| Literature DB >> 29186835 |
Nele Huys1, Katrien De Cocker2, Marieke De Craemer3, Marleen Roesbeke4, Greet Cardon5, Sara De Lepeleere6.
Abstract
School gardens have beneficial effects on children's dietary behaviors but information on its implementation is scarce. The current study aimed to gain insight in implementation practices of school gardens and in perceptions of key members and children towards a school garden. We conducted twelve interviews involving 14 key members and five focus groups with 38 children from fifth to sixth grade (10-13 years old) in four primary schools in Ghent (Flanders, Belgium). We analyzed the interviews and focus groups in NVivo, using thematic analysis. School gardens were mainly initiated to involve children in nature, not to improve vegetable consumption. Participants were positive about having a school garden, experienced facilitating factors (e.g., adaptability of the garden, having a person responsible for the garden), but also various barriers (e.g., difficulties with startup, maintenance during summer holidays and integration in the school curriculum) and suggested some solutions (e.g., involving external organizations and parents, expanding the garden) and motivating factors for children (e.g., colorful plants, use of gloves). In order to improve implementation and to contribute to children's health, future school gardening projects should take the recommendations of key members and children into account.Entities:
Keywords: children; gardening; key members; primary school; vegetables
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29186835 PMCID: PMC5750873 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph14121454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Characteristics of participating schools.
| School 1 | School 2 | School 3 | School 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location of school in Ghent | City center | Suburban region | Suburban region | City center |
| Number of children in 5th to 6th grade | 16 | 75 | 61 | 194 |
| Number of teachers in 5th to 6th grade | 6 | 5 | 6 | 20 |
| Participating children | 2 focus groups: one with 7 children and one with 9 children | 1 focus group with 6 children | 1 focus group with 8 children | 1 focus group with 8 children |
| Participating key members | 2 teachers and 1 responsible person (parent) | 4 teachers | 2 teachers and 1 responsible person | 3 teachers and the headmaster |
Focus group guide for children and interview guide for key members.
| Theme | Questions for Children | Questions for Key Members |
|---|---|---|
| Contextual information on the school garden and perceptions on implementation | What does the school garden look like? How long have you been working in the school garden? What fruits or vegetables do you grow in the school garden? Do you want to grow other fruits or vegetables in the garden? Do you work with the teacher in the garden or do you work alone or with friends?
Would it be good to work alone in the garden? Why? Would it be good to work with friends in the garden? Why? Would it be good to work with the teacher in the garden? Why? | How did the idea grow to start a school garden? How long is the school garden already in use? Is the school garden part of a broader health policy at school?
Are there other actions at school to work on children’s health? Why do you choose to work with a school garden? Who is working with the school garden? Teachers: all teachers? Children: what age, which classes? All children in class or only a few children? Are parents involved? Why, why not? Can you, as a teacher, choose to work in the school garden or is it an obligation? When do teachers and children work in the school garden? During the complete school year? Also in holidays or in winter? During classes? Are there specific lessons about the garden? During breaks? During leisure time? Who provides the seeds or plants for the garden? Which vegetables or fruits do you grow in the garden? Do they all succeed? Why, why not? What happens with the harvest? Processed in class, at school? Something else? |
| Perceived effects of a school garden | Do you like fruit and vegetables more now? Do you eat more fruit and vegetables now? And why? Have you learned more about fruit and vegetables by working in the school garden? What have you learned? | Do you perceive benefits for children who work in the school garden? Which ones? |
| Attitudes towards the school garden and the development of school garden projects | What do you think about working in the school garden? What do you like about it? What don’t you like about it? Do you think it is good to be outside when working in the garden? Why? Do you mind that your hands get dirty when you work in the garden? Why? What bothers you about it? Do you talk about the school garden with your friends or at home? What do you talk about then? | How do you experience working with the school garden? The purpose of a school garden project can be increasing fruit and vegetable consumption. What do you think about this goal? Do you perceive barriers of a school garden? Which ones? |
| Ending | Is there anything else you want to say about the school garden? | Is there anything we should have talked about but did not? |
Quotes of children and key members.
| Theme | Quote |
|---|---|
| Goals | Teacher: “In the school garden we try to teach the children the growth process of vegetables, taking care of plants, and we also focus on the origin of plants, as children often lack knowledge on this”. |
| Perceived effects | Teacher: “My own children go to this school and my oldest son tells me that he is interested in gardening and I must admit that everything the teachers tells lingers”. |
| Characteristics of the garden | Teacher: “We subscribed to the contest of “Watch them grow” and we got a starters pack: a planter of 1 m2 and lots of information and movies”. |
| Organization of the garden | Teacher: “Starting a school garden was an idea of a colleague. We were looking for something to do within our Environmental Care at School-project, to plant and sow with children”. |
| Staffing considerations | Teacher: “It is important that there is a person who stimulates the whole process, who says: “Now it is time to do this and ‘that’ person is going to do it…””. |
| Positive attitudes of key members | Teacher: “It is fun and I think it is feasible. This is perfect and we actually had a good harvest from those planters”. |
| Barriers of key members | Teacher: “A lot of teachers are not keen to do it (=working together with the children in the garden), because it is seen as a burden and because they need to maintain it over the year”. |
| Positive attitudes of children | Child: “I think it was nice to do something new and something different during class than what we otherwise do”. |
| Barriers of children | Child: “If there is not a lot of work, I don’t really like it”. |