Dole packaged foods joins ShopRite and the Captain Planet Foundation to celebrate project learning garden at Battle Hill elementary school in Union, N.J.

New York and New Jersey Schools Team up with the Captain Planet Foundation to Inaugurate Project Learning GardensPosted: October 6By Outlook-12 UNION, N.J. — Union Assistant Superintendent of Schools Annie Moses joined representatives from the ShopRite of Union, Dole Packaged Foods and the Captain Planet Foundation at Battle Hill Elementary School today to inaugurate a Project Learning … Read more

RECAP: 2016 Summer Garden Management

What a successful summer! 3 interns and 5 FoodCorps service members In total, they visited 50 different schools 227 separate times Food harvested went to various people and groups Atlanta Community Foodbank Clifton Sanctuary Mission Oxford Commons Cooperative Kids at local summer camps Local community members

Recap: 2015 – 2016 FoodCorps year with Project Learning Garden schools

2015 -2016 FoodCorps Recap: 5 service members 14 schools 28,818 student activities 339 pounds of produce harvested from school gardens served to students 22 taste tests 528 volunteers What the kids are saying: “I just want to live in the soil!” “This garden made me addicted to kale” “We should spend more time in the … Read more

Dole Packaged Foods joins Key Food and CPF to install Project Learning Garden in New York Elementary School

Dole Packaged Foods joins Key Food and Captain Planet Foundation to celebrate Project Learning Garden at PS 354 The Jermaine L. Green STEM Institute of Queens Elementary SchoolPosted: September 27By PR Newswire QUEENS, N.Y., Sept. 27, 2016 /PRNewswire/ — Today executives from Key Food, Dole Packaged Foods and the Captain Planet Foundation joined Principal Raeven Askew and … Read more

Three Project Learning garden schools are featured on thenewsstar.com

Let it grow: Three schools get gardensPosted: September 16By Bonnie Bolden How’s it growing? Students at three local elementary schools will get the opportunity to get hands-on gardening experience and learn how to use what is grown as part of the Captain Planet Foundation’s Project Learning Garden. On Friday, volunteers from the Brookshire’s on North … Read more

Project Learning Garden featured in Simply Buckhead Magazine

Diggin’ in the DirtPosted: September 2016By Simply Buckhead There’s something about harvesting the crops they plant that tempts kids at Sarah Smith Elementary School (SRS) in Buckhead to taste vegetables, such as radishes, kale, arugula, beets, turnips and mustard greens, they would likely refuse at home. Read Full Article / Page 21  

Southern Seasons Magazine features Article from CPF Board Chair Laura Turner Seydel

Feeding the FuturePosted: September 2016By Laura Turner Seydel / Southern Seasons Magazine We’ve all heard the saying “You are what you eat.” If you eat unhealthy foods, you’ll inevitably be unhealthy. I’d like to take it one step further. It’s not just what food you eat, but how it ended up on your plate. Read Full Article

Atlanta Schools, Join the Plastic Film Challenge of 2016 in honor of Kids Recycle Day!

We invite you to take part in our efforts to raise environmental awareness at your school. Live Thrive Atlanta’s Center for Hard to Recycle Materials (CHaRM), in collaboration with Atlanta Public Schools, the Mayor’s Office of Sustainability, and Captain Planet, brings you the Plastic Film Challenge of 2016 in honor of Kids Recycle Day! The … Read more

Mental Floss wrote a great piece about the Captain Planet and the Planeteers cartoon.

How ‘Captain Planet’ Turned Kids GreenPosted: August 18By Jake Rossen / Mental Floss Sometime in the late 1980s, Ted Turner came to a conclusion about Scooby-Doo: It didn’t have much of a message. Nor did Yogi Bear, or The Flintstones, or any of Hanna-Barbera’s multiple animated properties that Turner had purchased the rights to air as … Read more

Back to school gardening!

Welcome back to school! Summer is such a brief window of time, and there are few days even during the summer when the school is completely empty. However, for most regions, June and July are bountiful months for the garden. This is when the big, juicy, sweet summer veggies (or botanically-speaking, fruits, since they contain … Read more