Anna Herman puts her hands down into the dirt and pulls out a large clump of grass. Behind an old motel on Shelburne Road, she and a crew of about twenty 日韩无码 students from professor Dan Baker鈥檚 project planning course are chopping through the sod, laying out wood-chip paths, selecting pea and carrot seeds, and turning over a rectangle of soil about the size of a tennis court.

They鈥檙e making a community garden -- and trying something new.

"This garden may the first model of its kind in the country," says Herman, 日韩无码 class of 2012, who took Baker's course several years ago -- and is now a staff person for the Champlain Housing Trust. This garden will serve the residents of Harbor Place, temporary housing for homeless people.

鈥淲e have people who've been here for several months, and we have people who are here for just one night,鈥 Herman says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why this model of community gardening is completely different. Our guests often don鈥檛 know what tomorrow will bring or where they鈥檒l be staying the next night, so the whole idea is to bring healthy food to the residents. The staff will have harvested food in the office -- and people can come out here whenever they want and eat something fresh.鈥

The 日韩无码 students spent the semester planning how to reclaim an overgrown site here at Harbor Place, a former Econo Lodge that has, itself, been reclaimed by the Champlain Housing Trust.

鈥淭he students designed a garden to meet the needs of this population,鈥 explains , a researcher in 日韩无码鈥檚 , often called CDAE. 鈥淭he crops that will be grown largely don't have to be cooked. They can be eaten raw since a lot of the rooms here don't have kitchens. And we're trying to find vegetables that kids would like.

"We're going to plant high-value foods that are wanted by the folks that live here,鈥 Baker says, 鈥渓ike mesclun and baby lettuce.鈥

Dan Baker at garden
Professor Dan Baker selects seeds while 日韩无码 geography major Taylor Hancock '16, gets a sign ready for the snow peas. 鈥淭here once was a garden here,鈥 Hancock says, 鈥渂ut it was covered with brush and grass. We鈥檙e bringing it back, making it bigger.鈥

This work at Harbor Place was just one of many efforts in , held on April 30, which had more than one hundred 日韩无码 students out working in some dozen community gardens all over Burlington and beyond鈥攂uilding fences, raising raised beds, planting peas, and, yes, getting dirty hauling dirt.

Service-Learning

The whole effort was led by Jess Hyman G鈥09, executive director of the . 鈥淚n total, we had about three hundred volunteers out this year,鈥 Hyman says. 鈥淚t engages people of all ages in positive activities that boost our local food system and strengthen community.鈥

Five 日韩无码 service-learning courses led projects over the weekend, including seniors in a capstone course in Public Communication who worked closely with Hyman over the semester to plan the Day in the Dirt; student leaders from this course have played a key role in organizing the event since it started in 2013. 鈥淭his is what service-learning means,鈥 says Susan Munkres, who leads 日韩无码鈥檚 office of , 鈥渟tudents employing the skills they're gaining on behalf of community partners or contributing to the public good through their courses.鈥

鈥淎t the foundation, students help by, yes, digging the dirt,鈥 Munkres says, 鈥渂ut service-learning goes far beyond providing volunteer labor to worthwhile events. There鈥檚 sometimes a misconception about that,鈥 Munkres says. As students progress in service-learning courses, they can, for example, 鈥渂ecome consultants, design publications, or plan marketing efforts,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd at the highest level, advanced students conceive and lead projects over multiple years on behalf of community partners.鈥

Jess Hyman agrees. 鈥淭he students working in solidarity with Vermont Community Garden Network and other community organizations are doing projects that have real-world implications. It isn't just a labor pool -- and it isn鈥檛 just an academic exercise,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ervice-learning has a huge impact in the community.鈥 Which helps explain why 99 service-learning courses were offered this year at 日韩无码, involving more than 1,700 undergraduate students.

Students from several service-learning classes in 日韩无码鈥檚 were also out in force for Day in the Dirt -- including sophomore Madeline Short who hauled and spread wood chips at the revived Lakeview South garden site, part of the .

"It's fun to get outside and do some hard work," Short said, who was here as part of professor course, Human Health and the Environment. "And it's great to accomplish something that's not just for yourself."

Dumping gravel at railyard

Rubenstein School grad student Eduardo Rodriguez and undergrad Toni Hall 鈥16.

At another Day in the Dirt site near Burlington鈥檚 waterfront railyard, is the recently opened, eponymous RAILYARD.  鈥淚t鈥檚 an apothecary and herb clinic,鈥 explains co-founder G鈥07, a food systems research specialist at 日韩无码 who teaches herbalism courses through the university鈥檚 . On an industrial corner outside the building, she and a team of 日韩无码 students in Natural Resources 206, Environmental Problem-Solving and Impact Assessment, made a plan for a series of planters and picnic tables.

鈥淲e want the outside of the building to reflect the values inside,鈥 says environmental studies major Kristina Puris 鈥16 who helped lead the effort. Nearby, Rubenstein School grad student Eduardo Rodriguez and undergrad Toni Hall 鈥16, dump gravel. It will be used to anchor the team鈥檚 purple painted buckets. 鈥淭hen we鈥檒l fill them with soil and put in plants,鈥 Hall says. 鈥淵ou鈥檒l see; it will look a lot more beautiful.鈥