1. Introduction
School gardens are increasingly part of projects related to the promotion of environmental and nutritional education in many countries throughout the world. In school garden projects, fruits and vegetables are grown in areas around or near the school, sometimes providing a small-scale staple food source, as well as other complementary activities. However, this is not a new approach; already in the 1950s, FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization) and UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund) had begun the “Applied Nutrition Projects” meant to improve nutrition through school and community gardens. Numerous other interventions by government and non-government organizations followed, aiming to spread the development of a “garden culture”. In what are commonly considered the developed countries, a “garden-based learning” (GBL) approach has prevailed, where gardens are laboratories for learning science, environmental studies, as well as topics such as art and literature.
In the report, “Revisiting garden-based-learning in basic education”, published by FAO and UNESCO in 2004 [
1], the authors document how there was already a strong movement in the 1800s tied to scholastic gardens, both in Europe (especially in Austria), as well as in North America. At the beginning of the 20th century, the great American horticulturalist, Liberty Hyde Bailey wrote:
“... to open the child’s mind to his natural existence, develop his sense of responsibility and of self dependence, train him to respect the resources of the earth, teach him the obligations of citizenship, interest him sympathetically in the occupations of men, touch his relation to human life in general, and touch his imagination with the spiritual forces of the world”
emphasizing how experiential learning, ecological literacy, and environmental awareness, as well as technical agricultural subjects, could all be integrated within a garden. It is interesting to note how some of the key principles of sustainable development, such as inter- and intra-generational equity and the interrelation between multifaceted aspects, have already been mentioned in relation to a school curriculum almost 80 years before in the 1987 Brundtland report (known as “Our Common Future”) [
3].
In the southern hemisphere, the tableau is more variable: the origins of school gardens are less documented and quite often not institutionalized in official school curricula. In these cases, their design focused on the principal aim, which was not always achieved [
3], of supplying food for school meals and improving the children’s nutrition and health. Similarly to what happened previously in developed countries [
4], youths who live in urban areas (but not only) have less and less experience with natural ecosystem complexity and are becoming strangers to the source of the food that they consume, with evident nutritional imbalances that cause important health problems, such as obesity [
5,
6,
7].
By putting together these considerations, we can see how the perception of school gardens is still evolving and represents a response to the increasingly pressing needs for greater food security, environmental protection, more secure livelihoods, and better nutrition [
8]. A school garden is both a sustainable action by itself, as well as a generator of other sustainable actions [
9].
From the many analyses carried out on various projects [
10,
11,
12,
13], it has clearly emerged that for a school garden to be successful, some key “active ingredients” are always needed [
14]. The school garden must be designed and carried out together with the local community and must correspond to the socio-cultural and environmental place, particularly for crop choices and garden management. Successful school garden projects do not just aim to involve the school’s children, but also the school’s directors, teachers, and parents, or rather school garden programs can and must have multiplying effects, encouraging the creation of private gardens in the case of school-age children, as described by Drescher [
3]. Furthermore, regarding a successful program’s objectives, gardens must build ties and synergies between learning, nutrition, health, agriculture, and sustainability [
15].
One of the most interesting aspects of school gardens is their ease of realization; they can be developed both in rural and urban contests, with limited financial investments and manual labor needs. Furthermore, the potential use of domestic organic waste for compost provides the opportunity to institute an efficient use of limited resources and to close the nutrient cycle. This benefits the environment and forms a sustainable system [
16,
17,
18]. Furthermore, another important contribution to sustainability comes from the large variety of crops, including those belonging to the local germoplasm [
19], that can be found in school gardens and that create systems that are much more diversified in respect to the widespread agricultural models, even the small-scaled ones [
20]. Finally, to reduce environmental risks, the crops are almost always cultivated in conditions that reduce the necessity for external inputs to a minimum (for example the creation of compost, use of legume species, and crop rotation) and that maximize quality yields. All of this shows how school gardens can be a new gymnasium for sustainable education [
21]. Thus, they should be proposed as more than an educational objective, but as the very method where the message, as well as the structure, practices, and the entire educational system are all congruent [
22]. In fact, in the last few years we have rediscovered an interest in education that includes nature activities (excursions in parks, observations of the wild flora and fauna, etc.), the impact of every-day life (education on waste, recycling, separated trash collection, home water-use, energy saving), and even agriculture and animal husbandry. The underlying theme is education on the relationships between humans and ecosystems, which was already delineated by Stapp in 1969 [
23]. This widespread and growing attention towards environmental themes comes from a need to feel that one is making a contribution, and is fundamental because it is directed towards new generations, and to solving conflicts between the current model of development dominant in the population and the limits imposed by the finiteness of Earth’s ecosystem [
21].
