Education Impact
For Educators

Meet a Changemaker: Educator Janis Boulbol

Teacher Janis Boulbol with students at Vermont saffron farm harvest
Janis Boulbol, above right, harvests saffron with students at Calabash Gardens in Wells River, Vermont. Boulbol and colleague Kat Robbins are developing a new interdisciplinary program for 7-12 graders in Woodstock, VT, focused on creating local climate change solutions. “Everything I’ve done with Shelburne Farms has led me to this point,” says Boulbol.

Picture a typical high school experience. “You have snippets of information in every class,” says agricultural innovation teacher Janis Boulbol. “Students go from block to block and often, nothing is interconnected or interrelated.”

Staff and community partners of Vermont’s Woodstock Union Middle High School have long had a vision for how this could be different. In 2020, Boulbol refocused a 65-year-old horticulture elective program to integrate place-based education and promote stewardship of place. Her students investigate plant and soil science (with an emphasis on native plants), agriculture, and forestry. Working in school hoop houses, plus herb and pollinator gardens, students grow nourishing food for the cafeteria and houseplants for the community.

Now, Boulbol and colleague Kat Robbins are looking school-wide, creating a student experience that’s interdisciplinary and immersive, with courses and hands-on projects that address pressing, real-world challenges. They call it CRAFT, Climate Resilience through Agriculture, Forestry, and Technology.

If the idea sounds revolutionary, it should. Boulbol and Robbins’ proposal for CRAFT earned each a coveted Rowland Fellowship for 2021, a prestigious award for visionary secondary school teachers in Vermont. While Boulbol has been a teacher for decades, it was her experience in Shelburne Farms’ Education for Sustainability Immersion program “that shifted everything for me,” says Boulbol. “It really gave me a true voice. Shelburne Farms has created the teacher that I am today. That leadership voice is ingrained in who I am now, and it led me to the Rowland Fellowship.”

“In the place-based education world, Janis’ reputation precedes her as she’s worked tirelessly in the field for almost twenty years,” says Joan Haley, director of education partnership programs for Shelburne Farms with the National Park Service. Haley and Boulbol recently co-facilitated the Forest for Every Classroom program. “Through her love for learning and commitment to the practice, she has become something of a poster child for skillfully integrating education for sustainability and place-based education throughout her curriculum.”

Forestry class of students stand in woods with instructor
National Park Service interns and WUHS students came together for a week this summer to learn about food and forest systems, and to provide input on the future direction of the CRAFT program.
Boulbol and Robbins’ goal is to create a program that earns students a distinctive CRAFT credential on their high school transcripts. “We felt strongly that students should be recognized for their deep learning and experiences,” says Robbins, Place-Based Learning Coordinator with WUHMS and Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park (a nearby resource that often serves as a classroom). There was a strong tradition to build on in Woodstock, but Robbins says she saw an opportunity “to incorporate more learning through food and forest systems in order to cultivate community and climate resilience.” Adds Boulbol, “We want students to come out with the ability to make change in their community and create climate solutions.”

Boulbol and Robbins are now charting a path forward for CRAFT, working in partnership with steering committees of students, staff, and community members. Change at this scale takes patience, but, “I feel extremely hopeful,” says Boulbol. “We strongly believe this is not just about an alternative education. This is about how education really should and could be.”

Students, staff, and community members are heavily involved in the development of CRAFT. “We’re really building student voice and capacity in all of this,” says Boulbol. “Students having their voices heard about envisioning what could happen in the future is incredibly empowering.”

Woodstock Union Middle High School students gather in field; student crouches in garden

Read more on Boulbol and other stories of extraordinary place-based educators on the Promise of Place website

Discover programs and resources for educators

Comments

Submitted by Keenan on Fri , 11/12/2021 - 08:44 AM

Janis and Kat are making education relevant and joyful! I hope more school around the state can tap into their vision and make this type of learning available to all our students!

Submitted by Toni Phillip on Fri , 11/12/2021 - 03:09 PM

While at Sharon Elementary School, Janis was an integral part of the place-based and agricultural curriculum that continues to be both sustainable and alive! So pleased to see that she is still such a steward of the land and climate and yet so not surprised by this new initiative! Way to go!

Submitted by Wanda Stetson on Thu , 11/18/2021 - 09:09 AM

Huge kudos to Janis Boulbol and her colleague, Kat Robbins! They've built on the Forest for Every Classroom, a program introduced to Woodstock Union Middle Middle School 20+ years ago, to create a truly remarkable, integrated, place-based educational experience. The deep learning of CRAFT participants gives them the skills and knowledge to be real change-makers. Bravo!

Add new comment