Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventions

Farm-to-school programs have many documented benefits but are typically centered around school gardens or local food procurement, which can be a limitation for schools. Land-based learning takes a student-centric approach to agricultural education, allowing students to identify and develop interven...

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Main Authors: Abbey Palmer, Phillip Warsaw, Aaron McKim, R. Bud McKendree, Maezie Nettleton, Tiffany Marzolino, Haley Brasier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food Systems 2024-12-01
Series:Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development
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Online Access:https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/1309
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author Abbey Palmer
Phillip Warsaw
Aaron McKim
R. Bud McKendree
Maezie Nettleton
Tiffany Marzolino
Haley Brasier
author_facet Abbey Palmer
Phillip Warsaw
Aaron McKim
R. Bud McKendree
Maezie Nettleton
Tiffany Marzolino
Haley Brasier
author_sort Abbey Palmer
collection DOAJ
description Farm-to-school programs have many documented benefits but are typically centered around school gardens or local food procurement, which can be a limitation for schools. Land-based learning takes a student-centric approach to agricultural education, allowing students to identify and develop interven­tions to improve their local food system based on the content presented in the classroom, providing the possibility for delivering farm-to-school content outside of its traditional settings. We present findings from the evaluation of a land-based learn­ing program implemented in northern Michigan. The program engaged two teachers and their respective students across two schools, each school’s food-service directors, two local farmers, and a Michigan State University extension educator to form two Locally Integrated Food Teams (LIFTs). Students were presented content about local food procurement across 20 instructional sessions, during which each LIFT worked to develop a shared understanding of the local food system and school lunch sourcing to identify an intervention to increase the amount of local food in their school lunches. The LIFTs then proposed their interventions to Michigan State University faculty, implemented their intervention, and pre­sented the results of the intervention during the program wrap-up day. To explore the experiences of LIFT members, we conducted focus groups and collected observational data from the program par­ticipants. We find that delivering farm-to-school content in a land-based learning framework pro­vides many of the same benefits of traditional farm-to-school programs, while allowing for great­er flexibility in the construction of the program and providing additional educational benefits not com­monly discussed in the farm-to-school literature.
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spelling doaj-art-3bac4958a1884e308e03c8cbc095de0c2025-08-20T02:58:26ZengLyson Center for Civic Agriculture and Food SystemsJournal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development2152-08012024-12-0114110.5304/jafscd.2024.141.013Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventionsAbbey Palmer0Phillip Warsaw1Aaron McKim2R. Bud McKendree3Maezie Nettleton4Tiffany Marzolino5Haley Brasier6Michigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityUniversity of Illinois Extension and Michigan State UniversityMichigan State UniversityMarquette-Alger Regional Educational Service Agency Farm-to-school programs have many documented benefits but are typically centered around school gardens or local food procurement, which can be a limitation for schools. Land-based learning takes a student-centric approach to agricultural education, allowing students to identify and develop interven­tions to improve their local food system based on the content presented in the classroom, providing the possibility for delivering farm-to-school content outside of its traditional settings. We present findings from the evaluation of a land-based learn­ing program implemented in northern Michigan. The program engaged two teachers and their respective students across two schools, each school’s food-service directors, two local farmers, and a Michigan State University extension educator to form two Locally Integrated Food Teams (LIFTs). Students were presented content about local food procurement across 20 instructional sessions, during which each LIFT worked to develop a shared understanding of the local food system and school lunch sourcing to identify an intervention to increase the amount of local food in their school lunches. The LIFTs then proposed their interventions to Michigan State University faculty, implemented their intervention, and pre­sented the results of the intervention during the program wrap-up day. To explore the experiences of LIFT members, we conducted focus groups and collected observational data from the program par­ticipants. We find that delivering farm-to-school content in a land-based learning framework pro­vides many of the same benefits of traditional farm-to-school programs, while allowing for great­er flexibility in the construction of the program and providing additional educational benefits not com­monly discussed in the farm-to-school literature. https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/1309land-based learninglocal food systemscommunity engagementfarm to schoolexperiential learningpedagogy
spellingShingle Abbey Palmer
Phillip Warsaw
Aaron McKim
R. Bud McKendree
Maezie Nettleton
Tiffany Marzolino
Haley Brasier
Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventions
Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development
land-based learning
local food systems
community engagement
farm to school
experiential learning
pedagogy
title Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventions
title_full Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventions
title_fullStr Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventions
title_full_unstemmed Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventions
title_short Experiences from a land-based learning project focused on local food interventions
title_sort experiences from a land based learning project focused on local food interventions
topic land-based learning
local food systems
community engagement
farm to school
experiential learning
pedagogy
url https://www.foodsystemsjournal.org/index.php/fsj/article/view/1309
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AT phillipwarsaw experiencesfromalandbasedlearningprojectfocusedonlocalfoodinterventions
AT aaronmckim experiencesfromalandbasedlearningprojectfocusedonlocalfoodinterventions
AT rbudmckendree experiencesfromalandbasedlearningprojectfocusedonlocalfoodinterventions
AT maezienettleton experiencesfromalandbasedlearningprojectfocusedonlocalfoodinterventions
AT tiffanymarzolino experiencesfromalandbasedlearningprojectfocusedonlocalfoodinterventions
AT haleybrasier experiencesfromalandbasedlearningprojectfocusedonlocalfoodinterventions