Issued February 25, 1909. U.S DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. OFFIOH OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS—BULLETIN 204. A. C. TRUE, Director. SCHOOL GARDENING AND NATURE STUDY IN ENGLISH RURAL SCHOOLS AND IN LONDON. BY MISS SUSAN B. SIPE, Collaborator, Bureau of Plant Industry. WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICER. 1909. 4122 Issued February 25, 1909. U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. ; OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS—BULLETIN 204, A. C. TRUE, Director. SCHOOL GARDENING AND NATURE STUDY IN ENGLISH RURAL SCHOOLS AND IN LONDON. BY MISS SUSAN B. SIPE, Collaborator, Bureau of Plant Industry. <5 hiicesssss> WASHINGTON: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. 1909. ry L/V THE OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. A. C. TRuE, Ph. D., Se. D., Director. BE. W. ALLEN, Ph. D., Assistant Director and Editor of onoRiment ai Record. W. H. Beat, A. B., M. E., Chief ae, Editorial Division. Dick J. CrosBy, M. 8., Specialist in Agricultural Education, 204 (2) ay MAR 5 1909 ae D: Of D, u p : ROMS Secnee LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL. U. S. DeparTMENT or AGRICULTURE, Orrice or EXprriMEeNtT STATIONS, Washington, D. C., October 1, 1908. Sir: I have the honor to transmit herewith a manuscript submit- ted by Dr. B. T. Galloway, Chief of the Bureau of Plant Industry, for publication as a bulletin of this Office. The manuscript is enti- tled “School Gardening and Nature Study in English Rural Schools and in London,” and was prepared by Miss Susan B.. Sipe, teacher of botany and nature study in Normal School No. 1 of this city, and collaborator of the Bureau of Plant Industry in school-garden work. It is a report upon some investigations of methods of teaching nature study and school gardening conducted by Miss Sipe in connection with a recent visit to Europe. For the successful prosecution of these investigations Miss Sipe was much indebted to Mr. T. S. Dymond, a member of the board of education for England, and to the secretaries of the education committees in the counties visited, the county agricultural inspectors, and the principals of the schools in London. Through the courtesy of these gentlemen, special oppor- tunities for study were afforded Miss Sipe, and it gives her pleasure to express her appreciation of their efforts in her behalf. The report contains many points of interest to American readers concerning methods of teaching nature study and school gardening and will supplement her earlier report on school gardens in some American cities, published as Bulletin 160 of this Office. I therefore recommend that it be published as Bulletin No. 204 of this Office. The bulletin contains 15 illustrations which are considered neces- sary for the clear understanding of the text. Respectfully, ASC: Laon, Director. Hon. JAmMres WIiLson, Secretary of Agriculture. 204 (3) CONTENTS. Nature study in the schools of Whitechapel, London_____._......----------- Roswearden. Myrdle Street school 242.2 .).622 -- 2-22... 5-252 eee sess: Nature Study Museum, St.-George-in-the-East....-....--.------------- iim AGL OT ON Gla seies sane e ee = acct gens -ceesescescekcac cs AE ESC REDS SEMOO IS ee eevee et en he Sencar chou ajo atc cose alae FINE MIMO EU Vinee rer ere eee ree: te en ee Se Ei cee eee Recreation ground and children’s garden..---...-...--------------- i ASIEULEC SE MOO nema remem er eee ees oe SPO OR Lee No ee oe es oi Crnnaey-in-tow lex MibiMion. 222 25 22 has Lote ns oe sees Sees ses- 2s Plants grown from seeds by London school children .......--..----- Sehools miubualvardeschemessss ames i en eas pee is Seseise,. eee See Imrre SE NGhy CON ee ce e oS es es ee nee Sk Nature study at the Kentish Town Road School, London .........-----.----. Pecan ime Lata pated MeCab hs sete hace See a cow hoe eee ee oe ian -mistaMce JOUIMCYS 22. ohececieseceess 5 seese Sods GFA OP vara BROT Ae, me fuurealuschoolicandengres- a. s-tsc. ase coos ca ee wane t= Be eA oe erento i SPOCUOES 2 a\ 5 kao ons le al seers wa cle be ole aoe «eles = rts oe ROUTO ENS | eet se to 8 Oe er eel at ee CPP SEEN ECS Sh oe era a a Hesexe Count yascheme fOr Cardensm =. < sooaease -e ee = eee oe Wiestneld- Council School, Woking, Surrey -..25 --.-:---22. <2 ---- eure GUSERVALOfy=2 = 8. ose iat ee eee Ses Sas eae Se iirescommon earden plat,-Oxiordshires.s 2-4-2. ass-e-ce5 Se ae 2 PU Oiment: Cardensiens ss ae eted eincinn ee ine Sietape soo wlt a cte eieslaice ee Teachers’ courses and examination ..-.- cS es aes ee ee pa gee es ent, ng Hoxncultunaly@ollere: Swanley, ehenites a2 23222 ess ese eee oe oe eee SHPO? COURS GS Seo ae Boe GaSe ee eee ee et ee ee eee ee 204 (5) o ww oo oo oO nm 8 wo Oo OD Ib Fic. ILLUSTRADION S: . ‘Sallie,’ the borough Ot H CO bo © 0 I OD oe bo oe — ee = c= 15. hivand 4. eee . “Tom,” the borough toad . Children’s garden at the Nature Study Museum -.....-.-.---------- . Typical drawing lesson required in London schools .....---.-------- . Water color of alder made from natural spray.........---.---..----- Water colors of orchid and currants made from the objects.......--- >, Wessonuin' forestryjoushlampsteadebleat has = =se === eee see . Lesson on pond life, Hampstead? Heath s2c2- > sees = 3 ee . Three-minute observation on the edge of the pond.._.......