Students at the St. Eustatius Seventh-day Adventist Church harvest some string beans and other vegetables at the garden they learnt to cultivate when the 2020-2021 school year began in August. The school board voted to include agriculture as part of the school’s curriculum in efforts to teach students early on to be contributors in the food production of their island. [Photo: Gene Herbert]

January 28, 2021 | St. Croix, US Virgin Islands | Royston Philbert / NCC Staff / IAD News Staff

Dozens of students at the Seventh-day Adventist School in St. Eustatius, an island in the northern portion of the Leeward Islands in the West Indies, learned to plant and grow seeds at the start of the new school year, thanks to a new agriculture focus included in the school’s curriculum.

“Food production is critical for the St. Eustatius community, so we must double our efforts to teach the younger ones to do so,” said Laverne Duggins, principal of the St. Eustatius Seventh-day Adventist Primary School.

Since the school year began in August 2020, the entire school made up of 85 students ranging from early childhood, kindergarten, to grade 6, planted and harvested watermelons, sweet potatoes, string beans, papayas, sorrel, sweet peppers, and pumpkins.

Elementary students work the ground to set up a vegetable garden on the premises of the St. Eustatius Seventh-day Adventist School, Aug. 2020. [Photo: Gene Herbert]

When the school shifted to online-learning in September due to the pandemic, students were given seeds to plant at home and were asked to document their observations in a journal daily, said Duggins.  “Some classes planted on school premises, as teachers helped clean and keep up the vegetable gardens, she added.

The curriculum focuses on tools  and their proper use, soil preparation, planting seeds and seedlings, irrigation, caring for the plants and recognizing when the fruit is ready for harvesting.

“It has been very touching to see the pupils’ excitement toward the program,” said Duggins. “One child from group 8, or grade 6, asked ‘Why are they just starting the program now that we are moving on to another school? It is not fair.’”

A bunch of string beans and green peppers collected in December after students worked on the garden in St. Eustatius.  [Photo: Gene Herbert]

Students posted pictures as the seeds germinated and grew and were thrilled to feast on their produce.

In-person classes resumed in October, said Duggins, and “although the planting area is small, if we specialize in just a few crops, it would help us accomplish our objectives.”

The four objectives of the program include teaching a greater appreciation for the field of agriculture, encouraging students to begin planting at home, encouraging them to grow what they would like to eat, and becoming aware of the nutritional values of the various foods they have harvested, explained Duggins.

The intention is to produce goods to the point where the produce can be sold to the community, said Duggins. “This will give the students experience in the art of marketing and selling their produce.”

Students from the Adventist school enjoy some watermelon pieces harvested from the garden they worked on. [Photo: Gene Herbert]

Gerene Joseph, education director of the North Caribbean Conference, congratulated the school  for its excellent and exemplary demonstration of true education.

“The Adventist philosophy of education, the holistic development of the student, is evident in this undertaking, and it is a joy to see students partaking of the fruits of their labor,” said Mrs. Joseph. “The lessons learnt will certainly impact students now and in the future.”

St. Eustatius Seventh-day Adventist School was established n 1997 and it is the only Adventist church school on the island.

To learn more about the school, its programs and activities, visit their Facebook page HERE.

 

Top news

Violence Claims the Lives of Two Seventh-day Adventists in Haiti Amid Gang-Fueled Killing Spree
Despite Major Hurdles, Maranatha Resumes Church Construction in Cuba
Southern Adventist University Trains AI Model to Classify Dinosaur Teeth