Showing posts with label environmental studies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environmental studies. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Food/Culture/Storytelling syllabus, spring 2019


ENVA 390: Food/Culture/Storytelling
MW, 4:45–6:25 pm, Lone Mountain 350

Professor David Silver (dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu)
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, MW, 1–2 pm & by appointment

This course examines the many overlaps between food and culture from an interdisciplinary and intersectional perspective. We begin with the personal, and trace our own food patterns, consumptions, and heritages. Next, we get political and, with the SF/Bay Area as our landscape and laboratory, explore local actions, apps, and organizations devoted to food activism and food justice. In place of papers and midterms, students will create and share stories – spoken, written, photographic, multimedia, and social – within the classroom and into the community.

  

Learning Outcomes
By the conclusion of the semester, students will be able to:
  • Demonstrate an interdisciplinary understanding of key issues surrounding food and culture with a particular focus on cultural difference and culinary heritage;
  • Engage in intellectually valuable readings, viewings, and discussions about food activism and food justice;
  • Create original multimodal work that explores local actions, apps, and organizations devoted to food activism and food justice;
  • Collaborate with peers and professor to share classroom stories with the broader campus community; and 
  • Reflect upon one’s role and contributions to industrial and alternative food systems.
Calendar
Wednesday, January 23: Introductions and Expectations

Monday, January 28: Before class, please read: Jenny Linford, “Honey,” in The Seven Culinary Wonders of the World: A History of Honey, Salt, Chile, Pork, Rice, Cacao, and Tomato (2018): pp. 43-73; and watch Stephen Satterfield, “Wild Grapes” (16 minutes), https://www.whetstonemedia.co/presents
Wednesday, January 30: Demo Day 1: Everything I ate and drank yesterday project

Monday, February 4: Read Ruben Canedo, “Beyond the Campus Food Pantry”; Estella Cisneros, “Protecting Farmworkers’ Rights”; Adrionna Fike, “A Community Grocery Store Feeds Its People”; Sammy Gensaw III, “Fighting to Save the Salmon”; Breanna Hawkins, “Digesting Data, Transforming Lives”; Kristyn Leach, “Farming Honors the Past and Considers the Future”; Anthony Reyes, “Farming for a Stable Future”; and Rachel Sumekh, “On a Mission to Swipe Out Student Hunger,” from Berkeley Food Institute, Hungry for Change: California’s Emerging Food Systems Leaders, https://bit.ly/2R3pf37
Wednesday, February 6: Read Kathleen Collins, “Julia Child and Revolution in the Kitchen,” from Watching What We Eat: The Evolution of Television Cooking Shows (Continuum, 2009): 71-100. In class reading: Michael Pollan, “Out of the Kitchen, Onto the Couch,” New York Times Magazine (August 2, 2009). At 6 pm, we will walk to Fromm Hall to attend Cheryl Haines’ talk “Out of Place: The Power of Art in Unexpected Spaces.” (This event runs until 7:30 pm, past our classtime. Please plan accordingly. Also, there is a reception – free food! – following the talk in Thacher Gallery in Gleeson.)

Monday, February 11: Watch multiple segments of Samin Nosrat, Salt Fat Acid Heat (Netflix); and read Therese Nelson, “Cookbooks, Not Restaurants, Are Giving Black Foodways an Identity,” Taste (September 18, 2018). Also, as a class, we will attend the community dinner at St Cyprian’s Church (Turk & Lyon) from 6-7:30 pm. (This event runs past our classtime; please plan accordingly.)
Wednesday, February 13: Demo Day 2: Food celebrity/food media project

Monday, February 18: No School: Presidents Day
Wednesday, February 20: Read Taiyo Scanlon-Kimura, “‘Bon Appétit!’: The Value of Fellowship at the Table,” “Meet Northern California’s Suppliers of Local Fish, Cage-Free Eggs, and Fair-Trade Produce,” and “SoCal Teams Visit Local Cheese Maker and an Organic Farm,” all online here: http://www.bamco.com/author/taiyo-scanlon-kimura/ Guest Lecture: Taiyo Scanlon-Kimura, Bon Appétit Fellow. Field trip to USF’s Caf for a kitchen and dining room tour.