-------- 10. Long-distance vacation journey, Kentish Town Road School, London. . Surrey school garden on very poor soil . Surrey school garden on same kind of soil as that shown in figure 11, showing the effect of trenching and fertilizers -.......---.-.---+-- 3. Evening school plats, Westfield Council School garden, Surrey, Eng- land ..25.4.2. see eee eee See ee ee ee ee . Observatory invvarden= = 2252 soeeeee ssee ee ae eee eee eee Rural school garden’ at Culham> Oxtordshineso: -= 5 eeeee eee eee 204 (6) SCHOOL GARDENING AND NATURE STUDY IN ENGLISH SCHOOLS. NATURE STUDY IN THE SCHOOLS OF WHITECHAPEL, LONDON. The Whitechapel district of London, with its mass of unemployed humanity and with foreigners forming a large proportion of its popu- lation, seems an unpromising place to carry on investigations in nature-study teaching. But the investigator is very soon impressed with the earnest belief of the Whitechapel teachers in the immense value of nature study in the education of the Jewish and .Russian children whom they are training for British subjects, with the spirit of self-sacrifice in these underpaid men and women, and with the intelligent enthusiasm shown by the children into whose lives comes nothing of the beautiful except that brought by the teachers, and whose natural environment is smoke, mud, and rain. ROOF GARDEN, MYRDLE STREET SCHOOL. The head mistress of the Myrdle Street Higher Elementary School, Miss M. Brooks, is working out the problem by means of a roof garden. This school is one of the newest council schools, a well- lighted three-story building with a commodious central hall extend- ing to the roof, but with absolutely no ground. The playground is on the roof. Miss Brooks is making herculean efforts to bring nature interests into this school. The children are being encouraged to beautify this playground and to take an intelligent interest in sea- sonal gardening operations. In October, 1905, the London county council granted permission for an expenditure of 20 shillings to purchase boxes to form a garden. Butter tubs were also purchased, painted, bored, and raised from the floor, and thus a beginning was made. Later the council voted that properly constructed troughs should be placed around the roof, and furnished 200 bushels of soil to fill these troughs. The plan for the garden was made by Annie Lazarus, a pupil in the seventh standard. From her plan a group of pupils, directed by one of the teachers, made a model in wood and cardboard of what the garden will be in 1910. Each pupil has a small space assigned to her in the roof-garden boxes, scarcely more than a foot square, but even so, more than she has at home. At the time of my visit, in September, 1907, the Virginia creeper in the 204 (7) 8 butter tubs was beginning to climb the protecting wall of the play- ground and the marigolds in the boxes were blooming. A turret room adjoined the playground. This had been fitted up by the council with water-tap sinks and table for experimental work in plant life and preparation for the roof gardening. On the mistress’s desk a miniature forest of oaks was growing in a straight-sided aquarium jar. Two years ago a few acorns of Quercus pedunculata were planted in it in leaf mold. The children watched the germination, the first year’s growth, the change of color in the autumn, the fall of the leaf, the winter rest, the awakening of the buds, and the putting forth of leaves the second year. The little trees at the time of my visit had reached the top of the jar, about 10 or 12 inches high. I asked the ultimate fate of the forest and was told the children would be given them to plant at home, if any space could be found. On the window sills in the hall were some interesting though pathetic attempts of these East Side children to grow plants at home. The children were asked to bring pots and soil from home in which to plant seeds and bulbs. The response proved the scarcity of such things in their homes. The teachers then procured the material. Seeds were given them and when vacation came the plants were taken home to be cared for. The results showed how little the children know of plants. In one pot were a half dozen varieties of weeds, the original plant having been choked out of existence, but the child owner of the pot thought them “so beautiful.” Stunted and sickly marigolds and nasturtiums gave ample proof of the blighting effect of London smoke. NATURE-STUDY MUSEUM, ST.-GEORGE-IN-THE-EAST. An opportunity to study animal life is found for this school at the St.-George-in-the-East Nature Study Museum. The museum is the offspring of the Stepney Borough Museum, 77 High street, White- chapel. The parent museum is a place of much interest. The nucleus of it was a gift of a heterogeneous private collection to the Stepney borough council by a canon of the Church of England, who resided many years in Whitechapel. This collection was housed at the bor- ough library building, and a curator, Miss K. M. Hall, appointed by the library and museum committee. Miss Hall is a university gradu- ate in science and a social settlement worker of the most practical type. Devoting her scientific training to the uplifting of the masses, she has developed both a local museum and a nature study museum “in the center of one of the blackest spots of the sociologist’s magpie map of London,” which probably have not ‘their counterpart in the world. 