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Unified Education Strategy Grants

Petaluma City Schools District

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Grantee Information

Petaluma City School District is located in southern Sonoma County. Two schools were involved in the Unified Education Strategy (UES) grant program: Valley Vista Elementary and Mary Collins at Cherry Valley Elementary, a charter school within the district. Both schools have gardens on site and garden coordinators who help to tie the garden into classroom curriculum. The gardens are also directly related to the cafeterias, which offer a weekly salad bar with produce grown, harvested, and prepared by the students. The salad bar is free to students.

UES grant funds were used to develop and implement standards-based lesson plans and included the following approaches:

  • A "buddy system" approach has been used to disseminate information and understanding between the upper and lower grades. This cross-age mentoring has built and strengthened a community feeling within the school. This has generated a schoolwide adoption of resource conservation that students will carry with them throughout their elementary school experience.
  • The two schools exchanged groups of students to share the information they gathered through waste audits and diversion efforts.
  • Students from both schools made a joint presentation about their work at the school board meeting in April 2005.

Opportunities and Obstacles

  • In acknowledgement of years of exceptional collaboration, Petaluma’s garden coordinators, administrators and classroom teachers at Valley Vista Elementary and Mary Collins at Cherry Valley Charter School have become recipients of Sonoma State University's 2005 Jack London Award for Excellence in Education. The UES program gave the Petaluma team the tools and means to document their instruction and communicate the benefits of using the environment as an educational framework for their "Teaching Garden."
  • When the City of Petaluma was looking to contract with a waste hauler in 2005, the sixth-graders from Valley Vista offered sound advice. In a letter to the City Council, the students urged the City to contract with a hauler that had a quota for "compostable" waste. If they instituted the use of compostable trays in the Petaluma City schools, the city would meet the hauler’s quota as well as divert waste from the Sonoma County landfill. It was a "win-win" for the city and the waste hauler, and a powerful learning experience for the students and staff at Petaluma’s UES schools.
  • Following a well-received presentation at the California Science Teachers Association conference in 2005, Valley Vista’s principal and garden coordinator have been asked to present once again at the 2006 conference.
  • Staff changes at Cherry Valley caused a breakdown in communication between the two school sites, and impacted the level of collective knowledge about the program’s requirements and timeline.
  • Although staff changes occurred after the grant ended (resulting in only one UES team teacher at Valley Vista and another new principal at Cherry Valley), the Petaluma UES team members expressed their continuing commitment to their vision and to carrying out the efforts that have begun under the UES grant.

Diversion Successes

Through the UES grant, both schools have strengthened the purpose and visibility of their gardens and have implemented the following diversion activities:

  • Composting programs have been started and vermicomposting systems are being refined to handle higher food-scrap intake.
  • The use of organic, biodegradable food trays has been introduced at both schools as an alternate to the polystyrene foam trays that were previously used. The biodegradable food trays are currently being shredded and added to the compost pile at each school site.
  • The district joined a purchasing co-op that includes schools in Berkeley. The larger number of schools increases the co-op’s buying power, thereby significantly reducing costs to the district.
  • The district has also created and strengthened its partnerships with local waste management representatives.
  • Valley Vista’s weekly volume of waste has dropped from seven dumpster loads to two.

Lessons Created

  • During the first year of the grant, a campus needs assessment (Adobe PDF, 321 KB) was created and carried out by staff and students at Valley Vista Elementary. This gave the schools an idea of where to focus their efforts during the second year of the grant.

Partnerships

Program Contacts

CIWMB Office of Education and the Environment
k12edu@ciwmb.ca.gov
(916) 341-6769
Petaluma City Schools
Maureen Vieth, Principal, Valley Vista Elementary School
MVieth@pet.k12.ca.us
(707) 778-4762
CIWMB Office of Local Assistance
dplaola@ciwmb.ca.gov
(916) 341-6199
 

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Last updated: September 18, 2008


Office of Education and the Environment http://www.ciwmb.ca.gov/Schools/
Contact: EEI@calepa.ca.gov (916) 341-6769