Meet Our New Farm to School Coach—Jenny Kessler

Food Connects is excited to introduce Jenny Kessler as the newest member of the Farm to School (FTS) team. Jenny joins the team as the newest Farm to School Coach. Jenny previously worked as an educator in NYC for 13 years, where she integrated Farm to School throughout her curriculum.

Jenny took some time to answer some of our questions, so you could get to know her better!

What sparked your interest in Food Connects and why are you excited to be here?

Working as an educator in NYC for 13 years, I integrated FTS projects and curriculum wherever possible. I noticed right away that my high school students were always asking about my experiences working on farms, being a vegetarian, and raising chickens in the city. These questions deserved more time than a quick chat in the hallway. Kids are curious about the real world, and it doesn’t get any more real than the food we put into our bodies every day. FTS can allow students the time and space to dive deeper into the complex questions of where food comes from, why we eat the things we do, and who benefits from these choices. But equally important, it allows students time to work with their hands, be outside, work with real tools, be exposed to new foods, and have a voice in what they grow and feed themselves. I believe these to be essential learning experiences that sometimes get overlooked in the traditional American classroom. 

FTS is at the center of all the issues I’m most passionate about—sustainability, education, and social justice issues. I feel incredibly fortunate to have a job where I can integrate all of these topics into my daily work. 

Why is the local food movement important to you?

There are so many reasons to get behind local food—supporting farmers, making fresher and healthier food available to everyone, putting more power in the hands of individuals rather than corporations, sustainability, and energy savings, and because I love seeing and visiting small farms. 

Working with small farmers in Belize, I learned how important small farms were to cultural and ecological preservation. And saw how finding a market for local products enabled Mayan families to thrive in their communities and on their land.  In each of the places I’ve lived (and there have been many!) it was abundantly clear how important local food is. It connects people to their land, their culture, and their communities, and it’s under threat everywhere. Local farmers are the heart of a thriving community. 

What do you see for the future of Food Connects and what you will do here? What are your hopes/dreams for this position?

My hope is to support school staff, food service directors (FSDs), and administrators in doing the work they’ve begun, to celebrate that work, and to make it easier for them to do more. I also hope to expand the reach of FTS to reach more students and more communities, including the West River Valley where I live. 

I’d love to continue to build on the sharing and networking that Food Connects has already started—making it easier for our Garden Coordinators, administrators, and FSDs to connect with and learn from each other. As a teacher, learning from my colleagues and visiting other schools was the most valuable experience in my own professional development. 

How will your previous Farm to School and education experience impact your work at Food Connects?

In my previous teaching career, I was able to see the direct impact of FTS activities. I’ve had high school students who had never tasted a raspberry, 4th grade students who were amazed the first time they tasted real maple syrup, and watched many of my students who were least engaged in the classroom become leaders and role models during FTS activities.

But, I’m also very familiar with how incredibly difficult it can be to integrate anything new or “extra” into the teaching day. Teachers, administrators, and Food Service Professionals need support and encouragement, and time! I’m hoping that I’ll be able to figure out creative ways for them to practice FTS that make their lives feel easier, rather than more difficult.  

How do you spend your time outside of work?

Exploring Vermont, gardening and cooking with my son, battling woodchucks and slugs, watching our hilarious flock of chickens, local hikes and walks, fixing up our very very old house, antiquing, and of course, taking trips back to NY to eat all the amazingly delicious food you can find from every corner of the world. Oh, and sitting on the floor in front of our woodstoves all winter—a woodstove is such a luxury to a Brooklynite. 

What is your favorite or least favorite food?

Could never have a favorite.  Ice cream, cheese, fresh-baked bread, salads…

What are three things still left on your bucket list?

I have a Vermont bucket list which includes: buying and using cross country skis, hiking at least some of the Long Trail, visiting the Northeast Kingdom, and camping on/biking around the Champlain Islands.  

Moving to the country was something on my bucket list for years, and I can finally check that off! 

FREE innovative Farm to School module & educator resources at the Monadnock Farm to School Network virtual forum in November!

