Our Mission The Edible Schoolyard Project is a nonprofit organization dedicated
to the transformation of public education by using organic school gardens,
kitchens, and cafeterias to teach both academic subjects and the values of
nourishment, stewardship, and community.
Edible education provides hands-on experiences that connect students to food,
nature, and each other; and it systematically addresses the crises of climate
change, public health, and social inequality. At its heart is a dynamic and
joyful learning experience for every child.
Our Story Founded in 1995 by chef, author, and activist Alice Waters, the Edible
Schoolyard Project began as an idea to transform the food experience at a public
middle school in Berkeley, California. As the idea took shape, a coalition of
educators, families, farmers, cooks, and artists joined the effort, working
closely with students to create a flourishing garden and kitchen classroom.
Today, the Edible Schoolyard at Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Middle School serves
as a demonstration site and innovation hub for the field of edible education.
Our curriculum offers students experiential learning opportunities that deepen
their relationship with food, facilitate learning the skills of cooking and
gardening, build their capacity for critical examination of the food system, and
develop their agency to affect change in their own lives and in their
communities. source: nycfoodpolicy source: The edible school yard, Nancy
Borowick source: The edible school yard source: The edible school yard
Tag - usa
Echo Park Film Center (established 2001) and the EPFC Collective (launched 2022)
provide all-ages community film/video workshops, screenings, resources and
residencies in Los Angeles and around the world. The EPFC Collective is a fluid
and ever-evolving multi-generational, multi-cultural working group that came
together in 2022 with open hearts to share an array of skills, experiences, and
interests, united in our passionate belief in the power and joy of collaborative
creative practice to support and strengthen community.
Source images & texte EPFC COLLECTIVE
CUP was founded in 1997 by artist and architect Damon Rich with co-founders
Oscar Tuazon (artist), Stella Bugbee (graphic designer), Josh Breitbart (media
activist), Jason Anderson (architect), AJ Blandford (architectural historian),
Sarah Dadush (attorney), Althea Wasow (filmmaker), and Rosten Woo (policy
analyst).
During the fall of 2003, at the Storefront for Art and Architecture, CUP
organized the exhibition City Without a Ghetto on the theme of low-income
housing development in New York City since the late 1940s.
In 2011, CUP received a Rockefeller CIF grant to develop its Public Access
Design project. This project aimed to connect graphic designers with struggling
communities. In November 2018, CUP partnered with the Drawing Center of New York
to advocate for civic engagement through drawing and design. Design that
breathes life into important regulations, smartsign Center for Urban Pedagogy,
Freedom and Incarceration, New York, NY TOC of MONU #23 ‘Participatory Urbanism’
The Center for Land Use Interpretation The lab hosted a collective reflection
space between different agents in the cultural and creative european ecosystem,
from artists, cultural and innovation facilitators, policy makers to citizens.
The main topic we explored together was the creation of new “homes of commons”,
as spaces of encounter between the European and the local level, spaces where
local territories and local actors are empowered and have a closer contact with
the EU and its decision making structures. The objective of the three days we
worked together was to ideate these “homes of commons” and their participatory
tools, governance, administrative structures, spaces of encounter, physical or
digital.
Source images Source text: The Center for Land Use Interpretation