Malcolm X Elementary
Outdoor Classrooms for East Bay Students.
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Youth Impacted
SUGi partners with schools across the globe to plant ultra-dense, biodiverse forests closer to the classroom. Berkeley, California is now home to the first three Miyawaki School Forests in the United States.
Students at Malcolm X Elementary are able to benefit from the direct health effects of urban forests. Learning in Nature can improve a child’s behavior, helping them build stronger relationships, reduce stress and anger, and heighten curiosity. Even seeing Nature from a school building fosters creative thinking and expands the imagination.
Today’s kids spend a whopping 44 hours a week in front of a screen and less than 10 minutes a day playing outside. Access to Nature is not equal; it’s too often dictated by where you live, your race and income level. These forests are a big leap forward in resetting the balance.
Forest Maker
Ethan Bryson
Forest Partner
Forest Report: 2023
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It's a jungle in there! The plants are so interconnected and intertwined that it's becoming quite difficult to get into the center of the forest to do the data collection.
The willows are not just tall, they are wide. The biggest willow's lowest branches spread 320cm horizontally in all directions.
It's fall - the deciduous trees are losing their leaves, creating drifts of leaf litter in the most sheltered parts of the forest. Every twig of coyote brush is loaded with feathery white seeds. There are lots of berries on various shrubs; the toyon's red berries are particularly striking. The native blackberries sent out 3 and 4m long tendrils along the ground, which now send fingers down into the earth to root new plants.
The leaf litter is helping retain soil moisture. Digging under the thickest piles of leaves, we found thick fungal mats.
Many leaves have been observed with half circles cut out of them by native leafcutting bees (family Megachilidae).
Biodiversity Notes:
Forest Report: 2022
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At Malcolm X, we are into our second year of having a Miyawaki Forest. The plants have all grown tremendously since the planting ceremony last year, to all our delight and surprise.We have a new project this year of writing a collective field guide to the plants in there. I am the science teacher for all the 4th and 5th graders who have learned how to classify and identify plants using field guides and dichotomous keys.
We observed the plants from the perimeter of the forest to reduce foot traffic, noticing specific characteristics like leaf margins and venation patterns.We researched the plants on websites, took notes and will paraphrase into our wording for our field guide. With the art teacher, all 180 students will draw detailed sketches of the plants for the field guide.We also will be measuring the plants’ growth throughout the year and charting it.
Last year, we studied the regenerative nature of native forests and took detailed, labeled visual notes of the forest and from Miyawaki TED talks.Other classes have visited the forest, mulched the forest, and written letters to the plants.There is great pride and care of our forest.
Biodiversity Notes:
We have noticed an increase in insects and even found a nest at the base of a young willow.We have heard birds and seen butterflies.