By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi's Junior Master Gardener program has
gone from an idea introduced two years ago to one that
involves more than 1,200 youth in horticulture-related fun,
service and learning opportunities. Lelia
Kelly is the state coordinator for the Mississippi State
University 4-H Junior Master Gardener program. JMG, as it is
known, targets young people in grades three through eight,
but it is for any group of youth, not just school
classes. "What
makes this program so effective is the children learn
teamwork, leadership and community service, while increasing
their knowledge of horticulture and the environment," Kelly
said. "We have church groups, schools, home schoolers and
after-school programs of all grade levels using the
curriculum." Like any
other 4-H program, Junior Master Gardener activities provide
hands-on learning. The program was created at Texas A&M
University, and was introduced in Mississippi in 2000. The
original curriculum covered grades three through five, but a
new curriculum for grades sixth through eighth is being
introduced. "We have
keyed all the activities in the first curriculum to
educational benchmarks established by the Mississippi
Department of Education in four subject areas," Kelly said.
"We hope to correlate the appropriate benchmarks to the
second curriculum next summer." JMG
youth do a variety of projects as they learn about a wide
range of horticultural topics. Kelly said two of the more
popular activities are Suck a Bug and Plant Heads. Suck a
Bug is an apparatus the youth make using a film canister,
netting and some tubing. "You
suck on one tube and it pulls the bug into the canister. You
don't have to touch the bug and you don't get the bug in
your mouth, either," Kelly said. Youth
make Plant Heads by putting ryegrass seed in the toe of a
stocking. They add dirt, tie off the stocking to look like a
head, and decorate their "plant person." After watering the
head and placing it in sunlight, the grass grows and their
Plant Heads have hair. There
are 39 registered JMG groups in Mississippi scattered across
23 counties. Each Junior Master Gardener is a 4-H member, as
the local county 4-H agent coordinates the program. New
groups can form anywhere there are interested youth and an
adult volunteer to lead the club. The
Water Valley Soil Scientists, a JMG group in Yalobusha
County since 2001, was featured in the national JMG
newsletter in July. Errin Dunbar leads that group, with the
assistance of 4-H agent Christine Fielder. "The
lessons learned through this program far exceed the basics
of when and what to plant and how to nurture living things,"
Dunbar said. "We are planting the seed of self worth,
community pride, city beautification and civic involvement
in the future generation of our town. It is amazing that all
this can be taught with a handful of volunteers in just a
few hours a month." For more
information on the 4-H Junior Master Gardener program, visit
any county Extension office or go to http://msucares.com/lawn/garden/youth/junior.html. Released:
Sept. 23, 2002
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Gardening program
expands for youth
Contact: Dr. Lelia Kelly, (662) 566-2201
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:34
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/lgnews/lg02/020923.html
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