In line with what has been sustained until now, it is possible to synthesize the objectives of the current school gardens as (1) reaching a better understanding of biological processes, sustainable agricultural practices, and environmental sensibility; (2) providing better information regarding healthy food choices, favoring the assumption of a varied diet, and guaranteeing irrigation water and sanitary services; and (3) reducing the cost of food and providing a safety net for the poor, giving them the possibility to cultivate their own food. Notwithstanding more than 50 years of experience regarding healthy food with school garden programs, the evidence that these gardens contribute in an integrated way to sustainability, with nutritional, educational, and economic results is not well documented and is largely anecdotal. Although many quantitative and qualitative studies have shown positive outcomes in the areas of food behavior (especially for vegetable intake) [
4,
24], and academic performance (especially for disruptive students) [
25], there is the need to learn from these programs in a more structured way and to collect data to improve their efficiency and quantify the results obtained in terms of sustainability. The lack of an integrated evaluation of school gardens undermines the multifaceted contribution that they produce for society.
This work’s objective is to evaluate the environmental, social, and economic sustainability of school gardens by applying an interpretive structure called the “Sustainable Agri-Food Evaluation Methodology-Garden” (SAEMETH-G), derived from an analogous model built for small scale agro-food systems [
26]. SAEMETH-G situates itself within the studies that aim to translate the general principles of sustainability into practical and operational tasks for small agricultural systems by directly involving the users [
27,
28].
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Geographical Location and Selected School Gardens
The study was carried out in Kenya in the counties of Embu, Muranga, and Nakuru (
Figure 1). School gardens are widespread in these three counties, fulfilling educational, as well as community, needs in a regional context where agriculture is one of the principal sources of livelihood for the population. School gardens play a fundamental role in maintaining an awareness of how agriculture works; outside of school gardens, agriculture is almost completely absent from the school curriculum and the majority of young people who complete their primary and secondary education did not receive any training for an agricultural career.
School gardens initiatives are carried out by several different participants: they can come directly from government institutions or through agricultural extension officers, NGOs, foreign donors, or directly as a teachers’ initiative. In this area, the local section of the Ministry of Agriculture is very active: numerous school, family, and community gardens have been formed thanks to the support and training provided by the Ministry (4K-Club), which is also working to promote the principles of organic farming.
Many local NGOs, including PICE (Progressive Initiatives for Community Empowerment), and NECOFA (Network for Ecofarming in Africa), in collaboration with foreign NGOs and associations, are operating in the three counties with the primary objective of educating the local community and sustainably using the existing human and natural resources to improve economic and social wellbeing. In Nakuru County alone, there are 90 vegetable gardens promoted by the Slow Food Foundation for Biodiversity through the project “10,000 gardens in Africa” [
29].
For the selection of the 15 case studies, we used a qualitative targeted sampling procedure [
30], individuating the most representative school gardens of the various counties. In total, 15 gardens were selected with sizes that varied between 90 and 5000 m
2. The 15 gardens show different forms of interaction and participation among students, teachers, and the local community.
Table 1 shows an overview of the selected school gardens.
2.2. SAEMETH-G Method: Dimensions, Components, and Indicators of Sustainability
The SAEMETH-G method has been developed as an attempt to make the concept of sustainability operative in school gardens, taking into consideration the triple bottom line of social, environmental, and economic sustainability. The sustainability assessment framework’s construction was based on an interdisciplinary dialogue among a team of five Kenyan and 10 Italian experts, including the authors of the present work.
The 15 experts were both the heads of theoretical projects (professors, teachers, and researchers) but, most of all, of practical school garden projects (agronomists, managers of cooperative development projects, NGOs) addressing social, environmental, and economical themes. The team was composed to include different school garden stakeholders.
