Monday, January 11, 2016

First Semester Projects

The first semester is winding up at AALC and students at all levels were active in the gardens and other green spaces of our community.


Early Primary students planted the center of their garden space with a large bed of bulbs donated by families. Tulip bulbs (along with the noble dandelion) are among the first flowers available to pollinators in the spring. The kindergartners and first graders have also been writing in their garden observation journals. They charted what the butterfly and pollinator gardens looked like at the start of the school year and compared its appearance after there was a hard frost. They have plans to write and draw what the gardens look like under snow and watch for the first signs of their bulbs to grow.


Primary students harvested their vegetable beds eating salad greens and potatoes. In addition to overwintering crops and planning for spring planting, they are also conducting a census of the miles AALC students travel to and from school each day. Their goal is to plant trees in the spring to help offset the carbon-dioxide pollution produced by their daily commutes.


Intermediate gardeners reshaped their garden space and created a maze of pallets that will be planted in the spring. They also used herbs and flowers out of their garden to make a calendula-infused oil for skin and an herb-infused olive oil for cooking. Special thanks to AALC parent Lisa Mayne for helping students learn how to infuse oils.


The middle schoolers were thankful for the extended warm weather as it allowed them to complete AALC’s first ever hugelkultur. A hugelkultur has been described as nature’s raised bed because it mimics the decomposition and rebirth of the forest floor. Middle schoolers piled wood logs, branches and brush from school grounds, and the overflow from the school’s compost bins into a long bed bordering the hoop house. This was then covered with several layers of dirt and straw. As the wood decomposes, it creates a rich organic growing medium that retains water and is warmer than surrounding soil. They’ll be planting it in the spring with some annual cover crops and perennial food plants. Hugulkulturs are super fun to build and plant, especially with young gardeners.  Read more about how to build one in your homespace at http://inhabitat.com/diy-hugelkultur-how-build-raised-permaculture-garden-beds/.


As we wait and plan for spring, students will be busy conducting the indoor plant census and plant drive which aims to make sure AALC has an indoor plant or live element for every 50 square feet of space. Look for the display at the school entrance to watch our progress.



Thursday, September 24, 2015

2015 Fall Bulb Sale

Now is the perfect time to plant fall bulbs! Please consider purchasing your bulbs through our AALC Fall Bulb Sale.

For every purchase, Flower Power Fundraising will give 50% back to Ann Arbor Learning Community!

The fundraiser ends October 15th, so be sure to order soon! You can also share the link with friends and family who may wish to help support the school.

Orders can be placed online here. Your items will ship directly to your home. Feel free to email us if you have any questions about placing an order.  
 
Thank you for supporting Ann Arbor Learning Community!





Thursday, September 3, 2015

2015-2016 GEO-Ed Initiatives

As we look forward to the start of the new school year on Tuesday, we are pleased to announce this year's GEO-Ed indoor plant initiative.

By the end of the 2015-2016 school year, we will achieve NASA's recommendation of featuring at least one plant or natural component per 100 square feet of space within the school building. 

This recommendation comes from NASA's Clean Air Study conducted in association with the Associated Landscape Contractors of America.  The study demonstrates the natural air-purifying ability of indoor plants, advocating for the generous use of plants as a way to maintain clean air indoors.

This school-wide effort will involve all grade levels and will be integrated into each class curriculum.  Students will be responsible for caring for all of the natural components.

More details to come on how you can help us achieve our goal!

As summer comes to an end, we would also like to take a moment to recognize Chloe Duke, a loving AALC parent and active GEO-Ed Committee member who passed away this summer.  Her passionate nature, love of gardening, and positive energy are sorely missed, and we hope to honor her contribution to the school by creating a garden memorial this year.
 
 
 

Sunday, June 7, 2015

GEO-Ed Year in Review

As summer approaches and the 2014-2015 school year comes to an end, it is gratifying to look back at all the GEO-Ed Committee was able to accomplish this year.  Our sincere, heartfelt thanks to the many people who contributed their time, money and effort to providing such a significant educational opportunity for our students!

The AALC GEO-Ed blog was created and is up and running thanks to a collaborative effort between AALC parents, teachers and staff who worked together to create content, share photos, and include new blog posts in the weekly newsletter.

The Adopt a Garden Program was formed to facilitate maintenance, labor, creativity, and sometimes complete redesigns of some of AALC’s many amazing outdoor spaces. Families are pledging their time and effort to a specific garden in conjunction with the teacher or grade level team responsible for the area.

Michigan Green School Evergreen Status was worked towards, applied for, and received.