2021 Monadnock Farm to School Network - Fall forum

Saturday, November 13, 2021

9:00 - 11:00 AM, virtual event

Cornucopia Project and Stonewall Farm have teamed up to form a new regional branch of the NH Farm to School Network (NHFTS) here in the Monadnock Region. Monadnock Farm to School (MF2S) is gathering for the first time on Saturday, November 13, 2021, 9:00 - 11:00 AM. This virtual forum is an opportunity for teachers, school board members, school staff, parents, and individuals passionate about Farm to School, to learn about how they can incorporate Farm to School (FTS) activities in their school. 

National Farm to School programs sprouted in 1996-1997 to change food purchasing and education practices to improve student health. NHFTS Network was established in 2003 as a pilot program to introduce local apples and cider into NH K-12 schools.

Examples of FTS implementation include locally sourced food served in cafeterias and taste tests, hands-on learning in school gardens, or education activities related to food, health, nutrition, or agriculture.

Cornucopia Project has brought FTS programming to Symonds and Fuller schools in Keene over the last few years, even though the organization is based in Peterborough. According to Lauren Judd, Executive Director, "We are available to support schools and groups as they explore FTS learning. Our aim in establishing the MF2S Network is to create broader access to these fun and healthy activities."

MF2S members will share a free FTS teaching module with participants during the forum. Originally developed by the Vermont Farm to School Network, "Nuts & Bolts of Farm to School: Gardening, Cooking, and Farm Field Trips" will, according to Sheila Humphreys of Food Connects based in Southeastern Vermont, "liven teacher's existing curriculum with a multi-sensory FTS approach. We are excited to expand our FTS programming to the Monadnock Region." A Q & A will follow the module presentation. Teachers will receive professional development credits for their participation in the forum.

"Our students are the most important piece to this puzzle, representing the future of policy and agriculture," adds Rebecca Lancaster, education director, Stonewall Farm. "The MF2S Network will facilitate this mission by arming educators with the resources they need to successfully integrate Farm to School programming into their classrooms."

The Monadnock Farm and Community Coalition is the coordinator of the event and works behind the scenes to build capacity for FTS curriculum and activities throughout the region.

Monadnock Farm to School (MF2S) Network members include Cornucopia Project, Food ConnectsStonewall FarmMonadnock Farm and Community Coalition, and NH Sustainability Institute. 

To register or find out more, go to: https://monf2school.eventbrite.com, or call 603.852.3198.

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Cornucopia Project's mission is to plant seeds for a lifetime of healthy eating through garden, kitchen and farm education.

Food Connects is an entrepreneurial nonprofit that delivers locally produced food through its Food Hub, and offers farm to school educational and consulting services.

The Monadnock Farm and Community Coalition is a coalition of 140 member organizations who come together regularly to build a sustainable local food system by cultivating community action and building collaboration to implement effective programs, projects, and policies.

Stonewall Farm offers a variety of farm-based education programs for schools, homeschool, and youth groups. Additionally, it teaches and demonstrates regenerative farming to people of all ages to ensure food security, vibrant communities and a healthy planet.

The Sustainability Institute’s mission is to be a catalyst, convener, and champion of sustainability ideas and actions across and beyond the University of New Hampshire. The institute fosters a culture of sustainability that permeates the civic, professional, and personal lives of members of the UNH community.

Expanding Farm to School Throughout Windham County

Chroma Technology Supports Growth of Farm to School in the WNESU

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 Chroma Technology is growing Farm to School programs across the Windham Northeast Supervisory Union (WNESU) this school year by being the lead Farm to School donor for Food Connects, a Brattleboro-based non-profit serving schools in Windham County.

The Food Connects Farm to School program focuses on the “Three C’s” of Farm to School—classrooms, cafeterias, and communities. The generosity of Chroma Technology allows Food Connects to continue and strengthen its work in the WNESU. “We are incredibly grateful for the support that Chroma Technology is providing us this year,” says Sheila Humphreys, Food Connects Farm to School Coach. “Their dedication to Farm to School initiatives in our community ensures that more students can access locally grown food and can experience engaging Farm to School curriculum.”

“One of Chroma's core values is to be an active and caring member of our community,” says Newell Lessell, CEO of Chroma Technology. “Chroma supports Food Connects’s Farm to School program because helping develop healthy eating habits through education and access to nutritious, locally farmed food is good for children’s health, supports Vermont farmers, and builds healthy communities.”    

So how do these funds impact schools and, more importantly, the students in the WNESU? 