The construction of the framework moved across three levels of increasing complexity: first the selection of the sustainability dimensions; then, the individuation of the components; and, finally the choice of proper indicators as described in
Table 2. Three focus groups were organized to support the exchange among research participants across the three levels of the framework elaboration. The socio-cultural, agro-environmental, and economic dimensions of sustainability, already selected for the SAEMETH framework for small agri-food system [
26], were considered to also be well-suited for school gardens.
Regarding the weight of the dimensions, the outcome of the exchange among the research stakeholders, reached during the first focus group, was to attribute an equal importance (equal weight = maximum 100 for each measurement) to each of the three dimensions in the total measure of sustainability.
The definition of the components and the attribution of weights to the components (Level 2) of the various dimensions with the equal weights system led to the following outcome:
for the social-cultural dimensions: two components were selected (internal and external relationships) with a weight equal to 50;
for the agro-environmental dimensions: five components were selected (biodiversity, culture/terroir, farming practices, productive process, energy) with a weight equal to 20; and
for the economic dimensions: two components were selected (external input, products sold) with a weight of 50.
This structure reflects the trade-offs made between the considered objectives and the priorities emphasized by the research team starting directly from the proposals of the different stakeholders [
27]. By following the approach used for the formulation of SAEMETH [
26], and already successfully applied by Van Calker et al. [
31] and by Meul et al. [
32], the research team tried to mediate the subjectivity of the school garden sustainability components in order to have a framework that allows data collection to be standardized and results to be comparable.
The selection, test, and refinement of the indicators were the most challenging part in terms of time and debate. Various indicators were tested for each component as well as various maximum and minimum values for these indicators. This pilot phase involved three school gardens (one for each county). Quantitative and qualitative data were considered for the indicator selection. For each of the chosen indicators, we have defined a minimum threshold (0 = for the worst situations) and a maximum (10 = the best situations); the reference values are, in some cases, derived through the best techniques available, in other cases through the results of an ad hoc questionnaire and through the proposals of experts. Finally, a set of indicators was agreed upon for the assessment of the 15 selected school gardens for the socio-cultural (
Table 3), agro-environmental (
Table 4), and economic (
Table 5) dimension.
2.3. Collection and Statistical Elaboration of the Data
The data were collected for each garden during two visits, lasting about three hours each, (interviews were conducted with at least 30% of the people involved) including a meeting with the project manager in loco conducted by an expert trained in our method. The training program of the expert, carried out in Italy, included a theoretical part with lessons on how to obtain the information on a specific indicator as well as training in the field developed in gardens located in the cities of Turin and Palermo (Italy). At the end of the training period, the expert was well versed in asking for and verifying responses in a standardized way. English was used as the reference language. The interviewer was always accompanied by a translator, who translated the question into Swahili or, where necessary, into the local dialect.
Once the data had been collected, they were first elaborated and viewed graphically, similarly to SAEMETH [
26], by putting dimensions, components, and indicators together so that they could be analyzed both singularly and as a whole, considering different scales of analysis (the 15 school gardens, a single school garden, a single dimension, a single component). For the information regarding Level 1 (dimension), the data have been visibly grouped together in a bar graph. For Level 2, a radar chart shows all of the components of total sustainability together, independently of their size. This operation is made possible by the equal-weights approach regarding the size pertaining to each one. This tool supports school gardens coordinator to conceive of their achievements in a holistic way. The indicator values of the analyzed systems are positioned along the axes of a radial diagram scaled from 0 to 100, from the worst (0) to the best (100); therefore, the external ring of the diagram represents the optimal values measured for each component. Furthermore, for Level 2, a principal components analysis (PCA) was performed in order to show the behavior of the components in the school garden’s sustainability assessment. Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin and Barlett’s sphericity tests were used to test and analyze the appropriateness of the PCA. For an easier interpretation of the PCA results, varimax rotation was applied. For Level 3, a cluster analysis was used in order to show the trend of the 50 indicators in relation to the 15 school gardens. Ward’s method of hierarchical clustering with squared Euclidean distance was applied to explore the sample grouping. All of these statistical analyses have been performed with SPSS software 13.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA).
