Just another day in Paradise (EDU): Urban nursery turns soil to nurture STEAM students

February 17, 2022  |  Austin Barnes

Paradise EDU at Paradise Garden Club

When learners dig into the Paradise Garden Club STEAM program, they unearth non-traditional learning opportunities in a classroom cased in chlorophyll. 

“It starts on a very base level — using your hands to work with raw soil,” said Jessica Teliczan, owner and operator of Crossroads-planted Paradise Garden Club, teasing the newly launched effort — formally branded as Paradise EDU — that aims to make kids more open to non-traditional learning opportunities. 

“It lowers your stress levels, it makes you feel safe — it makes you feel like you’re tapping into something that humans have been doing for hundreds of thousands of years.”

Erika Baker, Paradise EDU, Paradise Garden Club

Such a feeling is one Teliczan and Erika Baker, STEAM education director, hope to shed light on for kids through the plant shop’s expansion into educational programming; now hosting monthly STEAM sessions, one-on-one educational experiences, field trips, and birthday parties set against an urban nursery backdrop that’s ideal for scientific exploration. 

“As an informal educator, I also teach subjects like theater,” explained Baker, who joined Paradise in 2021, detailing her expertise and how it nurtures the program which is set to host its next session Friday afternoon. 

Click here to register kids for a Paradise STEAM Session or here to read more about Paradise.

“My goal is to give kids positive outlets and to allow them to learn in a more hands-on environment, because we all learn differently.”

Paradise EDU at Paradise Garden Club

Paradise EDU at Paradise Garden Club

Each Paradise STEAM session promises experiments, art, bio-science, and hands-on activities, an official description of the events reads. 

“Tactile learning is really stimulating to the brain and it helps kids create new connections between different subjects,” Baker continued.

“[These sessions are designed to] make learning more engaging, create a positive, unique space to further engage learning, and to step outside of strict structure and show that [learning] can be fun.”

Paradise Garden Club

Paradise Garden Club

Matt Lett and Jessica Teliczan, Paradise Garden Club

Matt Lett and Jessica Teliczan, Paradise Garden Club

Rooted in botany-based science, each session aims to create an interest in nurturing living things that can better a learners own community, Teliczan added. 

“We’re [built] on a foundation of community and education and plants are our avenue to achieve those two connections,” she said. 

“We donate our soil to Operation Breakthrough so that their students can learn about composting — [we do the] same with any of our plants that are sort of struggling at the end of end of the month,” Teliczan laughed, noting the impact of Baker’s work, hopeful to watch it scale in the months ahead. 

“It isn’t all about us and what we can do — it’s about how we can use those plants to reach people.”

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2022 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        DevOpsDays KC

        Plexpod Westport Commons exhumes obscured mural of Kansas City

        By Tommy Felts | August 16, 2016

        For an update on this piece, click here. Amid the dust and drilling at the yet-to-be-open Plexpod Westport Commons is a little-known artistic gem for Kansas City. At the heart of a project that marries history and innovation, the colossal coworking facility that was formerly Westport Junior High features a vibrant — albeit deteriorating —…

        GUILDit feeds starving artists with tools to monetize their crafts

        By Tommy Felts | August 12, 2016

        If good entrepreneurs are money-motivated, great ones know that it’s going to take more than that to be successful. In contrast, artists oftentimes develop a “love-hate relationship” with money. As anyone who has seen a “starving artists” moving van can attest, an artist’s passion doesn’t always lead to food on the table. For artists whose…

        Kansas City streetcar app update arrives with roaring ridership

        By Tommy Felts | August 12, 2016

        Has the popularity of the Kansas City Royals found its match with the Kansas City streetcar? No — probably not. But if you live in or around the City of Fountains, you probably know that its new downtown streetcar is quite popular. Since opening day, the streetcar has carried a total more than 645,000 passengers…

        Political tech vet to lead KCK innovation efforts

        By Tommy Felts | August 11, 2016

        A political tech vet is leading new innovation efforts in Kansas City, Kan. The Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas on Monday welcomed Alan Howze on board as their first chief knowledge officer to oversee the government’s IT Department, the 311 service center and mapping group. A former Virginia gubernatorial director and…