Tribune reporter December 6, 2009 WASHINGTON -- Not long after arriving at the White House, first lady Michelle Obama led reporters and culinary students through its cramped, stainless steel kitchen, enthusing, "This is where the magic happens." The food at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. is fresh, seasonal and gathered from across America, as far away as the rivers of Alaska and as close as the first lady's garden. There's a Chicago influence too, not only because of the first couple's deep roots. They brought with them Sam Kass, who had cooked for them in the Windy City and is now an assistant chef at the White House. Ten months into the Obama presidency, it's plainer than a scoop of vanilla ice cream that Barack and Michelle Obama are food enthusiasts. Call them the "first foodies." The Obamas possess sophisticated palates, according to chefs who know them. Still, there's a dichotomy to their dining. They're omnivores who enjoy "adventurous" eating, but confess a hankering for humble foods, like burgers and sweet potato french fries. All of this translates to a White House where food, and who is cooking it, matters.
    [Show full text]
  • Celebrating Women's History Month
    March 2021 - Celebrating Women’s History Month It all started with a single day in 1908 in New York City when thousands of women marched for better labor laws, conditions, and the right to vote. A year later on February 28, in a gathering organized by members of the Socialist Party, suffragists and socialists gathered again in Manhattan for what they called the first International Woman’s Day. The idea quickly spread worldwide from Germany to Russia. In 1911, 17 European countries formally honored the day as International Women’s day. By 1917 with strong influences and the beginnings of the Russian Revolution communist leader Vladimir Lenin made Women’s Day a soviet holiday. But due to its connections to socialism and the Soviet Union, the holiday wasn’t largely celebrated in the United States until 1975. That’s when the United Nations officially began sponsoring International Woman’s day. In 1978 Woman’s Day grew from a day to a week as the National Women’s History Alliance became frustrated with the lack of information about women’s history available to public school curriculums. Branching off of the initial celebration, they initiated the creation of Women’s History week. And by 1980 President Jimmy Carter declared in a presidential proclamation that March 8 was officially National Women’s History Week. As a result of its country wide recognition and continued growth in state schools, government, and organizations by 1986, 14 states had gone ahead and dubbed March Women’s History Month. A year later, this sparked congress to declare the holiday in perpetuity.
    [Show full text]
  • Superbosses Introduction.Pdf
    INTRODUCTION ome years ago, a family of New Yorkers came in for dinner at Alice SWaters’s legendary Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, California. According to longtime cook Seen Lippert, the family—​­Mom, Dad, a lit- tle boy, and a little girl—​­claimed not to have been aware of the restau- rant’s practice, then unheard of in the United States, of changing its menu daily to feature the freshest locally sourced and organic ingredi- ents. The family agreed to stay for the meal, giving the restaurant a list of items they didn’t like and didn’t want to be served. One of the items on their list was peas. As it happened, the restaurant had gotten its hands on “these beautiful, sweet, fresh peas” and the staff had spent the after- noon shucking them by hand. Waters, who loved superior ingredients and always evangelized on their behalf, insisted that a dish of peas be presented for the family to try. The staff reminded Waters of the family’s wishes, but she was unmoved. “I don’t care. I just want them to try it. I just want them to try one.” The peas were brought out, and the family loved them. “I’m telling you,” Lippert related in an interview, “that little boy, he smiled and looked, like, ‘WOW. I’ve never tasted a pea before. I’ve never tasted any- thing like this before.’ ” Soon, the family had eaten the whole bowl. “They were so excited and so happy at the end of that dinner.”1 It was a small victory for Waters, one of countless that she’s had.
    [Show full text]
  • December 22, 2011 Contact: for Immediate Release Randall Morton
    December 22, 2011 Contact: For Immediate Release Randall Morton President, Progressive Forum 713-664-0020 office [email protected] More at www.ProgressiveForumHouston.org Alice Waters at The Progressive Forum February 27, 2012 A pioneer of the sustainable-local food movement, Alice Waters will appear at The Progressive Forum, Monday, February 27, 2012, at the Wortham Center, Cullen Theater, at 7:30 PM. Waters will greet fans and sign books at the end of the evening. Tickets range from $14 to $54. A limited number of $94 tickets are available which include green room reception with Alice Waters at 6:15 PM and center-front seating. Tickets are available at www.ProgressiveForumHouston.org or by calling 832- 251-0706. There is no physical box office except at the theater on event night. The event is produced in association with Urban Harvest. Other sponsors include Georgia’s Farm to Market, OHBA – Organic Horticulture Benefits Alliance, MicroLife Organic Biological Fertilizer, Garland Kerr and Jim Blackburn, Wendy Kelsey, and Catherine Walsh MD. Randall Morton, Progressive Forum president, said, “Alice Waters’ appearance is the third event in our exciting annual food series. She follows Michael Pollan in 2011 and Eric Schlosser in 2010.” Alice Waters, restaurateur, author, activist, and proprietor of Chez Panisse Restaurant and Café in Berkeley, California, is a pioneer of a culinary philosophy based on using the freshest organic products, served only in season. Over the course of 40 years, Chez Panisse - More - Page 2 has inspired chefs and leaders of the food movement around the world. The restaurant developed a network of local farmers and purveyors whose dedication to sustainable agriculture assures the restaurant a steady supply of pure, fresh ingredients.