Michigan Green School Evergreen Status

AALC at SEMIS (South Eastern Michigan Stewardship Coalition)
AALC teachers Tracey Marchyok and Drake Meadow along with some Intermediate and Middle School students presented SEMIS workshops at EMU. Tracey and her students gave a presentation on their 5 day nature immersion program, Annie’s Big Nature Lesson. Mr. Meadow and his students presented on Permaculture and student leadership.

Middle School Students Return to AALC
Even after graduating from Ann Arbor Learning Community former middle school students come back to work with GEO-Ed projects!

Zane and Sophia returned to AALC during the school year to work on the Outdoor Classroom construction.  Zane also worked on the wind turbine project.  Noah returned to help the permaculture program with a grant called the butterfly effect.

Collaboration with PTSO
The GEO-Ed Committee and the PTSO embraced a cross-functional approach this year, cultivating a sense of community and cooperation by collaborating on a number of projects and events. The PTSO assisted with the fall bulb fundraiser and the spring plant sale to raise funds for GEO-Ed projects. Together we have purchased plants, tools, equipment, and even professional development opportunities for teachers to further the GEO-Ed mission of our charter.

GEO-Ed Plant Sale

Garden Resource Fair
The GEO-Ed Committee hosted its first-ever Garden Resource Fair this year.  Families, teachers and staff were invited to get expert advice from Master Gardeners, speak with Project Grow representatives about their community garden program and gardening classes, learn more about other local resources and programs, and discover how they can help out with AALC's gardens.


Garden Resource Fair

Garden Work at AALC
Many of the garden areas have received lots of attention this year thanks to the efforts of families, teachers, staff and students. Work included fall tending, “putting the garden to bed for the winter”, spring clean-up (cleaning out winter debris, weeding, replanting, new plantings), and new signage. Some of the gardens that received attention this year were the Pollinator Garden, The Sensory Garden, The Welcome Garden, and various other classroom gardens.

Middle School Permaculture Accomplishments
The Middle School Garden experienced a renovation this year, while more trees were planted in the Orchard during Earth Day.

A wonderful new Outdoor Classroom was built with the help of parents during enrichments. We also modified the wind turbine during an enrichment with the help of parents.

Middle School students worked on the Iota (pronounced Yoda) Module, an LED Grow light and shelving unit designated to grow little green things.

Outdoor Classroom Under Construction

Intermediate Accomplishments
Intermediate students enjoyed Annie’s Big Nature Lesson, a weeklong excursion to the Leslie Science and Nature Center where they became immersed in outdoor environmental learning. They also took their reading buddies, the Early Primary students, on the Reading Buddies Field Trip to the nature center to help teach them about the amazing natural world.

The Intermediate Herb Garden experienced a redesign, including tilling and grading (thank you to Jenn and Kate for doing the work and providing the equipment!).  Students helped harvest seeds from the old herb garden, selling seed packets at Spring Fling and donating some to new and interested AALC families.  They also sold herbs, spices and tea at Fall Fest this year.

Intermediate Herb Garden Sale

Primary Accomplishments
Primary students enjoyed a bountiful harvest this year from their Vegetable Garden and Pumpkin Patch.  Students cleaned up the vegetable beds and pumpkin patch, fixing and refilling the tall back beds. 

They planted the vegetable beds and worked to critter-proof the beds.  The benches were also re-positioned back into the garden class arrangement.

New Pumpkin Patch Gate


Early Primary Accomplishments
The tire beds in the Early Primary Butterfly Garden were tended and new plantings were added where needed.  All of the beds were weeded and cleaned up in the spring, while the garden path was cleared and re-mulched.

The small vegetable patch inside the Butterfly Garden was maintained with the help of the Chase family.  Bird netting was added to the low tunnel area to protect the vegetables from critters, and vegetable seeds and plants were added including radishes, spinach, lettuce, tomatoes and peppers. 

Radishes in the Early Primary Veggie Patch

GEO-Ed Enrichments
Several GEO-Ed enrichments were offered throughout the school year, including:

Fall Bulbs and Winter Seeds – planting bulbs and seeds.
Blowin’ In The Wind- working on the AALC wind turbine.
Outdoor building 1,2, and 3 - with Mr. Meadow and Gary Turner.
Fairy Garden 1 – (to be continued with Fairy Garden 2).
Spring Garden Projects – cleaning up garden beds and planting in butterfly garden tire beds and welcome garden bed.
Ollas -Ollas are terracotta water jugs that are buried in the ground with their neck exposed above ground. It is a Native American gardening technique that conserves water for garden plants.
Fun Fall Gardening- perennial transplants.
Wormy Towers & Bins -building worm towers and using worm casting from our worm bins to fertilize AALC gardens.
Bird Homes for Winter -build our feathered friends birdhouses for the winter.
Drawing in Nature -a listening, learning and doing class - but the focus is on quiet observation and drawing.
Rain Garden Construction- build a beautiful rain garden to help keep fresh rain water going into the groundwater rather than into the sewers.
Spring Gardening- planting so many different, awesome things all around our school.
Herbs and Pallets- pallet gardens planted outside two classroom doors.

