Ennis School Staff |
As spring marches
forward the question comes with increasing frequency: “So, Natasha… what’s
next?” This may sound preemptive to address in April, five months before the
FoodCorps end of service in August. The end of my time in Ennis may be a long
way off, but it already seems to be in the thoughts of the community members I
work with, and it is something that has been on my mind since the day I started
my service.
The way I see it, this is actually a
two-part question. Wrapped up in that expectant “What’s next” is concern for
the community projects I’ve helped to set into motion, as well as curiosity
about how I plan to take two years of FoodCorps service and turn it into a
career. I’m happy to report positive prospects on both accounts.
Ennis School Garden |
The school garden and other farm to
school projects that I’ve been working on will continue to grow and change
after I leave. The school garden is literally rooted in the schoolyard. It
would take at least as much work to go backwards (imagine ripping out 4’’x4’’
fence posts, 10 raised beds, a pergola and garden gates) as it will to go
forwards. Through committee work and volunteer recruitment, the school garden
has been endowed with a small army of dedicated curators. The classroom
teachers we’ve worked with now plan projects and lessons around what’s
happening in the garden. Volunteers are eager to help with duties of summer
weeding and watering, if only for a chance to harvest spoils from the garden.
And students positively shriek when they see that purple FoodCorps t-shirt
headed down the hallways: a sure sign that they’ll be headed out to the garden
for class.
The garden isn’t going anywhere, but I
am, and I believe that my FoodCorps service experience will help get me there.
Until I started rooting around for potential jobs, I wasn’t sure what I’d be
qualified to do after two terms of service in rural Montana. Reading through
job descriptions, picking up the phone to do some informational interviews, and
rewriting my resume has helped me find some confidence and clarification. What
I’ve realized through this process is that “FoodCorps service member” is just
an abbreviation for project manager, volunteer coordinator, director of
outreach and communications, graphic arts guru, special events planner and
more. My service experience has paved the way for a path into the nonprofit
sector, classroom or outdoor education, nutrition and public health, food
service, and, of course, agriculture.
“So… what’s next?” At the end of two
years, I’m confident that the Ennis community will move steadily forward with
Farm to School projects. And I will take away a medley of experiences that will
be relevant to whatever is next for
me.
Well, Natasha, yes we in Ennis will miss your bright smile, your enthusiasm, and your dedication to Madison Farm to Fork programs but most of all we will miss you, in person! I am already trying to figure a way I can be a mouse in your pocket to follow you to wherever/whatever the future holds for you! Thanks for all that you and FoodCorps has provided our community.
ReplyDeleteWe'll miss ya, Natasha! Thanks for all of your hard work!
ReplyDelete