3. Results
3.1. Application of SAEMETH-G: Level 1—Dimensions
The bar graph (
Figure 2) shows the total sustainability of value each school garden. Only the Iruguini Garden (Muranga 1) exceeds the threshold of 200, showing positive values (the minimum sustainability threshold was equal to 50 for each single dimension—defined by the research team) for all of the three dimensions. All of the other school gardens registered a total sustainability value comprised between 150 and 190. In the case of the gardens of Embu (1, 2, and 4) and Nakuru (2 and 4), the agro-environmental dimension is less than 40, indicating problems relative to the cultivation techniques adopted.
Furthermore, it shows how socio-cultural and economic sustainability are positive elements for all of the analyzed school gardens. In particular, the values reached by the socio-cultural scale underline how important the school garden is as a gymnasium for interpersonal relationships inside and outside students’ school journey.
3.2. Application of SAEMETH-G: Level 2—Components
The radar graphs (
Figure 3) show the distribution of the various components (expressed as percentages) in each garden, aggregated according to geographical location. It is one of the possible result representations. This way of gathering the data has been selected in order to look for the presence of a trend within the territorial context defined by the county (homogeneity of climate conditions, ethnicity know-how in garden management).
In all of the three territories, and in all of the gardens, the internal relationships and culture and regional components reach values above 70%. It is particularly interesting to note that, in addition to the indicators regarding the involvement of women and youths, those that regard the internal relationship component, and most of all, the indicator for diet diversification, reached elevated thresholds. In contrast, external relationships were seen to be lacking, showing a certain difficulty by the schools to communicate their own activities to the outside world through any means of communication.
Regarding the components of the agro-environmental dimensions, no particularly virtuous situations are to be seen, with the exception of the biodiversity component, which reaches values near 80% (most of all in Nakuru and Muranga 1).
All of the schools taken into consideration consumed all of what they grew in their gardens (in the school canteen and/or events), so that the sales component was 0. Even if the schools tended to own the land and not use synthetic products, the acquisitions component (in particular seeds and forest plants) was moderately elevated. In particular, the Embu 3 and Muranga 3 garden were the least self-sufficient.
3.3. Principal Components Analysis (Level 2) and Cluster Analysis (Level 3)
With the aim of evaluating which of the Level 2 components were the most influential in determining the value of sustainability, a PCA was carried out with the data relative to all of the gardens in all of the geographic locations.
The primary purpose of the PCA is to reduce the nine components (representatives of analyzed phenomenon as derived from their articulation into indicators) in some latent variables by performing a linear transformation of the variables. Therefore, the variable with higher variance (highlighted in bold) is drawn on the first axis, the second on the second axis, and so on. In order to reduce the complexity, the main (for variance) among the new latent variables (factors) is usually analyzed.
As can be observed in
Table 6, Factor 1 is explained by the indicators aggregated in an input and acquisition process. Factor 2 is connected to the agro-environmental indicators, grouped into Biodiversity and Agricultural Practices, while Factor 3 emphasizes aspects that are more socio-cultural and regard generational exchange such as culture, region, and internal relationships. The fact that these three principal components are represented by factors included in the three considered dimensions (socio-cultural, agro-environmental, and economic) clearly shows that the indicators chosen by the stakeholders for these representations are reliable and demonstrates the relevance of all three dimensions (
Figure 4).
Finally, to show the homogenous presence able to characterize the sustainability of the analyzed gardens, a cluster analysis (
Figure 5) was carried out taking into consideration all of the Level 3 elements (indicators). The cluster analysis is a multivariate statistical analysis technique able to logically group the countings in order to minimize the differences inside the groups and to maximize the differences among groups.
The analyzed gardens were aggregated according to the geographic areas, with the exception of the Nakuru 4 and Embu 5 gardens. This kind of analysis made it possible to show how the similar climate conditions and the cultural component of the local populations had a particular influence on every-day actions. In fact, the Muranga county gardens, all aggregated into a single cluster, were able to strongly influence the practices and processes characteristic of the Kikuyu culture, the ethnicity dominant in the area [
33].