    [Show full text]
  • Revolution by the Bay: a Vanguard of Women Chefs Reset the Table
    Revolution by the Bay: A vanguard of women chefs reset the table By Harvey Steiman May 31, 2019 Alice Waters (left) and Sibella Kraus, shown here at the Ferry Plaza Farmers Market in San Francisco, have worked tirelessly over many years to get more fresh ingredients onto more dinner plates. (Alanna Hale) When Alice Waters and a few counterculture Berkeley friends opened Chez Panisse in 1971, they set in motion trends that would change the food landscape in the San Francisco Bay Area and across America. Waters and other women not only laid the foundation for what became known as California cuisine, they drove key developments that set the tone for the way we dine today. Things we now take for granted originated with women in the City by the Bay, from chef's menus to farm-to-table cooking to kitchens organized as collaborations instead of traditional chef hierarchies. An inspiration for Alice Waters was Cecilia Chiang. Now 99, Chiang established a Chinese restaurant in San Francisco in 1961 called the Mandarin and introduced authentic dishes from all over China, not just the narrow list of Americanized Cantonese specialties that then prevailed in 1 Chinese dining here. She moved into the then-new Ghirardelli Square development in 1968, with decor that avoided kitschy chinoiserie. Chiang championed high quality wine with her food, then unheard—of in Asian restaurants. Beyond Chinese cuisine, she mentored prominent restaurateurs, starting with Waters, who took cooking classes from Chiang before opening Chez Panisse. "Alice came to the Mandarin with some friends," Chiang recalls, sipping tea in the living room of her Pacific Heights apartment.
    [Show full text]
  • TEN RE a SONS T O GRO W a FOOD GARDEN More Nutrient
    APPENDI X TEN LIST S O F TEN ESSENTIAL S FOR EVERY ASPIRIN G GARDENE R TEN RE A SONS T O GRO W A FOOD GARDEN 1. HEA LTH More nutrient-dense than conventional produce, homegrown fruits and vegetables can improve the eating habits of adults and children and help prevent diabetes, obesity, and some cancers. The Journal of the American Dietetic Association found that children more than doubled their overall fruit and vegetable consumption after their parents grew a food garden in their yard. 2. TAST E Homegrown, fresh-picked vegetables, herbs, and fruit offer an unparal- leled taste experience: juicy, crisp, with a great depth of flavor and inten- sity. 3. SAFET Y Foodborne illnesses such as salmonella and E. coli are routinely found on produce grown on industrial farms. In 2006, spinach tainted with E. coli from cow manure on industrial farms in California sickened hundreds of Americans and took five lives. There is no safer source of food than your own backyard. 4. EXERCIS E Working in a garden is an antidote to the sedentary, indoor lifestyles that are becoming increasingly prevalent in a technology-driven world. The joy Nola_9780812992991_3p_all_r2.f.indd 253 5/16/13 254 A P P E N D I X of physical activity in a natural setting to produce something tangible is not only good for your body but fulfilling to the spirit. 5. FOCU S Gardening helps overstimulated and hyperactive kids focus and perform better academically. A 2004 report from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign found that green outdoor settings, including garden- ing, reduced symptoms of ADHD in the more than four hundred kids in the study.
    [Show full text]
  • Advocate for Women, Children and Families, Matilda Raffa Cuomo
    Matilda Raffa Cuomo (1931- ) Advocate for women, children and families, Matilda Raffa Cuomo has been described as the “most active first lady in New York State history.” As First Lady (1983-1995), she established the first state-wide, school-based, one-to-one mentoring program. By 1995, ten thousand children had been mentored by volunteers from corporations, schools and government and the groundwork laid for Mentoring USA and international extensions. Since its establishment, the program has expanded ages it serves and offerings to address LGBT, Bias Related Anti-Violence Education, fostercare and workplace mentoring. Matilda Cuomo co-chaired the Governor’s Commission on Child Care; chaired NY Citizens’ Task Force on the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect; led New York in the UN’s World Summit for Children and the US ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. Born in Queens, Matilda Cuomo’s experiences as a first-generation American engendered her lifelong dedication to mentoring. Having had whole worlds opened by a teacher, she graduated cum laude from St. John’s University Teachers College and taught at Dutch Broadway School (Long Island). Wife and mother of five children, fourteen grandchildren, and one great grandson, Matilda Cuomo wove together her life and life’s passion into mentoring understood as relationships building awareness and respect for one’s own and others’ cultural heritage. As she said to Kingsborough College graduates: “do what must be done to encourage a more intelligent, constructive and reasonable acceptance of our nation's unique diversity, through dialogue … hard work and respect….
