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Including contributions from experts in research and practice from across the United States, this book explores the history, importance, and benefits of horticulture to urban populations. It details how passive and active interaction with plants enriches the lives of individuals and communities. Though not designed as a textbook, it is adaptable to classroom learning, with each chapter featuring a set of objectives, key terms, review questions, enrichment activities, and suggestions for further reading as well as a summary.

Produktbeschreibung
Including contributions from experts in research and practice from across the United States, this book explores the history, importance, and benefits of horticulture to urban populations. It details how passive and active interaction with plants enriches the lives of individuals and communities. Though not designed as a textbook, it is adaptable to classroom learning, with each chapter featuring a set of objectives, key terms, review questions, enrichment activities, and suggestions for further reading as well as a summary.
Autorenporträt
Tina Marie Waliczek, PhD, is a professor of horticulture in the Department of Agriculture at Texas State University in San Marcos, overseeing the university's horticulture degree program and the management of its gardens and greenhouse. She earned her PhD at Texas A&M University. Her research focuses on urban/plant interactions, including a wide range of studies on children's gardens, community gardens, the effects of green spaces on people, the influence of gardening on perceptions of quality of life, and interior plants usage on job satisfaction and interior space in buildings. She has also researched teaching techniques in horticulture, such as studying the benefits of integrating service-learning into the horticulture curriculum. She is interested in sustainability issues such as composting and managing invasive species using large-scale composting systems and the economics of integrating cafeteria composting programs at universities. Dr. Waliczek is also a certified horticultural therapist. Jayne Zajicek, PhD, is a professor of urban horticulture in the Department of Horticultural Sciences at Texas A&M University in College Station. She teaches urban horticulture and has developed a course titled "sociohorticulture" that fulfills the social science requirement in the university's core curriculum. She also developed the Bachelor of Arts degree program in the department, the first of its kind in a college of agriculture in the United States. She earned her PhD at Kansas State University. Her Growing Minds Research Program develops and conducts sound scientific research to evaluate the effects of gardening and horticulture in populations, including school children, at-risk youth, the elderly, mentally and physically disabled individuals, and the incarcerated. Since its inception, the Growing Minds Research Program has graduated 16 Master of Science degree and eight PhD students.