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School Gardens and the Urban Child

Angela Oulton (George Brown College, Canada)
Susan Jagger (Toronto Metropolitan University, Canada)

Sociological Research and Urban Children and Youth

ISBN: 978-1-80117-445-9, eISBN: 978-1-80117-444-2

Publication date: 2 October 2023

Abstract

The research on the positive effects of children’s learning in and with nature is persuasive yet a deeper examination of the contemporary and historical discourses suggests that the school garden has been neither welcoming nor accessible to all children. Its detrimental effects on groups of children have been masked within the discourses of urban children’s health and wellbeing, environmental stewardship, and children’s connection with nature. The school garden has been used historically to enact adult agendas to contain and protect urban children from the social ills of modernity; civilise and assimilate marginalised, impoverished, and immigrant groups; and make future industrial and agricultural labourers who would in turn, entrench the white affluent society’s economic and social positions. In this sense, the school garden was used to reinforce patriarchal, colonial, white supremacist, and eugenic aspirations. We consider the school garden movement in North America through a discourse analysis of historical school garden texts to explore how childhoods were culturally constructed and how these discourses have influenced children both in the past and present.

Keywords

Citation

Oulton, A. and Jagger, S. (2023), "School Gardens and the Urban Child", Berman, R., Albanese, P. and Chen, X. (Ed.) Sociological Research and Urban Children and Youth (Sociological Studies of Children and Youth, Vol. 32), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 9-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1537-466120230000032002

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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