Monday, February 25: Read Jonathan Kauffman, “Brown Bread and the Pursuit of Wholesomeness,” in Hippie Food: How Back-to-the-Landers, Longhairs, and Revolutionaries Changed the Way We Eat (2018): 97-130. In class reading: Edward Espe Brown, “Detailed Instructions for Making Tassajara Yeasted Bread,” in The Tassajara Bread Book (1970): 13-29.
Wednesday, February 27: Bread Workshop at St Cyprian’s Church.

Monday, March 4: Read Shanta Nimbark Sacharoff, “Rainbow Grocery Collective” and “Other Avenues Food Store Cooperative,” in Other Avenues Are Possible: Legacy of the People’s Food System of the San Francisco Bay Area (2016): 71-100. In class viewing: Lisa Brenneis’ film, Eat at Bill's: Life in the Monterey Market (2009).
Wednesday, March 6: Demo Day 3: Food store project

Monday, March 11: No School: Spring Break
Wednesday, March 13: No School: Spring Break

Monday, March 18: Read Ben Mervis, “Curry Grows Wherever It Goes” (53-61); René Redzepi, “If It Does Well Here, It Belongs Here” (87-95); Bini Pradhan, Heena Patel, and Isabel Caudillo, “Food is a Gateway” (103-123); and Krishnendu Ray, “Culinary Difference Makes a Difference” (151-159) from Chris Ying, editor, You and I Eat the Same: On the Countless Ways Food and Cooking Connect Us to One Another (2018).
Wednesday, March 20: Read Osayi Endolyn, “Fried Chicken is Common Ground,” from You and I Eat the Same (71-77); and watch “Fried Chicken,” Ugly Delicious, Netflix (2018). In class reading: Psyche A. Williams-Forson, Building Houses out of Chicken Legs: Black Women, Food, and Power (2006).  

Monday, March 25: Class guests: Lisa Marr and Paolo Davanza, filmmakers who run the Echo Park Film Center (www.echoparkfilmcenter.org) in Los Angeles.
Wednesday, March 27: Demo Day 4: Food heritage project

Monday, April 1: Read Priya Krishna, “WhatsApp Is Changing the Way India Talks About Food,” New York Times (November 23, 2018); Amanda Mull, “Instagram Food Is a Sad, Sparkly Lie,” Eater (July 6, 2017); Kim Severson, “Neighbor, Can You Spare a Plum?” New York Times (June 10, 2009); Nassos Stylianou, Clara Guibourg and Helen Briggs, “Climate change food calculator: What's your diet's carbon footprint?” BBC News (December 13, 2018); and read/browse Equity at the Table on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/equityatthetable/
Wednesday, April 3: Zine workshop with Matt Collins and Anders Lyon, Gleeson librarians. Readings TBD.

Monday, April 8: Read Adam Harris, “Millions of College Students Are Going Hungry: A new government report highlights just how pervasive the problem,” The Atlantic (January 9, 2019). Demo Day 5: Community dinner storytell project. Food/Culture/Storytelling students will provide stories for the free community dinner at St Cyprian’s Church, organized by students enrolled in Rachel Brand’s Community Garden Outreach class. (This event runs past our classtime; please plan accordingly.)
Wednesday, April 10: Read Joshua Sbicca, “Introduction: Food as Social Justice Politics,” in Food Justice Now! Deepening the Roots of Social Struggle (2018), pp. 1-22. In class reading: Alison Hope Alkon and Christie Grace McCullen, “Whiteness and Farmers Markets: Performances, Perpetuations … Contestations?” Antipode (2011), pp 937-959.

