PAUL MILLER, IPS #114
Address: 2251 Sloan Ave., 46203, Center Township
School Website: www.114.ips.k12.in.us/
General Overview of the School: Paul I. Miller Elementary #114 is a safe, clean and inviting school with a positive, engaging and most of all, respectful and nurturing environment. Children come first at IPS #114. Miller Elementary is a Title I school, providing programs to multiple staff members who supplement the work of the classroom teachers. The Title I teachers offer remediation to those students who qualify, offering them individualized attention and opportunities for the children to reach their maximum potential and be successful
General Overview of the IPS #114 KIB Club: Led by Parent and Community Coordinator, Kate Voss, the club will consist of a group of kids ranging from 4th-6th grade and will focus on creating and maintaining the different projects that will take place at the school.
General Overview of Landscape Design Plan: IPS #114 has a very large campus and would like to see it full of trees… perimeter, near the school, around the track, an orchard and anywhere else that they can fit them. The entrance to the school has a very unwelcoming appearance and they’d like to include public art as a way to attract people to their campus. They have a vegetable garden already in place on the south side of the school but no water access nearby, so they will either re-locate the garden or build a rain-collecting structure. A paper recycling program is already in place at the school but they would like to expand this to include metals and plastics.
Volunteer Landscape Architect: Brian Main, KIB intern
Recent Projects
On May 4th, 2011, students from the IPS #114 KIB Club took a field trip to Holliday Park where they learned about the different animals in the park as well as took a hike throughout the woods.
On July 22nd, 2011, volunteers from the Art Institute of Indianapolis helped lay a recycled stone pathway leading into the "Wildcat Woods."
On September 12th, 2011, volunteers from Exact Target helped lay recycled stone for a pathway leading into the "Wildcat Woods."



























