By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- A group of 105 youngsters in Kossuth have included
gardening in their classroom activities and become the first
Junior Master Gardener group in the state. In
November, the Kossuth Aggie Junior Gardeners registered as
Junior Master Gardeners. The fifth graders' teachers began
teaching a gardening curriculum and the classes began
working in their outdoor classroom at the school. The group
studies environmental and horticultural topics, does
hands-on activities, and has the opportunity to take on
community leadership projects. "This is
a good way for teachers to do hands-on activities with their
students, which a lot of educational research shows is the
best way to educate students," said Sonja Skelly, Extension
consumer horticulture specialist at Mississippi State
University. "If you get real creative, you can use the
garden to teach every subject." Lelia
Kelly, area Extension horticulturist in Verona, said the
Junior Master Gardener program started last fall in the
state. Two elementary teachers are the volunteers leaders
for the first group, which is under the supervision of
Alcorn County 4-H program assistant Tammy Parker. "The
program is totally flexible and allows the volunteer leaders
and youth to become as involved as they want to be," Kelly
said. "There are no set regulations about what the kids must
do." There
are three levels to the Junior Master Gardener program, with
programs for third through fifth graders, intermediate
students and high schoolers. It is designed for classrooms,
home schoolers or other groups. There
are three degrees of involvement possible. Youth can become
certified Junior Master Gardeners, be involved in the Golden
Ray program or be a registered group that includes Junior
Master Gardener training in classroom
instruction. Junior
Master Gardeners and their volunteer leaders all join the
4-H program, which offers the Junior Master Gardener
projects. Gardeners follow a handbook that describes many
activities that can be undertaken, or they can select their
own projects from the community. Volunteer leaders also have
a guidebook to help them as they work with the
youth. "The
Junior Master Gardener program is designed to give a basic
education in horticulture," Kelly said. "It's a 4-H project
that helps teach leadership and responsibility by helping
students understand that if they don't take care of plants
and gardens, they will die." Mississippi
initiated a pilot Junior Master Gardener program last fall
in the northern half of the state that will run through May.
Already, about 20 to 24 groups have registered and begun
gardening activities. Some Extension agents and volunteer
leaders were trained in late fall and mid-winter to work
with the new groups. Released:
Jan. 15, 2001
Home
lawns & gardens news:
New Junior
Program Training Gardeners
Contact: Dr. Lelia Kelly, (662) 566-2201 and Dr. Sonja
Skelly, (662) 325-8742
Visit: DAFVM
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