Monday, April 15: Watch Scott Hamilton Kennedy, The Garden (2008): 80 minutes; and read Janelle Bitker, “A Meal for the Masses,” East Bay Express (June 13, 2018); and Stephanie Parker, “Edible Landscapes Are Un-Lawning America,” Civil Eats (January 14, 2019). Display workshop with Carol Spector, Gleeson librarian.
Wednesday, April 17: Read selections from Monica M. White’s Freedom Farmers: Agricultural Resistance and the Black Freedom Movement (2019). In class reading: Black Panther Party, “Free Breakfast for Schoolchildren Program” and “Free Food Program,” in David Hiliard, editor, The Black Panther Party: Service to the People Programs (University of New Mexico Press, 2008): 30-39.

Monday, April 22: Demo Day 6: Food Activism display in Gleeson Library.
Wednesday, April 24: TBD

Monday, April 29: Watch Agnès Varda, The Gleaners and I (2000): 82 minutes.
Wednesday, Mary 1: Read Sandra Cate, “‘Breaking Bread with a Spread’ in a San Francisco County Jail,” Gastronomica: The Journal of Critical Food Studies (Summer 2008): 17-24.

Monday, May 6: Gleaning workshop
Wednesday, May 8: Demo Day 7: Gleaning project

Please note: Three class periods – February 6, February 11, and April 8 – stretch beyond our regular ending time of 6:25. Please plan, alter, or tweak your schedule so that you can attend and participate fully in these class events. If, however, you cannot stay after 6:25, no problem. You will not be penalized.

Throughout the semester, I will offer extra credit for attending campus and local food-related events and writing a one-page reflection. Some of these events include: Rodrigo Dorfman’s documentary, This Taco Truck Kills Fascists, as part of the SF IndieFest, Roxie Theater, Mission, SF, $13 (Saturday, February 2, 2:45 pm); Berkeley Food Institute’s panel, Hungry for Change: Emerging Food Systems Leaders, Wurster Hall, Room 112, UC Berkeley (Friday, February 8, 5-7 pm; Info and free registration: https://bit.ly/2DpILTz); The 17th Annual USF Human Rights Film Festival, Presentation Theater, USF (March 21-23, 2019); and USF’s 10th Annual Social Justice Seder, Fromm Hall, Maraschi Room, USF (Tuesday, April 9, 6:30 pm).

There is no final in this class.

 
Attendance Policy
Attendance is crucial. Missing class (or attending class unprepared) will significantly affect your final grade. If you do miss class, contact a classmate to find out what you missed and ask to borrow her or his notes. Then, do it again with a different classmate. If after doing this you still have questions, email me. Please note that missing a Demo Day is brutal. You lose 10 points or an entire grade. Don’t do it!

Academic Integrity
Plagiarism is using another person’s words, works, and/or ideas without giving appropriate credit. Plagiarism is a serious violation of academic honor and personal integrity and can result in failing an assignment, being removed from this course, or even being asked to leave USF. Plus, it’s just lazy.

Grading
10% Demo Day 1: Everything I ate and drank yesterday project
10% Demo Day 2: Food celebrity/food media project
10% Demo Day 3: Food store project
10% Demo Day 4: Food heritage project
10% Demo Day 5: Community dinner storytell project
10% Demo Day 6: Food Activism display in Gleeson Library
10% Demo Day 7: Gleaning project
30% Class Participation (which includes quizzes, homework, and most importantly listening, contributing, and participating in class and on Demo Days)                            
                                                                                                           
Note: If at any point you wish to discuss your grade, please set up a face-to-face meeting with me, preferably earlier rather than later in the semester.

Rules
1. In class and on field trips, no drinking out of non-reusable containers.
2. During the first day of class we will discuss and agree upon further class rules. We may even decide to eliminate rule #1.

