Bridges' Garden Program

The garden program at Bridges integrates gardening activities into the school curriculum. This serves as dynamic, hands-on learning environments that support cross-curricular education by connecting subjects such as science, math, language arts, social studies, health, and environmental education.

Community Garden

Why Gardening?

Key Benefits:

  1. Science: Gardens offer real-world applications for biology, ecology, botany, and environmental science. Students can study plant life cycles, ecosystems, weather, and soil composition.
  2. Math: Measuring garden plots, tracking plant growth, calculating harvest yields, and managing budgets teach practical math skills like geometry, arithmetic, and data analysis.
  3. Language Arts: Students enhance literacy by writing journals, creating garden-related stories, reading about agriculture, and giving presentations or reports.
  4. Social Studies: Gardens provide a platform to explore cultural food traditions, local and global agricultural practices, and community roles in food systems.
  5. Health and Nutrition: Students learn about healthy eating, where food comes from, and how it impacts their bodies and the environment, promoting lifelong wellness habits.
  6. Art and Creativity: Garden environments inspire artistic expression through drawing, painting, design, and garden-themed projects.
  7. Social-Emotional Learning: Gardening fosters teamwork, responsibility, patience, and a sense of accomplishment, supporting students' emotional development and mental well-being.