With Additional Funding, The KSU Food Forest Will Realize its Desired Outcomes
Expanding the Reach and Impact of the KSU Food Forest
The goal is for the KSU Food Forest to serve as a bridge between KSU and marginalized Atlanta communities by developing a unique and replicable STEM education curriculum, outreach programs, and training in sustainable and regenerative agriculture for food insecure communities. We hope to provide incentives to engage youth, community leaders, and residents from Atlanta’s low-income communities to participate in the programs and training with the goal that they will ultimately be able to teach the design and planting of food forests in their own neighborhoods. Additional support for the project will provide critical funding to expand the reach and impact of the KSU Food Forest to disseminate this effective, but underutilized sustainable agricultural system, and empower and benefit low-income, food insecure communities in metro Atlanta and beyond.
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Cutting-Edge Research: Conduct cutting-edge research on system productivity and climate resiliency. The
research will optimize the design of the food forest and create best management practices
that maximize food yield and resiliency, thus providing optimal results to communities
implementing their own food forests.
STEM Education Curriculum: Develop unique and replicable STEM education curriculum, outreach programs, and training
in sustainable and regenerative agriculture for food insecure communities. These initiatives
will include underrepresented groups from both KSU and local high schools, and they
will be developed based on hands-on, experiential learning projects that address sustainable,
urban agricultural systems, as well as environmental and social justice issues in
metro Atlanta. In addition, we will provide experiential opportunities for students
through internships, research assistantships, and directed applied studies.
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Sustainable Food Production: Share best practices for long term food security. The KSU Food Forest will play a
special role as a model of sustainable food production that can be replicated in the
small backyards of urban households, as well as within small areas of community parks
and forests. Using established relationships, training and hands-on experiences will
be provided for youth, community leaders, and residents in low-income food insecure
communities to teach the design and planting of food forests in their neighborhoods.
Additional funding will allow us to exponentially increase participants from low-income
communities in metro Atlanta that receive training in urban sustainable agriculture
and support to create sustainable community food systems.
Help Meet Short-Term Food Needs: Food resources grown at the KSU Food Forest will also be used to help meet critical
short-term food needs in low-income communities of metro Atlanta.
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