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

food, culture, and storytelling (fall 2017)

ENVA 390: Food, Culture, and Storytelling
Tues & Thurs 4:35–6:20 pm, Education 104

Professor David Silver (dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu)
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, Tues & Thurs 1–2 pm & by appointment

This course examines the interplay between food and culture with a focus on cultural diversity and environmental sustainability. Using the SF/Bay Area as our landscape and laboratory, students will explore multiple examples of food production, preparation, and consumption. A production class, students will translate their findings into stories – spoken, written, photographic, and multimedia – to be shared within and outside the classroom. No production experience necessary.

 
Calendar
Week 1
Tuesday, 8/22: Introductions and expectations.

Thursday, 8/24: Demo Day 1: “Everything I ate and drank yesterday” project – presented and discussed in class.

Week 2
Tuesday, 8/29: Read Kathleen Collins, “Julia Child and Revolution in the Kitchen,” from Watching What We Eat: The Evolution of Television Cooking Shows (Continuum, 2009): 71-100.

Thursday, 8/31: Demo Day 2: Food celebrity project.

Week 3
Tuesday, 9/5: Read Sandra Cate, “‘Breaking Bread with a Spread’ in a San Francisco County Jail,” Gastronomica: The Journal of Critical Food Studies (Summer 2008): 17-24.

Thursday, 9/7: Demo Day 3: Lunch project.

Week 4
Tuesday, 9/12: Read selections from Diana Abu-Jaber, Trudy Condio, EL Cortés, Julie Dash, Louise DeSalvo, Elizabeth Ehrlich, Linda Furiya, Lucy Knisley, Jhumpa Lahiri, Andre Lorde, Paula Martinac, Jane Ormondroyd, Ruth Reichl, Leah Ryan, Ntozake Shange, Calvin Trillin, and Gloria Wade-Gayles.

Thursday, 9/14: Continue selections from Abu-Jaber, Condio, Cortés, Dash, DeSalvo, Ehrlich, Furiya, Knisley, Lahiri, Lorde, Martinac, Ormondroyd, Reichl, Ryan, Shange, Trillin, and Wade-Gayles. Also read: Bonnie Tsui, Shakirah Simley, Stephen Satterfield, Dakota Kim and Tunde Wey, “Why We Can’tTalk About Race in Food,” Civil Eats (June 27, 2017).

Week 5
Tuesday, 9/19: Demo Day 4: Food heritage project.

Thursday, 9/21: Cooking workshop at St Cyprians.

Week 6
Tuesday, 9/26: Read Vandana Shiva, “Manifestos on the Future of Seed” (2007): 76-102; and William Black, “How Watermelons Became a Racist Trope,” The Atlantic (December 8, 2014). 

Thursday, 9/28: No class. (David will be attending the Black Mountain College Conference in Asheville, North Carolina. We will pool these hours for two Thursday night community dinners (October 5 and November 2) at St Cyprian’s Church (Turk & Lyon).

Week 7
Tuesday, 10/3: Seed packet workshop in Gleeson Library. During class, we’ll take a field trip to USF Seed Library and meet Gleeson librarians Debbie Benrubi and Carol Spector.

Thursday, 10/5 Demo Day 5: Story Tell under the USF Sukkah. Also, as a class, we will attend the community dinner at St Cyprian’s from 6-8 pm.

Week 8
Tuesday, 10/10: Readings to be determined.

Thursday, 10/12: Storytelling Workshop with Sophia Lorenzi, Program Manager at Real Food Real Stories.


Week 9
Tuesday, 10/17: No class: Fall break.

Thursday, 10/19: Read Rebecca Solnit, “Revolutionary Plots: Urban agriculture is producing a lot more than food,” Orion Magazine (July/August 2012); and watch Ron Finley, “A guerilla gardener in South Central LA,” TED Talk (February 2013). Also, read selections from Urban Food Stories blog.

Week 10
Tuesday, 10/24: Read Black Panther Party, “Free Breakfast for Schoolchildren Program” and “Free Food Program,” in David Hiliard, editor, The Black Panther Party: Service to the People Programs (University of New Mexico Press, 2008): 30-39.
Also, read selections from Urban Food Stories blog.

