2018
DOI: 10.2105/ajph.2018.304674
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School Gardens in the United States: Current Barriers to Integration and Sustainability

Abstract: Objectives. To elucidate details about the barriers (time, funding, staffing, and space) to integrating and sustaining school gardens. Methods. A total of 99 school gardeners from 15 states participated in an online survey in June 2017. The 29-item survey contained qualitative and quantitative items that we analyzed using descriptive statistics and inductive content analysis. Results. In order of greatest to least barrier, gardeners ranked time, staff, funding, curriculum, and space. Time for classes to use … Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Community gardeners in different contexts experience multiple, competing challenges that require time and resources [77,78]; therefore, interventions to address safe gardening practices need to be practical and efficient. This study makes a unique contribution by providing a theoretical framework to prioritize specific intervention targets that predict soil testing intention.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Community gardeners in different contexts experience multiple, competing challenges that require time and resources [77,78]; therefore, interventions to address safe gardening practices need to be practical and efficient. This study makes a unique contribution by providing a theoretical framework to prioritize specific intervention targets that predict soil testing intention.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Edible garden projects are less likely to be in schools that serve a higher proportion of lowerincome students (Turner et al, 2016). Major barriers to the establishment of gardens include lack of funding and time (Burt et al, 2018;Hazzard et al, 2011;Loftus et al, 2017), competing responsibilities faced by teachers (Fisher-Maltese, 2018), insufficient staff support (Hazzard et al, 2011;Loftus et al, 2017), insufficient space (Burt et al, 2018), insufficient teacher training (Burt et al, 2018), lack of volunteers and a full-time gardener (Hazzard et al, 2011), and insufficient parental cooperation and school bureaucracy (Ohly et al, 2016).…”
Section: Edible Gardensmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Teachers find the garden is a moderately to very effective tool for teaching science. 3 aspects of school gardens as opportunities to address time-and staff-related issues: strengthening of garden committees, professional development, and community outreach (Burt, Luesse, Rakoff, Ventura, & Burgermaster, 2018). But there are some limitations based on teacher perception of the innovative green garden-based education implementation such as time consuming and requiring wide and large spaces.…”
Section: The Perception Of Teachers and Students Toward The Implementmentioning
confidence: 99%