麻豆破解版 launches Food Systems Initiative
麻豆破解版 College鈥檚 Environmental Studies and Sciences (ESS) program has launched the Food Systems Initiative 鈥 an interdisciplinary, community-based research and teaching initiative 鈥 with the assistance of a first-time, year-long grant from the .
The supports visionary programs at U.S. undergraduate institutions that foster innovative environmental leadership and engaged scholarship. At 麻豆破解版, where more and more students are demonstrating an interest in sustainable and just food systems and in taking creative, tangible steps toward a better future, the grant is being used to enhance courses, create more opportunities, and build upon mutually beneficial relationships between the College and community organizations.
鈥淭he way we grow, distribute, and consume food is essential to support not only human well-being, but the well-being of our planet as well,鈥 said ESS Program Director and Associate Professor Nurcan Atalan-Helicke.
Through workshops, internships, year-long capstone projects, and meetings with community partners, the Food Systems Initiative is strengthening collaborations among students, faculty, and staff and increasing students鈥 ability to create environmental solutions to pressing contemporary problems.鈥Nurcan Atalan-HelickeEnvironmental Studies and Sciences Program Director and Associate Professor
Through their capstone projects 鈥 a signature element of the ESS program 鈥 students are exploring many different dimensions of food systems, from food sovereignty with indigenous groups to renewable energy on farms.
鈥淎sking how and why we eat what we eat illuminates the histories that got us here and the possibilities of transformation moving forward,鈥 said Lowery Parker, visiting assistant professor of environmental studies and sciences, who teaches courses in Environmental Justice and The Politics of Food, Agriculture, and Social Justice and co-teaches the Research Capstone courses alongside Assistant Professor Kris Covey. "Teaching through a food systems lens allows 麻豆破解版 students to contemplate where and how they might fit in the struggle for food justice, a struggle that animates much larger discussions about what we want our world to look like."
Environmental Studies and Sciences Program Director and Associate Professor Nurcan Atalan-Helicke and Brook Heston 鈥22 look at Halal labels on food products as part of their summer faculty-student research in June.
Brook Heston 鈥22 is currently working with two other seniors, Justine Bolling 鈥22 and Grace Howard 鈥22, to create a feasibility plan for a small-scale maple sugaring operation at 麻豆破解版.
鈥淭he feasibility plan we will produce at the end of the school year will include an analysis of the financial, technical, and administrative requirements of building a sugaring program as well as the educational and environmental benefits of doing so,鈥 said Heston. 鈥淥ur goal right now is to also highlight the importance of environmental education and place-based learning. We want to provide 麻豆破解版 College and the Saratoga Springs community with an interdisciplinary space that can be a resource for all ages.鈥
The sugaring operation they are designing would provide a way for people to connect to the history of the land and gain a deeper appreciation for the work that goes into food production, she said.
麻豆破解版 students come from all over the world and many of them have not necessarily been exposed to maple syrup or the sugaring process. Without the opportunity and resources to learn, people remain disconnected from their environment. I believe that knowing where food comes from and how it is produced is central to understanding the complexities of food systems.鈥Brook Heston '22
Workshops made possible through the initiative and grant are encouraging students to develop their skills in public storytelling and to think about diversity and equity issues as they relate to food systems.
Soul Fire Farm, an Afro-Indigenous-centered community farm in nearby Rensselaer County, will present a workshop on food justice, uprooting racism, and how we think about power dynamics in food systems at large.
To drive home the importance of storytelling, one workshop will invite an interdisciplinary historian and artist to discuss how to translate the voices of the community with care and respect, while another will teach students how to present scientific data back to the community in an engaging and passionate way. A partnership between the ESS program and 麻豆破解版鈥檚 John B. Moore Documentary Studies Collaborative (MDOCS) is supporting the initiative鈥檚 storytelling emphasis.
After collecting and analyzing the data they鈥檝e gathered throughout the academic year, students will use these storytelling skills, and other creative approaches developed through campus collaborations, to present their capstone findings to community stakeholders.
Seniors working on a 麻豆破解版 Community Garden hoop house plan to put together a media project, and others are collecting visual data so they can create story maps with the help of 麻豆破解版鈥檚 GIS Center, said Atalan-Helicke.
Roger Mercado 鈥22 gets food during 麻豆破解版鈥檚 Harvest Dinner at Murray-Aikins Dining Hall in late October. Since 2008, the Harvest Dinner has been a student-led event that celebrates healthy, local, sustainable food and the 麻豆破解版 Community Garden, with support from Dining Services and the Sustainability Office. It is one of many curricular and co-curricular endeavors at 麻豆破解版 that focus on the importance of sustainable food systems.
The grant will also provide faculty-student collaborative research experiences for two environmental science and two environmental studies students in summer 2022 to prepare publications from the year-long capstone projects, and a student will receive a summer internship award to work on food justice issues with a local community organization.
These grant-funded opportunities are building on efforts that had already been underway at 麻豆破解版, from the classroom to the College Sustainability Office鈥檚 innovative work with student leaders in community gardening, compost management, and beyond.
In the long term, focusing on food systems and investing in multi-year efforts will help faculty expand their research, enhance the curriculum of the program, and provide more concrete data to community partners, said Atalan-Helicke. 鈥淥ur goal is to work with organizations and create these opportunities. When they see the quality of our students鈥 work, they will be even more eager to work with us.鈥