Thursday, 10/26: No class during normal class-time. Instead, we will attend, as a class, USF’s Performing Arts Department’s production of Henrik Ibsen’s Public Enemy at 8 pm.

Week 11
Tuesday, 10/31: Demo Day 6: Urban Ag/Urban Food project.

Thursday, 11/2: Story Tell workshop. Also, as a class, we will attend the community dinner at St Cyprian’s (6-8 pm) and stage a group Story Tell at the dinner.

Week 12
Tuesday, 11/7: Recipe-related readings to be determined.

Thursday, 11/9: Recipe workshop.

Week 13
Tuesday, 11/14: Read Michael Pollan, “Out of theKitchen, Onto the Couch,” New York Times Magazine (August 2, 2009); and Tom Sietsema, "At the heart of every restaurant," Washington Post (August 7, 2017).

Thursday, 11/16: Baking workshop at St Cyprians.

Week 14
Tuesday, 11/21: Watch Agnès Varda, The Gleaners and I (2000): 82 minutes. Read Wendell Berry, “The Pleasures of Eating,” in Robert Clark, editor, Our Sustainable Table (North Point Press, 1990): pp. 125-131.

Thursday, 11/23: No class: Thanksgiving.

Week 15
Tuesday, 11/28: Guest lecture: Eric Andraos, Sets Shading Lead at Pixar. Readings to be determined.

Thursday, 11/30: Demo Day 7: Gleaning project.

Week 16
Tuesday, 12/5: Dinner project.

There is no final in this class.

Grading
Demo Days (7 x 10 points each)        70
Class Participation                              30

Attendance Policy
Attendance is crucial. Missing class (or attending class unprepared) will significantly affect your final grade. If you do miss class, contact a classmate to find out what you missed and ask to borrow her or his notes. Then, do it again with a different classmate. After doing this, if you have questions email me.

Academic Integrity
Plagiarism is using another person’s words, works, and/or ideas without giving appropriate credit. Plagiarism is a serious violation of academic honor and personal integrity and can result in failing an assignment, being removed from this course, or even being asked to leave USF. Plus, it’s just lazy.

Rules
1. No late work accepted.
2. In class and on field trips, no drinking out of non-reusable containers.
3. On Demo Days, we will share our work. If you have no new work on Demo Day, do not come to class.

Please note:
On numerous occasions – 3 to be exact – class takes place outside of regular class-time. On 10/5 and 11/2, we will be attending the St Cyprian’s community dinner until 8 pm. On 10/26, class will meet at 8 pm to attend USF’s Performing Arts Department’s production of Henrik Ibsen’s Public Enemy. Please plan accordingly.

Monday, August 21, 2017

golden gate park (fall 2017)

ENVA 195: Golden Gate Park (First-Year Seminar)
Tues & Thurs 9:55–11:40 am, Lo Schiavo Science 303

Professor David Silver (dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu)
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, Tues & Thurs 1–2 pm & by appointment

Golden Gate Park is a First-Year Seminar that explores the history, built environment, mixed uses, and popular narratives of San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. As part of an accelerated writing seminar, students will read, research, write, and edit their ways through the park – with formal essays, informal reading responses, and significant contributions to Wikipedia. Through readings, class discussions, walks-in-the-park, and field trips, students will develop a broad and keen appreciation of Golden Gate Park.

 
Student Learning Outcomes
This course fulfills USF’s A2 Core requirement. As such, over the course of the term, you will develop capability in the following areas:
1.     Critical analysis of academic discourse: Students critically analyze linguistic and rhetorical strategies used in long and complex texts from a variety of genres, subjects, and fields. [Met primarily in essays 1 & 2 and in reading responses]
2.     Integrating multiple academic sources: Students incorporate multiple texts of length and complexity within a unified argumentative essay, addressing connections and differences among them. [Met primarily in essays 2 & 3]
3.     Academic research: Students develop sophisticated research questions and compose substantial arguments in response to those questions, incorporating extensive independent library research and demonstrating mastery of standard academic documentation modes. [Met primarily in essay 3 and Wikipedia project]
4.     Style: Students edit their own prose to achieve a clear and mature writing style in keeping with the conventions of academic and/or professional discourse. [Met in all three essays, in reading responses, and in in-class exercises]
5.     Revision: Students develop their own revision strategies for extending and enriching early drafts and for producing polished advanced academic writing. [Met in essays 2 & 3 and in Wikipedia project]

