Abstract

The University of Houston–Downtown (UHD), a Hispanic-serving institution, launched an educa­tional program in 2016 that engages undergradu­ates in a summer curriculum with a hands-on project focused on urban agriculture and sustaina­bility. The goals are to deliver new content, create purposeful interdisciplinary teams, and engage the participants, who are largely students of color, through mentoring and professional-development activities. In this reflective essay, we discuss improvements made between the first and second year and pro­gram elements that were most effective. The 2017 cohort was simultaneously engaged in two courses and the creation of an aquaponics system. Each student group created a system that could grow fish and hydroponic plants using solar energy. Qualitative student survey results indicate that the program increased student knowledge and affected career directions. The program was designed to extend mentoring from the summer through fall to optimize projects and prepare students for presen­tations on and off-campus. However, these plans had to be modified as Harvey, the most damaging hurricane in U.S. history, flooded the school and destroyed the student aquaponic systems. Fall plans now include rebuilding a single aquaponics system and consideration of resiliency in future sustaina­bility initiatives. The most critical elements of this program have been shown to be students’ intense immersion in curriculum and projects, creating cross-disciplinary student groups, mentoring across the program, and, finally, maintaining flexibility. The hurricane’s incursion into our program also stands as a powerful backdrop for discussions not only at our university but nationally of how we create sustainable communities and agricultural systems in a world that will continue to experience climatic changes.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThis is a reflective essay about a recent collaborative summer program at the University of Houston–Downtown (UHD)

  • Keywords Urban Agriculture; Undergraduate; Aquaponics; Hydroponics; Curriculum; Mentoring; Hurricane; Sustainable Development; Renewable Energy Systems; Resilience; Climate Change. This is a reflective essay about a recent collaborative summer program at the University of Houston–Downtown (UHD)

  • The original plan was to learn new techniques as well as have handscontinue optimizing the aquaponic systems on experience

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Summary

Introduction

This is a reflective essay about a recent collaborative summer program at the University of Houston–Downtown (UHD). We planned to develop a collaborative summer program for undergraduates that combined curriculum and a hands-on project to accomplish several goals. We wanted to expose students to challenges and technical solutions to address urban agriculture and sustainability. These topics are not covered in standard biology or engineering technology curriculum. We wanted students to work together in cross-disciplinary teams. Given the devastating flood that has just impacted the entire Houston region, a fourth goal is emerging. This goal will be to model resiliency for our students and consider the role of resiliency in teaching about and creating sustainable systems

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