204 9 ITS AIMS AND GROWTH. In her report, published in 1901, when the local museum was in its beginning, Miss Hall gives her views of what a borough museum should be, stating that as there was no precedent to follow, it rested with the committee to make one. Some of these aims are as follows: (1) A metropolitan borough museum should exist for the pleasure and in- struction of its inhabitants, who pay for it, and as a means of education for their children. (2) Primarily it should serve as a safe repository for all objects of local antiquity and permanent historic interest. (3) The aim of the exhibited collection should be to attract judiciously the ordinary visitor and inspire him with an interest and enthusiasm for the sub- ject illustrated and not weary him with details. (4) Apart from its central purpose, the London local museum should aim only at being a stepping-stone to the better understanding of our larger national museums. (5) In the arrangement of the collections the needs of the locality should be most carefully considered. It is possible that natural history would form one of the most valuable means of general instruction and education, and especially so in East London, where man has crowded out most other living things. (6) The museum should not only be a source of pleasure to the general vis- itor; but in order to carry out its function as a means of general education to the children it should be in immediate touch with the schools of the borough, and ready to illustrate lessons given in schools, (7) Educational authorities can not fail to recognize the advantages which would be afforded to their schools by a well-equipped central museum and will, without doubt, when applied to, be found willing to bear their share of the expense. These aims have been rigidly adhered to by Miss Hall. That the museum “exists for the pleasure and instruction of its inhabitants and to inspire the ordinary visitor with interest in the subject and not to weary him with details” is shown by the simple language used in labeling the collection, but which at the same time is scientifically ac- curate. Local antiquities are well represented. A whale’s head found a few feet below the surface of the ground a block or two away, fossils and innumerable pieces of pottery unearthed in local excava- tions, show the keen interest the laboring classes have in collecting for the museum. British sailors in foreign ports remember the museum at home and frequently bring living lizards and snakes to interest the Whitechapel inhabitants. ITS USE TO SCHOOLS. The use of the museum to the schools of the borough is incalcu- lable. Natural science is a required part of the course of study in London schools, but the teachers are allowed freedom in selecting the branch of science to be taught in their respective schools. The 65382— Bull. 204—09——2 10 curator of the museum extended invitations to the teachers to outline the work they proposed to teach and she in turn would make lists of material at the museum available for such lessons. She also expressed her willingness to help the teachers by giving demonstration lessons at the museum to classes not exceeding forty-five children. An observatory hive of living bees, an exhibition of ants, an arrange- ment to show the value of the earthworm as a soil mixer, toads, etc., were added from time to time. These living exhibits attracted so much attention from the nature-starved parents and children of the East Side that Miss Hall began plans to expand the “ living” side of the museum, and soon a circular was issued stating that the committee was considering “how an available space in the borough may be adapted to form a center for nature study.” THE MORTUARY. The “available space” was the public mortuary of the parish of St.-George-in-the-East, about a mile distant from the museum. This mortuary had not been used for several years, and an anonymous benefactor, prompt- ed by the vigilant curator, donated £100 to turn the dead- house into a museum for the living. It is a one-story build- ing of two rooms in the corner of the old churchyard, which also has been turned over to the living as a recreation ground. On the tiled walls of the mortuary in old English script are the following inscriptions: Fig. 1.—‘‘ Sallie,’ the borough lizard. “There are four things which are lttle upon earth, but they are exceeding wise—ants, conies, locusts, spiders.” “For so work the honey-bees, creatures that by a rule in Nature teach the act of order to a peopled kingdom.” “In Nature’s infinite book of secrecy a little I can read.” “ Nature is the art of God.” The rooms have been heated, fitted up with electric lights, and electric motive power furnished for aerating the aquaria. On shelves around the walls are large and small tanks containing ani- mals and plants of both fresh water and sea water, and vivaria con- taining living specimens of lizards, toads, frogs, snakes, worms, and. ants. “ Sallie,” the borough lizard (fig. 1.), was brought by a sailor from an Italian port. During the hour between 12 and 1 that the writer spent in the museum the cages and observational beehive were 204 et surrounded by men and boys intently watching the activities of the animals and insects. . . ; can 5 fy : ; ae | | 7 fs 7 » . LIBRARY OF CONGRES HMO OO0e7b0805A