Course Texts and Costs
You are required to purchase Philip J. Dreyfus's Our Better Nature: Environment and the Making of San Francisco. We will begin reading it second week, so please purchase it immediately. All other readings are either free online or emailed PDFs. All field trip costs are covered by USF’s First Year Seminar Program.

Calendar
Week 1
Tuesday, 8/22: Introductions and expectations.
Thursday, 8/24: Read Chris Walker, “The public value of urban parks,” The Urban Institute (2004).

Week 2
Tuesday, 8/29: Read Philip J. Dreyfus, “Coyote’s Children,” from Our Better Nature: Environment and the Making of San Francisco, pp. 11-31.
Thursday, 8/31: Field trip to Golden Gate Park.

Week 3
Tuesday, 9/5: Read Dreyfus, “Urban Genesis,” Our Better Nature, pp. 32-49.
Thursday, 9/7: Read Dreyfus, “Urban Genesis,” Our Better Nature, pp. 50-66.

Week 4
Tuesday, 9/12: Read Dreyfus, “Greening the City,” Our Better Nature, pp. 67-86.
Thursday, 9/14: Read Dreyfus, “Greening the City,” Our Better Nature, pp. 86-101.

Week 5
Tuesday, 9/19: Essay 1 workshop.
Thursday, 9/21: Essay 1 due in class.

Week 6
Tuesday, 9/26: Prior to class, listen/read/walk with Marina McDougall, Alison Sant, Richard Johnson, and Kirstin Bach, “An Unnatural History of Golden Gate Park,” a 7-part guided podcast (Studio for Urban Projects, 2008).
Thursday, 9/28: No class.

Week 7
Tuesday, 10/3: Field trip to Golden Gate Park: In search for hidden water with guest lecturer/tour guide Joel Pomerantz, writer, natural history educator, and founder of Thinkwalks.
Thursday, 10/5: Read James R. Smith, “California Midwinter International Exposition – 1894,” from San Francisco’s Lost Landmarks (Word Dancer Press, 2005): pp. 111-126.

Week 8
Tuesday, 10/10: Read Barbara Berglund, “The Days of Old, the Days of Gold, the Days of ‘49”: Identity, History, and Memory at the California Midwinter International Exposition, 1894,” The Public Historian (Fall 2003): pp. 25-49.
Thursday, 10/12: Field/research trip to San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Main Public Library.

Week 9
Tuesday, 10/17: No class: Fall break.
Thursday, 10/19: Essay Two due in class.

Week 10
Tuesday, 10/24: Read Ray Oldenburg, “The Character of Third Places,” from The Great Good Place: Cafes, coffee shops, community centers, beauty parlors, general stores, bars, hangouts, and how they get you through the day (1989), pp. 20-42.
Thursday, 10/26: Read Robert C. Cottrell, "From the human be-in to the summer of love," in Sex, Drugs, and Rock 'n' Roll: The Rise of America's 1960s Counterculture (2015): pp. 195-216.

Week 11
Tuesday, 10/31: Field trip to Golden Gate Park.
Thursday, 11/2: Topic selection workshop.

Week 12
Tuesday, 11/7: Field trip to Golden Gate Park
Thursday, 11/9: Essay Three due in class.

Week 13
Tuesday, 11/14: Read “Golden Gate Park” entry on Wikipedia at least 2-3 times. Read and be ready to discuss both its content (the information it contains) and structure (its outline, components, links, sources, and style).
Thursday, 11/16: Read/complete Wiki Education Foundation, “Online Training for Students.” This includes creating a Wikipedia account and a user page.

