Two gardeners wearing blue shirts and gloves tend a raised bed, planting seedlings
Incarcerated participants Taquan (left) and Heath (right) tend to plants in the garden at the California Health Care Facility, a prison in Stockton, California. (TJ Ushing / UC Davis)

Training Naturalists Behind Prison Walls

UC Davis Team Wins Major Grant to Teach Participatory Science to Incarcerated Persons

A kestrel swoops to grab a smaller bird on the wing and eats it, right in front of a group of men in the garden at California Health Care Facility, or CHCF, a prison in Stockton, where the garden has become both a thriving ecosystem and a science classroom for people incarcerated there. As the feathers fly, UC Davis researcher Laci Gerhart pulls out a bird guide and shows the incarcerated men how to identify the bird by its size and coloration, noting that kestrels are North America’s smallest raptor and one of the few that are sexually dimorphic. 

That’s just one example of how the prison yard has become surprisingly fertile ground for scientific learning, thanks to a collaborative effort between the School of Education and the College of Biological Sciences at UC Davis. 

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