January 12, 2011
Dr. Alice Ammerman

Dr. Alice Ammerman

Public health faculty member Alice Ammerman, DrPH, and health behavior and health education master’s student Marian Sadler were guest authors recently for the blog, “Community and Economic Development in North Carolina and Beyond,” hosted by the UNC School of Government.

 
Ammerman is professor of nutrition at UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health and director of the UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. She and Sadler are recipients of grants from Community-Campus Partnership (CCP), a UNC-Chapel Hill campus-wide initiative to forge effective partnerships with economically distressed communities in North Carolina. Their grant allowed them to develop an initiative in Caswell County that enables senior citizens and middle school students to work together to design and maintain a community garden.*
 
The School of Government’s Community and Economic Development Program provides leadership for the CCP.
Ammerman’s blog entry, which originally appeared at http://tinyurl.com/SOG-blog-2402, is reposted below by permission.
 

Tradition with a Vision:
A Community Garden Initiative in Caswell County
 
The inter-generational garden project seeks to engage youth and seniors in Yanceyville through the design and maintenance of a community garden. The wheel-chair accessible garden will be located at the Caswell County Senior Center, allowing seniors to work actively with approximately twenty five Dillard Middle School students through the Caswell County Partnership for Children.
 
This pilot initiative is primed to have a positive effect on social support in the community and promote better overall health. Similar initiatives have resulted in an individual’s increased intake and willingness to try new fruits and vegetable, increased social support and a decrease in crime, and increased education and physical activity. Senior-youth teams provide mentorship that Yanceyville youth have mentioned as lacking in their community, and interaction desired by seniors.
 
While we wait for prime growing season to begin again in the spring, there will be many additional winter-ready activities to kick off the program. The youth will be invited to participate in a community garden field visit as they start to imagine how they will design their own garden. This will be held at Anathoth Garden, a community garden in Cedar Grove that also coordinates a teen gardening program that could inspire our participants. The seniors are invited to attend a planning session at the Senior Center with a Landscape Architect to design the new raised beds. A fellowship cooking class and dinner at the Yancey House restaurant will bring together youth, parents, seniors, and other community partners to get a taste of what they will be growing themselves.
 
Sandra Hudspeth and Tyrone Graham of the Caswell County Partnership for Children are the project’s main community partners and will coordinate the youth’s involvement. Senior members have offered to coordinate broad involvement from the senior center.
 
This pilot project is expected to span four months. This month, the team has been collecting data for an evaluation to inform future garden efforts locally and beyond. Moving into 2011, we will be meeting with the youth on a regular basis to provide them with educational hands-on gardening experience. This will include many types of lessons, all depending on the interest and talents of the youth and seniors. For example, January’s lessons currently include a demonstration on composting and vermaculture to show how food waste can be turned into valuable material for growing delicious vegetables. As the season warms up in the spring, we look forward to experimenting with a wide variety of fruits and vegetables in the garden to maximize exposure and interest in these foods.


* Note: Ammerman credits former UNC health behavior and health education students Peter Balvanz, MPH, Leilani Ogan, MPH, CHES, and Jeff Quinn, MPH, with developing the project. Their community-based participatory research, conducted to complete the health behavior and health education Capstone requirement, included meeting with six youth from Bartlett Yancey High School in spring 2010 to learn about youth-perceived barriers and facilitators of health. The master’s students sought funding and partnerships that would expand the project and address the barriers.
 
Balvanz is now program officer of knowledge management at FHI, in Durham, N.C. Ogan is a health education coordinator for the GoodNEWS program at University of North Texas Health Science Center, and Quinn is a research analyst at the Center for Child and Family Policy at Duke University. All three graduated in May 2010.

 

 

UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health contact: Ramona DuBose, director of communications, (919) 966-7467 or ramona_dubose@unc.edu.

 

 

RELATED PAGES
CONTACT INFORMATION
Gillings Admissions: 233 Rosenau Hall, (919) 445-1170
Student Affairs: 263 Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-2499
Dean's Office: 170 Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-3215
Business and Administration: 170 Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-3215
Academic Affairs: 307 Rosenau Hall, (919) 843-8044
Inclusive Excellence: 207B Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-7430
Room Reservations
Facilities


135 Dauer Drive
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7400