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NASP Children’s Fund Community Service Project in Boston

Outdoor Science for the Sarah Greenwood School

By Gayle Macklem, Cochair Local Arrangements and Jeff McNish, President, NASP Children’s Fund

The NASP Children’s Fund (NASP-CF) is presently organizing a community service project as part of its annual commitment to promote children’s learning and mental health during the NASP Convention.  Last year the NASP-CF sponsored a playground build while in New Orleans through KaBOOM!.  This was by far the largest project, both financially and logistically, ever completed by CF or NASP. The experience was extremely rewarding for all of those who were able to participate in giving a lasting gift to a community that had undergone so much suffering, and represented the best of what community service projects can accomplish. Of course there is a cost to producing such an event and although the NASP-CF Board would like to sponsor a build every year it is simply not feasible. Neither is building a playground in Boston in February! The NASP-CF board met this past summer and discussed options in scale somewhere between our traditional “I Like Me” book giving program and the KaBOOM! build. We decided to support a local school in their effort to create an outdoor science centers at the school by funding the necessary equipment. 

Sarah Greenwood School

The Boston Public School System is the oldest pubic school system in America . It was founded in 1647. Boston is the home of the nation’s first public school, the first elementary school and the first public high school. In September of 2006, Boston was named the top city school system in the nation winning the Broad Prize for Urban Education. The Boston Public Schools serve nearly 56,000 pre-kindergarten through grade 12 students in 143 schools. One of those schools is the Sarah Greenwood K-8 School located in Dorchester, the largest and most populous neighborhood of Boston.

The Sarah Greenwood School is a two-way Spanish-English bilingual school.  All students learn both Spanish and English. The current enrollment is 363 students, 33% black, 64.2% Hispanic, .8% Asian, .6% Native American and 1.1% white. The Sarah Greenwood School has quietly done remarkable work to advance achievement among a diverse population of students and has consistently placed student learning as its highest priority. In 2005, The Sarah Greenwood School was named a “Title 1 Distinguished School” by the National Association of State Title I Directors (NASTID) and was one of only 52 public schools in the country that year to hold this distinction. The school has a 'Stay In School' program and received the first Thomas W. Payzant ‘School on the Move’ Award in 2006. All school staff members emphasize respect and are dedicated to helping students succeed.

The teachers at the Sarah Greenwood School produce a parent newsletter and work very hard to improve communication with their families. They have both a School Site Council and an Instructional Leadership Team. They provide an after school sports program and a robotics club. The school gives books to students to help families build their home libraries four times during the year. They offer extended day programs for students in need, theater and dance, and strongly emphasize science instruction.

Outdoor Science Learning

The Sarah Greenwood staff are developing a plan to build an outdoor science classroom in the schoolyard. Schoolyards tend to be neglected open spaces, but many people feel that they have the potential to enhance learning in the classroom and improve the quality of education, particularly for English learners. Boston is at the forefront of a national movement to build outdoor classrooms for elementary and middle school students. The goal of the Boston Schoolyard Initiative involves constructing outdoor classrooms in public schoolyards and training teachers to use the spaces to supplement their teaching in English Language Arts and science. Active environments can help to address childhood obesity, school learning, and neighborhood revitalization. The eventual goal is to create outdoor classrooms where planting beds, sample woodlands, and green technology could provide hands-on science lessons. According to the Christian Science Monitor (August 20, 2008), the Boston Schoolyard Initiative has become a national model as cities struggle to address both childhood obesity and academic gaps.

Supplying “Experiments on the Move”

Andria Amador, M.S.,CAGS, Assistant Director of Psychological Services for the city of Boston, brought the needs of this school to our attention. Their current need is for supplies for the outdoor science center. Teachers would like to do experiments “on the move” according to the school principal, Ms. Isabel Mendez. They need a variety of items for collecting scientific samples.  They need storage carts, measurement tools and magnifiers, clipboards, aprons, goggles, gloves, a weather station, a tracking compass and other lab tools.  After consulting with teachers and students, our contact at the school, Ms. Landing, determined that they would also love to have a robotics engineering kit.

This is a hard working, dedicated and really remarkable school staff. They really deserve our help! And, by the way, Ms. Mendez invites school psychologists to visit the school when they come to Boston!                   

You Can Help

To support the NASP-CF contribution for the Sarah Greenwood School, NASP has graciously decided to again allocate to monies generated from the Fun Run in Boston to the project. Additionally, if you would like to donate to this project you may do so through the link found on the NASP webpage, http://www.nasponline.org/about_nasp/childfund.aspx, or send a check to Judy Martin, NASP-CF at 9000 226th Court, Villa 14-A, Salem, WI, 53168 or the NASP Office at 4340 East/West Highway, Suite 402, Bethesda, MD, 20814.

Khadaroo, S. T. (2008, August 20). Boston's newest classrooms: schoolyards: In sprucing up playgrounds, the Boston Schoolyard Initiative has found a way to help kids learn. The Christian Science Monitor.

Lopez, R., Campbell, R., & Jennings, J. (2008). The Boston Schoolyard Initiative: A Public-Private Partnership for Rebuilding Urban Plan Spaces. Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 617-638