School Food

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Bellows Falls Union High School students, and other students throughout the district, saw lots of local food throughout the summer through the Farm to School Cafe’s summer meal box initiative. This program provided students and their families with fresh, nutritious food throughout the summer, regardless of their financial circumstances. As part of Vermont Act 67 and the local food purchasing incentive, students will begin to see more local food on their trays this school year. The Food Connects Farm to School team is working hard to help school nutrition programs navigate this new incentive, in conjunction with offering Vermont grown and made foods through its Food Hub.

School Gardens

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School gardens are an essential tool for hands-on and outdoor learning. Westminster Center School is a shining example of how school gardens can be done right. In May, the entire school participated in their Garden Day—a day where students plant seeds and seedlings in the school garden. As students harvest the final fruits of their labor, the garden continues to see an increase in infrastructure. Most notably, a frost-proof water spigot, a chicken coop, a small outdoor prep station, fire pits for outdoor cooking this winter, and blueberry bushes. Food Connects provided the school grant support, marketing materials, and hands-on support in the garden—and looks forward to supporting future garden projects, including the annual Farm and Field day later this month.

Farm to School Teams

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Food Connects works with Farm to School teams throughout the region. This task is essential to help develop, guide, and implement Farm to School action plans, provide curriculum and grants support, and create materials and marketing for these programs. Central Elementary School formed a new Farm to School team this year that is participating in the Northeast Farm to School Institute. This school year, the school plans to expand its gardening and do more hands-on cooking in the classrooms, including monthly taste tests organized by the 2nd grade. Food Connects looks forward to working with Central’s Farm to School team to help bring in best practices for gardening and cooking with kids.

Grafton Elementary School is also deepening its Farm to School programming this year, with plans to add new grow labs, a hydroponic fish tank, and cooking tools, including a new oven to make it easier to teach cooking to students. Food Connects will continue to support these new initiatives through coaching and curriculum resources.

The Lunch Monitor: Vermont’s New Local Purchasing Incentive

We are thrilled to highlight the new Local Purchasing Incentive, which passed into law in Vermont this past spring. This exciting new grant program available through the Vermont Agency of Education incentivizes schools to buy more foods grown or produced in Vermont. Offering a reimbursement of 15 cents per lunch served during the 2020-2021 school year and up to 25 cents per lunch served in subsequent years, this grant has the potential to transform school lunch in great ways by getting more fresh, local food into the lunch program while supporting the Vermont agricultural and food production economy.

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Linked here is an FAQ Food Connects has put together about the new program. This FAQ is not an official Agency of Education policy. Still, it is a tool that Food Connects created to help schools begin to strategize about this while the AOE works out how to implement the program in the coming months.

We are working closely with school nutrition directors and administrators on this. Please reach out to farmtoschool@foodconnects.org if you would like to learn more!

Where in the World are We Eating? A Celebration of Diversity by the WSESD School Lunch Program

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School lunch never tasted as good to me as it did on Tuesday, September 28, when I sampled a delicious Thai meal in the BUHS cafeteria. Thanks to “Where in the World are We Eating,” a new program by Brattleboro Regional Food Service Director Ali West of Fresh Picks Cafe, all Windham Southeast School District (WSESD) students had the opportunity to visit Thailand with their taste buds last month. Rather than the standard lunch fare of mac and cheese, pizza, and sandwiches, students could sample chicken satay, tofu Pad Thai, vegetarian Tom Kha soup (my favorite!), and mango sticky rice.

Ali was inspired to create this program to bring the entire school community together to celebrate the diversity of our school district through the shared experience of food. She collaborated with the district’s ESOL teachers to compile a list of the 22 countries students in WSESD are from. Twenty-two countries is a lot to fit into one school year, so she selected nine countries (one per month) to focus on this year, and she plans to continue the program and visit more countries in the future. Thailand is just the beginning! Here is the complete list of countries that students will get to explore with their taste buds this year:

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  • September - Thailand

  • October - Jordan

  • November - Haiti

  • December - Germany

  • January - Kenya

  • February - Syria

  • March - The Philippines

  • April - Jamaica

  • May - Bolivia

Ali is encouraging the entire school community at all nine schools in the district to get involved, with invitations to music, art teachers, and librarians to feature music, art, and literature highlighting these countries with their students throughout the year. Invitations have also gone out to 6th-12th grade social studies teachers to take turns doing an in-depth study with their students on the featured country. As a culmination of this research, students will create slideshows to share with students of all ages throughout the district to teach about each country’s flora, fauna, clothing, and scenery. For Thailand, Sarah Kaltenbaugh’s 6th graders at Academy School created an engaging slideshow that highlighted beautiful statues, floating markets, and clouded leopards. This slideshow was shared with students from pre-K through high school seniors during the special meal. Early grades can decorate their school cafeterias with coloring pages incorporating images from each featured country.

