STEAM PageLab: Heritage Garden
Our new Heritage Garden PageLab engages girls with STEAM learning that builds on our tradition of place-based learning.
In this pop-up outdoor classroom, participants explore a garden through multiple lenses: through the layer of science inquiry –learning about plants and seeds, growth processes, and soil composition; through the layer of history –asking questions about the natural history of a garden built on the site of an old farm; and through a layer of documentary arts –creating a visual diary of observations.
Our Heritage Garden Lab draws connections to the past. We learn about indigenous agricultural traditions, like companion planting of the “Three Sisters” (squash, beans, and corn), which emphasizes connections between plants that grow in tandem, each supporting one another, like caring sisters, and helping to create healthy bodies and soil.
The garden emerged from the creative vision of Madison Middle School Science teachers James Calloway and Lindsey Montgomery. Throughout 2020, they reworked their 7th-grade science curriculum to frame it around an outdoor teaching garden next to the school that includes a chicken coop, compost pile and multiple raised beds they created with their students. They served as Project Facilitators for our PageLab in 2021 and led our students in building a PAGE Permaculture Orchard.
Local biologist Lucy Lowe, a native of the Spring Creek farming community and an expert on Appalachian-grown plants, serves as Project Facilitator for our After-School PageLab in the Fall and Spring. Project deliverables include Illustrated Lab Journals, where girls record observations, questions, and emerging theories, and cyanotype photography using sunlight to develop images of plants.
We look forward to watching this Heritage Garden grow into a model place-based classroom that will help girls learn about science in new ways and help them become stewards of the farms and lands they will inherit.
We are very grateful for grant support from the Burroughs Wellcome Fund’s Student STEM Enrichment Program (SSEP), which has made possible this deepened investment in STEM opportunities for girls.