Mapping the city: how green space could make for happy kids
Mapping the City is an ongoing series on the stories we can tell about people and places in Toronto through maps created by University of Toronto students and faculty.
Read part one: how transit can fix access to jobs
Read part two: what Toronto's waterways can tell us
Read part three: smart transport data pave the way for a driverless future
Read part four: busting conventional wisdom on food deserts
In this fifth instalment, 缅北强奸 News writer Romi Levine profiles the work of Cosmin Marmureanu and Professor Scott Davies.
Living in a concrete jungle like Toronto can be suffocating sometimes 鈥 the noise, traffic and pollution can seem inescapable. The city鈥檚 parks 鈥 big and small 鈥 serve as an oasis from the chaos.
Anyone who鈥檚 taken a quick stroll through a leafy park on their lunch break can attest to that.
It should come as no surprise then, that the correlation between health and proximity to nature has been studied numerous times. Not only can this closeness to green space make you feel healthier, with a few extra trees in your neighbourhood.
But can access to trees and parks make you a better student?
That鈥檚 what Cosmin Marmureanu, a PhD student at OISE, is trying to figure out. He鈥檚 working alongside Professor Scott Davies to map out the relationship between a school鈥檚 physical surroundings and student achievement.
Though it鈥檚 still early in the research process, Marmureanu says he has 鈥渇ound medium strength correlations between suspensions and expulsions and the amount of vegetation around the schools.鈥
As a summer student and research assistant for the Toronto District School Board (TDSB), Marmureanu has access to plenty of data on the location of trees and parkland and its proximity to schools. The school board has shown interest in his research and has published papers of their own on the benefits of bringing vegetation closer to schools and teaching kids about the environment.
鈥淕reening is now a priority for them and the Ontario government in general,鈥 says Marmureanu.
The challenge of putting this plan into practise is convincing school administration of why it鈥檚 important, he says.
鈥淎 lot of the time the grounds aren鈥檛 the first thing the principal is worried about 鈥 they鈥檙e worried about student achievement and school safety,鈥 Marmureanu says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not something they necessarily think about 鈥 to get them to realize 鈥榟ey, if you had a green space for students to each their lunch, [students] may be more relaxed and less aggressive as a result.鈥欌
Davies says there are, of course, other factors at play 鈥 such as the quality of upkeep in the school, the reputation of the school and the neighbourhood it鈥檚 located in and whether or not students actually have access to the green space.
Marmureanu says he鈥檚 also look at how the ways students get to school affects their performance.
鈥淚f they鈥檙e spending 40 minutes in a subway tunnel 鈥 are these kids different from the kid that walks 15 minutes outside in fresh air in a densely vegetated neighbourhood?鈥 he asks.
For Marmureanu, his interest in the topic is also personal. He grew up downtown 鈥 close to Spadina and Bloor, but moved further north to leafier Bathurst and Eglinton. The change 鈥渄oes make an impact,鈥 he says.
Davies says the use of maps for education research is a relatively new idea, but a useful one.
鈥淢apping has the potential to tell a lot more stories,鈥 he says.
And Marmureanu adds: 鈥淚t sends a much stronger message than a pie chart or a graph.鈥
This cross-discipline pursuit is something Davies wants to continue fostering.
鈥淚 want to form a partnership with people across 缅北强奸 who also have an interest in how geography and education overlap. For example, there are guys in engineering who are interested in air quality and how air quality in the city varies substantially 鈥 and we want to map that onto schools,鈥 he says.