“I want all of our students, no matter where they are from, to feel welcomed and celebrated in our schools,” says Ali West. As a chef and food service director, the best way that she has found to do this is through a celebration of diversity in the school meal program, which is accessible to all students again this year thanks to the USDA extension of universal meals. Ali even met the added challenge of including local produce in the meal by purchasing bean sprouts from the Chang Farm in Whately, MA, through the Food Connects Food Hub.

A Farm to School Celebration

For most school administrators, their work has been non-stop since the pandemic first came to Vermont. From ever-changing health guidelines to troubleshooting class schedules and how to safely bring students back to in-person learning, and all the different technologies they’ve had to adopt, there hasn’t been much time for rest and reflection. Thanks to the generous support of Members 1st Credit Union, Food Connects hosted administrators and school nutrition professionals from across the region for an afternoon celebration of all that’s been accomplished despite the odds. 

On a deceivingly sunny day, 14 school staff members from 9 different schools gathered together for the first time, in what seems like, ages. Each school has a unique Farm to School program, yet schools rarely get to see all the interesting things happening elsewhere. The guests had the opportunity to cross-pollinate and share ideas on how to improve school gardens, share unique ideas about incorporating local food into their cafeterias, and generally celebrate the amazing (and challenging) Farm to School year.

“It was so nice to be able to connect with other area schools and hear about the tremendous impact of Food Connects.” said Kelly Dias, Academy School Principal. “ I'd love to keep up the networking throughout the year with our school-based teams if we can find a way to do so.”

Despite some surprising heavy rains midway through the event, principals were able to connect and learn from each other. Each attendee was paired with another school that had a similar program that they could learn from. From the new Where in the World are We Eating program in Windham Southeast Schools, to the new Farm to School program starting up at Central Elementary School, the full spectrum of programming was represented at the event.

Evelyn Sirois, CEO at Members 1st Credit Union, said that they support the Food Connects Farm to School program because “It enriches our educational practices and emphasizes local involvement in our agriculture." Food Connects is grateful for the fiscal support of Members 1st Credit Union for making this event possible. As a nonprofit organization, Food Connects relies on the generosity of our community donors, like Members 1st Credit Union to hold celebratory events and professional development offerings for our school teachers, administrators, and food nutrition professionals in our community.

Back to School Resources

Looking for ideas to bring outdoor learning up a notch at your school this fall? Or creative ways to engage with students around farm, food, and nutrition education during this school year? 

As part of the COVID-19 mitigation plan, school staff is encouraged to incorporate the outdoors as much as is reasonable in their instruction or daily routines this fall. Our Farm to School Resource Hub is a great place to look for ideas and support for outdoor learning, school gardens, and cooking with students during COVID-19.

Here are a few of our favorites:

  • Cultivating Joy and Wonder: Free downloadable resource book with over 75 classroom food, farm, and nutrition activities. This book is a great one-stop resource for elementary school teachers interested in incorporating more Farm to School education into their curriculum.

  • Teaching Outside 101: A 15-page guide from the Bonnyvale Environmental Education Center (BEEC) all about how to get your classroom outside.  This guide covers the nitty-gritty logistics of outdoor education and idea starters for outdoor lessons in each academic subject.

  • Cooking with Students: Guidelines developed by Food Connects in partnership with the VT FTS Network to help teachers cook with kids while staying COVID-19 safe.

We also want to highlight Discover Dairy’s Adopt a Cow program. This free program provides an exciting, year-long experience for the classroom where students get an inside look at dairy farming while paired with a calf from a Vermont dairy farm.  Classrooms receive regular progress updates, cow photos, live chats from the farm, activity sheets for students, suggested lessons that follow Common CORE standards, and opportunities to write letters to the calf. Register for this school year by September 15.

We are wishing you all a healthy start to the 2021-2022 school year!