4. Discussion
SAEMETH-G is an interpretative framework for assessing and monitoring the sustainability of school gardens, inspired by the SAEMETH method [
26] for evaluating small-scale crops. It is based on the parity of socio-cultural, agro-environmental, and economic dimensions of sustainability (in terms of weight due to an acknowledgement of the same level of relevance) with the aim of facilitating a synthetic vision of the school gardens, as a multifaceted learning tool [
34].
Its application on the 15 case studies in Kenya has demonstrated the functionality of a method proposed for a wide-spectrum and integrated evaluation of school gardens as a mix of quantitative and qualitative data. For some components and indicators of the agro-environmental and economic dimensions in particular, a quantitative approach has been possible (for example, the evaluation of the lifecycle and of the calculation of net margins). However it is clear that there are several constraints to exactly measuring some features of school gardens: the cost of the harvest and analysis of the data might be high and, furthermore, quite often these data are unavailable. The choice of using a large number of qualitative indicators, on one hand, penalizes the possibility of a precise analysis of a single indicator but, on the other hand, allows for a wider perspective of the capacity of an environmentally-, economically-, and most of all socially-sustainable system inside a school curriculum [
9]. The method has shown a substantial flexibility and, thus, can also be applied to different models of school gardens (managed by teachers, by local agricultural officers, by local NGOs). In fact, the analyzed gardens include all of the aspects of experiential education tied to local knowledge even though they represent different school garden programs. There are good reasons to believe that the garden micro-system as a sustainable action (albeit with variable margins of improvement according to the specific situation). It is a way of working on the approach children have toward sustainability [
9]. Thus, it is hoped that these kinds of learning laboratories will continue to spread.
According to the ecological principal of interdependence [
35], in which variations in an ecosystem’s components produce variations of other components, virtuous processes at a scholastic level can also generate changes at the family and community level [
36].
The participation of all of the subjects involved in the realization and management of school gardens together with experts, including those outside the academic world, in various phases of the methodology has, furthermore, carried out a fundamental role in the development of SAEMETH-G, the importance of which has already been shown in other works, such as that of Olsson and Folke [
37].
Aside from analyzing single SAEMETH-G gardens, the methodology was seen to be useful for comparing different systems at a school level, and could also be applied in the future to analyze school garden in other geographical contexts as well as other kinds of gardens such as community gardens. It could also become a supporting tool for monitoring the sustainability performance of school gardens over time by identifying possible spaces for improvement.
However, it is important to strengthen this research with other case studies with the objective of better understanding the importance of the synergies between the components and indicators in order to further refine the point-system criteria. In addition, the analysis of these synergies could reduce the number of indicators and make the method more widely applicable for explaining complex systems in simple ways. At the moment the framework is also still weighed down by the remarkable training that is necessary for those carrying out the data collection.
5. Conclusions
Among the different instruments that can favor an interdisciplinary and every-day approach to sustainability, caring for a school garden has revealed itself to be particularly effective across different nations and cultures. Furthermore, many different school subjects can be involved in the educational activities connected to it and it can play a fundamental role in bridging the gap perceived by new generations between the production and consumption of food.
Clearly, the school garden offers a “learning space” that is potentially more innovative and experiential than traditional school contexts. It should also be recognized that the school garden experience is not always as easy to implement as it seems because it requires not only adequate space and tools, but also teachers with appropriate skills (theoretical and practical management).
SAEMETH-G has shown itself to be an analysis method that is sufficiently flexible to be applied to models that are managed in different ways, even if based on approaches with a similar foundation. Additionally, even though the selected case studies received a good sustainability score on average, the method has contributed to showing the necessity of intervening in the training and productive processes with the aim of improving some fundamental aspects of sustainability, most of all in the agro-environmental field. Gardens may suffer when practical and theoretical skills are lacking, particularly when training is unavailable. In such cases, school-garden experiences can be improved by providing the teachers who manage the gardens (and activities related to them) with more scientific and informative support and by designing the school garden to be a complete agro-ecological system, complete and as independent as possible from external inputs and the associated negative externalities. In this way, the resulting garden can become a key part of a systemic education that supports an understanding of local and global issues.