Week 14
Tuesday, 11/21: Read “Evaluating Wikipedia,” “Editing Wikipedia,” “Using Talk Pages,” “Citing sources on Wikipedia,” “Avoiding plagiarism on Wikipedia,” and “Illustrating Wikipedia.”
Thursday, 11/23: No class: Thanksgiving

Week 15
Tuesday, 11/28: Wikipedia workday
Thursday, 11/30: Final Wikipedia contributions due in class.

Week 16
Tuesday, 12/5: Pizza party in the park.

This class has no final.

Grading
Essay 1                                   15
Essay 2                                   20
Essay 3                                   25
Wikipedia Project               20
Reading Responses            10
Class Participation              10

Attendance Policy
Attendance is crucial. Missing class (or attending class unprepared) will significantly affect your final grade. If you do miss class, contact a classmate to find out what you missed and ask to borrow her or his notes. Then, do it again with a different classmate. After doing this, if you have questions email me.

Academic Integrity
Plagiarism is using another person’s words, works, and/or ideas without giving appropriate credit. Plagiarism is a serious violation of academic honor and personal integrity and can result in failing an assignment, being removed from this course, or even being asked to leave USF. Plus, it’s just lazy.

Rules
1. No late work accepted.
2. In class and on field trips, no drinking out of non-reusable containers.

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

community garden outreach syllabus (spring 2017)

Community Garden Outreach
Thursdays, 11:45 am – 3:25 pm & 5-9 pm on 1st Thursdays
Class location: USF Garden, Gleeson Plaza, & St. Cyprian’s Church (Turk and Lyon)
Twitter: @USFgarden / Instagram: usfgardenoutreach

Professor David Silver (dmsilver [ at ] usfca [ dot ] edu)
Office / hours: Kalmanovitz 141, MW, 1-2 & by appointment
TA: Santiago Delgadillo (sdelgadillo [ at ] dons [ dot ] usfca [ dot ] edu)

Course Description: Community Garden Outreach introduces students to ideas, skills, and practices in ultra-local, urban-based food production and distribution. Through readings, reflections, and discussions, students will explore various social, cultural, and economic issues around food, food production, and food distribution. Through cooking and preserving workshops, urban farm visits, monthly campus farmstands in Gleeson Plaza, and monthly community dinners at St. Cyprian’s Church, students will engage directly with community food practices.

Learning Goals:
  1. Develop practical skills in preparing, preserving, and distributing local, seasonal food;
  2. Design, implement, and administer the campus farmstand and St. Cyprian’s community dinner;
  3. Design and implement outreach methods to publicize class events; and
  4. Demonstrate effective and creative collaboration with class members and community partners.




 
Grading:
50%  Participation in and contribution to 3 USF Farmstands and 3 St Cyprian’s Community Dinners
10%   Recipe Project
20%   Family Cuisine Project
10%   Homework assignments and reflections
10%   Out-of-class volunteering

Farmstands and Community Dinners: The heart of this class is the campus farmstands and community dinners. Occurring three times a semester, the campus farmstand takes place in Gleeson Plaza. Students are responsible for all aspects of the farmstand, including organizing, publicizing, harvesting, gleaning, cooking and preparing the food, setting up, serving, cleaning up, and documenting. Also occurring three times a semester, the community dinners take place at St. Cyprian's Church (at Turk and Lyon) on the first Thursday evening of each month. Again, students are responsible for all aspects of the community dinner.

Out-of-class volunteering: Each student is required to make at least three visits to an urban farm or food-related event in the city. We will talk more about this but in general students visit the urban farm during work days, work in the farm for about two hours, and write a one page reflection about your experiences. Possible urban farms include: Alemany Farm, Garden for the Environment, and Tenderloin People’s Garden. Students can also volunteer at USF’s Stress Less Day (February 28) and the Earth Day Seed Swap at San Francisco Public Library (on April 22).