Fall Fun Gardening Enrichment

Wormy Towers and Bins Enrichment

Wormy Towers and Bins Enrichment


More to Come!
Though the school year is nearly over, there is more to accomplish!  Join us on Tuesday, June 9th for Mulch Day.  Come help your student mulch their classroom garden bed.  Contact Mrs. King when you arrive for directions!

Also check out our Events page for other important summer events.

Thursday, May 7, 2015

Plant Sale Orders Due May 11th

It's the time of year... SPRING!!! When we start getting our home (and school!) gardens ready. Now is the time to order your plants, and proceeds will benefit the Geo-Ed Committee and the school grounds.

NEW THIS YEAR! Payments are available by credit card! If you're interested in having an invoice sent to you through Square for payment, please email aalcgeo@gmail.com.

Paid orders (by check or by credit card) are due back to the PTSO drop box by May 11th.

Plants will again be provided by Sell's Greenhouse, Cinzori Organic Herbs and Vegetables, and Native Plant Nursery. These three local growers will provide beautiful annual and perennial flowers, organic vegetable seedlings and herbs, and Michigan native perennials grown from locally sourced seeds in time for planting Memorial Day Weekend.

Order forms are available at the front desk.  Email us at aalcgeo@gmail.com to receive an electronic copy of the order form.

Plants will be ready for pickup Thursday, May 21st between 3 and 5pm.

Friday, April 24, 2015

Spring Fling GEO-Ed Happenings

GEO-Ed will be in Room 6 at Spring Fling. Stop in and get your hands dirty making a seed bomb or starting a seedling. Help create a sign for our Community Gardens. Pick up some gardening information for your own gardens.

Perennial Donations
Bring a piece of your home garden. Spring is an excellent time to divide perennials and the AALC gardens would love a piece of your garden. Bring a perennial divided from your house in a pot with some dirt and a label describing it, and we will happily plant it during our upcoming spring planting enrichment. Bring perennials to Room 6 at Spring Fling or at the GEO-Ed table next to the Reception Desk before May 8th.

Compost and Mulch Drive
Ann Arbor residents can stop by the Ann Arbor Compost Center at 4150 Platt Road, Ann Arbor MI 48108 to pick up free compost.  Grab a bucket of compost on your way to Spring Fling and deliver it to the compost pile near the tool shed off the school parking lot! 

Free compost is available for pickup from 8am to 12pm, visit the We Care Organics website details. 

Have an extra bag of mulch?  Bring that too and leave it by the tool shed.

Watering Can Drive
We'd also like to encourage donations of watering cans to your student's classroom. It's like they have legs and walk away on their own! We could use more so if you have an extra one collecting dust in your tool shed or see one on sale at a garden center, we'd gratefully put it to good use in the classroom or in the gardens.  Feel free to bring it to Room 6 during Spring Fling.

Rain Garden Dig on May 3rd from 10am to 2pm
Join us on Sunday May 3rd as we prepare for the upcoming Rain Garden Enrichment.  Bring a shovel and help dig out the garden area and install the fence.

Plant Sale
Stay tuned for details about our upcoming plant sale!  Look for the plant sale order form next week. Orders will be due back by May 8th. Plants will be provided by Sell's Greenhouse, Cinzori Organic Herbs and Vegetables, and Native Plant Nursery.

Celebrating Earth Day at Ann Arbor Learning Community

Students and teachers at Ann Arbor Learning Community celebrated Earth Day this week by planting trees, shrubs and seeds throughout the school grounds and helping to clean up the property.

Special thanks to Pinter's Flowerland for the donation of compost and dogwood trees and to Nature and Nurture for their fabulous discount on 15 fruit trees and shrubs. We were able to plant everything despite Mother Nature's rather frigid temperatures and occasional snow flurries!

Early Primary classes planted 4 Nanking cherry shrubs, while Primary classes planted 3 apricot trees in the orchard and cold weather veggie seeds in their vegetable boxes.

Intermediate classes planted 4 paw paw trees near the butterfly garden and sunflower seeds in the art room garden. The Middle School planted 2 pear trees and 2 apple trees in the orchard, plus 2 dogwood trees and 1 dwarf serviceberry by the front walk.

It will be wonderful to watch these trees and shrubs grow over the years, providing a tremendous opportunity for students to cultivate their interest in the environment and build the knowledge and skills needed to care for our earth.