Green Schools Quest: Spotlight on Fern Ridge High School

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The Clean Air Partnership is delighted to spotlight another Green Schools Quest winner – Fern Ridge High School of the Parkway School District in Creve Coeur – for its sustainability projects impacting the larger community. Deemed “Harvesting Harmony,” their Quest projects earned them the “Judges’ Choice” Award this past school year for standing out as unique and inspirational.

“Fern Ridge allowed their students to explore a wide range of sustainability topics, and their inclusion of student voice and student choice impressed the judging panel immensely,” said Deborah Rogers Curtis, Green Schools Coordinator for the Missouri Gateway Green Building Council. “The passion and impact of the students’ work was inspiring!”

Fern Ridge High School is a non-traditional program for Parkway School District high school students interested in an alternative path. Classes are personalized to meet the academic, social, physical and mental health goals of each student. The school day is shortened, and the program is self-paced for students so they can participate in work experiences or service learning. Fern Ridge’s work in the Green Schools Quest provided unique opportunities for the students to engage in sustainability, contributing to their school community, as well as communities around the region and even the world. There is a deep commitment to educating from a “whole child” approach at Fern Ridge, and their Green Schools Quest project touched on each of their core values.

With support from Green Schools Mentor Emily Forthaus of Jacobs Engineering and School Leader Rachel Metze, the students at Fern Ridge High School put their green thumbs to use, growing food on a tower garden to use in culinary classes and to give to local families, as well as planting a native pollinator garden featuring 10 trees. Students explored traditional recycling and terracycling items that are difficult to recycle locally to keep trash out of hazardous landfills and incinerators by turning waste into raw materials for new products. They also participated in “Wellness Wednesdays,” fundraised money for reforestation in Africa, and practiced sustainable waste management and energy conservation, all of which greatly helped benefit the region’s air quality.

“The Clean Air Partnership is proud to continue to collaborate with the Green Schools Quest to recognize the important work underway by our local schools to build a more sustainable community and a greener future,” said Susannah Fuchs, Director of Clean Air for the American Lung Association in Missouri. “The amount of work and creativity that went into Fern Ridge’s projects was very impressive, and we hope it will inspire others to take action for the environment and clean air.”

Registration for the 2024-2025 Green Schools Quest remains open through September 15. For more information on the Quest and Fern Ridge High School’s sustainability projects, visit www.showmegreenschools.org/gsq/. To learn more about the link between sustainability and air quality, explore the Clean Air Partnership’s website, like us on Facebook or follow us on X, formerly known as Twitter, @gatewaycleanair.