Attendance Policy: Missing class, or attending class unprepared, will significantly affect your final grade. If you do miss class, contact a classmate to find out what we discussed in class and ask to borrow her or his notes. Then, do the same with a second classmate. After this, if you still have questions about missed material, visit me during office hours or email me.

Course Rules
1.    No late work accepted.
2.    No drinking out of non-reusable containers during class, during farmstands, and during community dinners.
3.    Unless extremely necessary, stay off your phones during class.





 
Course Calendar
Thursday, January 26: Class and individual introductions. Food icebreaker. Tour USF Garden. Make a salad. Review syllabus. Homework: Visit a Farmer’s Market, preferably the Ferry Building Farmer’s Market on Saturday, to assess what makes a successful farmer’s market. Compile your observations into a one page reflection and bring to class on February 2.

Thursday, February 2: Discussion: What makes a stall at the farmer’s market good or bad? What’s a farmstand? What kind of farmstand do we want ours to be? Tour G05. Visit USF Seed Library and meet Gleeson librarians Debbie Benrubi and Carol Spector. Harvest for evening cooking workshop. Evening (5-9 pm): Cooking workshop and group dinner at St Cyprian’s. Dinner guests: Bruno Peguese, Senior Warden of St. Cyprian's Church; and Rev. Thomas Jackson, Vicar, St. Cyprian’s Episcopal Church. Homework: farmstand preparations, harvest/cook/coordinate with your team for next week’s farmstand.

Thursday, February 9: USF Farmstand 1. Class meets at Gleeson Plaza. After farmstand, we will have a brief visit from Lauren White, a representative from the HECUA Internship Program in Tuscany (“Sustainable Agriculture, Food and Justice in Italy”). Homework: Listen to TED Radio Hour, “The Food We Eat” (52 minutes), NPR.

Thursday, February 16: Recipe workshop. Homework: Readings on seeds and seed libraries distributed in class.

Thursday, February 23: Seed packet design workshop with Maren Salomon, Debbie Benrubi, and Carol Spector. Class meets near the USF Seed Library in Gleeson Library.

Thursday, March 2: Class meets at St. Cyprian’s to cook and prepare community dinner. Evening (5-9 pm): Community Dinner 1. Homework: farmstand preparations, harvest/cook/coordinate with your team for next week’s farmstand.

Thursday, March 9: USF Farmstand 2. Class meets at Gleeson Plaza.

Thursday, March 16: No class: Spring Break

Thursday, March 23: Mexican food and culture workshop with Josah Perley, owner of small-scale taco business, Tacoschani. Homework: Read Melati Citrawireja, “Deepa Natarajan: Ethnobotanist and natural fabric dyer,” Berkeleyside, November 9, 2015; and selections from John Keay, The Spice Route.

Thursday, March 30: Chai and spices workshop with Deepa Natarajan.

Thursday, April 6: Class meets at St. Cyprian’s to cook and prepare community dinner. Evening (5-9 pm): Community Dinner 2. Homework: Read Sandra Cate, “‘Breaking Bread with a Spread’ in the San Francisco County Jail,” Gastronomica, Summer 2008, pp. 17-24.

Thursday, April 13: Baking workshop. Guest baker: Samantha Blackburn. Class meets at St Cyprian’s kitchen. Homework: farmstand preparations, harvest/cook/coordinate with your team for next week’s farmstand.

Thursday, April 20: USF Farmstand 3. Class meets at Gleeson Plaza. Homework: Family cuisine assignment.

(*** On Saturday, April 22, there will be an Earth Day Seed Swap at the main branch of the San Francisco Public Library. The USF Seed Library is a co-organizer of this event and all CGO students are required to attend and participate in it.)

Thursday, April 27: Family Cuisine Project due in class.

Thursday, May 4: Class meets at St. Cyprian’s to cook and prepare community dinner. Evening (5-9 pm): Community Dinner 3. Homework: final reflection assignment.

Thursday, May 11: Last-day-of-class potluck party in USF Garden.

This class has no final.