    [Show full text]
  • A Vision for School Lunch
    A VISION FOR SCHOOL LUNCH · CHEZ PANISSE FOUNDATION · Cultivating a New Generation · A VISION FOR SCHOOL LUNCH CHEZ PANISSE FOUNDATION Cultivating a New Generation ON MAKING SCH oo L L U N C H PA R T O F T H E A CADE M I C C URRICULU M Adapted from a speech delivered by Alice Waters Forty years ago we had a preview of today’s obesity crisis: A presidential commission told us that children weren’t fit—and we made a resolution to do something about it. The country responded at great expense. We launched a physical fitness program in the public schools. We built new gymnasiums, tracks, and playgrounds. We bought new equipment. We trained new PE teachers. And we made physical education a mandatory part of the curriculum from kindergarten through high school. Students were required to participate and were graded on their performance. Now it’s time for kids to start getting credit for eating a good lunch. I know from experience that a lunch-centered curriculum can change lives. I know this because I’ve been involved in a decade-long experiment at a middle school in Berkeley, California. I believe we need the same kind of interactive program at the center of the curricula of every school district in the country: not just serving school lunch, but teaching it, in a hands-on way, as an academic subject. A school lunch curriculum is not a quick fix for the obesity epidemic. But by bringing kids into another kind of relationship with their food, we can bring about a deep and lasting change in the way they feel about themselves.
    [Show full text]
  • Board of Directors 2020-2021
    BOARD OF DIRECTORS2020-2021 ANNUAL REPORT TABLEBOARD OF OF CONTENTSDIRECTORS 2 Our Mission 26 Food Tank Refresh Group 3 Welcome Letter 28 Food Tank Organizational Partners 4 Focus Areas 33 Food Tank 2020–2021 Grassroots Members 7 Our Impact This Year 37 Food Tank Board of Directors 20 Looking Ahead to 2021–2022 38 Food Tank Advisory Board 22 Content and Social Media Report 40 Food Tank Staff 23 Food Tank CSO Group 2020-2021 ANNUAL REPORT 1 OUR MISSION Food Tank is a nonprofit organization focused on building a global community for safe, healthy, nourished eaters. We spotlight environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable ways of alleviating hunger, obesity, and poverty, and we create networks of people, organizations, and content to push for change in the food system. Food Tank was founded by Danielle Nierenberg and Bernard Pollack in January of 2013 in Chicago, Illinois. Food Tank is a registered 501(c)(3), and all donations are tax-deductible. Danielle Nierenberg has served as President since the organization’s inception with Bernard Pollack as the Chairman of the Board of Directors. The organization is headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland. 2020-2021 ANNUAL REPORT 2 WELCOMEBOARD OF LETTERDIRECTORS he last year has shown us the importance of We have announced events over the next year, starting October 2, 2021, healthy diets. COVID-19 is not just a virus, but taking place with academic partners that include: University of California- also a diet-related disease. The pandemic exposed Santa Barbara, Metropolitan University of Denver, University of Illinois- T massive vulnerabilities and inequities across our Urbana Champaign, North Dakota State University, Duke University, Spelman food and agriculture systems that demanded immediate College, Hutson-Tillotson University, Emory University, University of the attention.
    [Show full text]
  • November 2020
    Middletown Calendar of Events Newsletter Every Thursday 1pm Zoom meeting PENS group November 2020 Monday, November 9, 7pm Zoom meeting: Girls LEAD! Equity for ALL Program through the Dayton YWCA presented by the November Program executive director Rochelle Garner. On Monday, November 9, at 7:00 p.m., we will meet via ZOOM to hear Dr. Rochelle Garner speak about the role of the YWCA in the lives of women and Thursday, November 19, 7pm girls in leadership. Joy Luck Book Club Dr. Garner is the Executive Director for Girls LEAD!, one of the programs of Coming To My Senses: The Dayton’s YWCA. She has also served in higher education, both in student affairs Making of a Counterculture and teaching. Originally from Lexington, Kentucky, Dr. Garner received her Ph.D. Cook: Alice Waters from Miami University in Educational Leadership with a Certificate in Women’s Studies, and both her B.A. and M.Ed. from Howard University in Washington, D. Monday, December 14, 7pm C. She enjoys learning through travel, and has had an opportunity to examine Zoom meeting: Topic: How female leadership in Africa, China, and India. Junior Achievement educates The program Girls LEAD! Stands for Leadership, Education, Activism, and and inspires young people to Development. Its mission is to encourage, motivate, and empower girls to experience opportunities of develop holistically with strength, courage, and wisdom. The program partners work and entrepreneurship. with schools in Montgomery and Preble counties to provide an in-school program Speaker: Maria Langendorf, focusing on social emotional learning and bullying prevention. During the President, Middletown Junior summer, Girls LEAD! provides a summer day camp for girls between the ages of Achievement 11-14 years old in both counties.
    [Show full text]