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Karen Petroff teaching Woody Plants at the University of Maryland.
It’s about time for me to report on the Woody Plants ID class I took last semester at U. Maryland, after cogitating over it a bit and asking around for answers and getting plenty of them.
All that memorization – really? And is Michael Dirr’s book still the best?
In addition to her job overseeing the entire campus landscape, Karen Petroff teaches woodies and she’s excellent, an opinion that I know is shared by her students. Yet, I still wonder if the best way to teach plants is memorizing hundreds of them – Latin names only, in full – so they can be recognized in the field or even on a lab table, with no leaves on them!
Which is fine if you’re good at memorization, but it might make me steer clear of pursuing a field that required it. Several memorization tips were offered but thankfully I didn’t need them because I was auditing the class. (For retirees, the class is also tuition-free.)
The assigned text was the latest (2009) edition of Michael Dirr’s Manual of Woody Landscape Plants, and I didn’t
spend the $81 for it. But there’s so much demand now for information about ecological services provided by plants, can Dirr possibly keep up?
3 Landscape Architects I Know Respond
Since the course is required for all landscape architecture students, I asked three seasoned professionals I happen to know for their opinion on plant ID classes – had it been useful in their careers? The consensus was no, with one mentioning hearing “plenty of complaints. Given climate change, moving planting zones, and possible LA practices in other locations, why learn so many names? Better to focus on how plants are named and their full ecological performance. And yes, the Dirr book (treated like a Bible) is outdated but I’m not aware of another print book that would be better if memorization was one of the goals.”
In an email, Karen Petroff wrote that she thinks of it not as memorization but as “learning through association. I feel the same way about plants. By associating plants, plant images, names and other details such as common uses, ecological services, native origin or propensity to cause trouble, a student begins to make comparisons of one plant to another and to understand the complexity of a biodiverse world. I believe this skill also helps students apply the same understanding to biodiverse peoples collectively and individually, a side benefit.
Continuing, “Dirr’s text was last updated in 2009 and remains the standard for its comprehensive inclusion of not only morphology, landscape use and cultivars but relationships in nature, key aspects of cultivation, history, research citations, propagation and more. I would argue that ecological services are included but less prominent than they might be in a contemporary update. I continue to update my lectures each semester for the same reason. In my experience, I have met those who advocate for native plants even as they perish from an inappropriate landscape setting due to lack of appropriate support in a changing climate, or who discount aesthetics as a value, or who work with plants for a career without referring to them by an accepted name, and there is a place for everyone in a spectrum of professionals and hobbyists.
“For my part, I am hiring that surgeon that know what my internal organs look like and what to call them and how they relate to each other without consulting an app, and I’m hiring the landscape architect that understands a world full of plants and their nomenclature and how to use then in a way that they stay alive.”
Garden Professor Group LOVES Woody Plant ID Classes!

I asked the 27K-member Garden Professors Blog Facebook group for their thoughts and experiences about use of the Dirr book and requiring memorization for identification tests. To my surprise, the consensus was overwhelming positive and some of the stories were actually moving! People who love plants seem to just love this class, much of which is conducted outdoors. Mine met every Friday afternoon for a walk through the tree-filled campus, where we discussed trees and shrubs with Eve, the teaching assistant shown above.
Here’s how members of the Garden Professors group responded:
- “I took the exact same course and I remember the professor also inviting students to go around the campus (which is an arboretum) to see what plants they recognized from lectures. And after that semester it almost felt like a game to try to ID as many trees/shrubs on sight as possible. Later when I worked as a landscaper, it became very apparent and unfortunate to me that most job sites (both commercial and private) prefer to use the same 25~ woodies. Whereas like you said, the course goes over 178+ woodies to IMO try to show the diversity of what exists in this area even if you can’t just rattle them all out.”
- “I’m hoping plant materials is still about interacting with plants outdoors. No picture or pictures can imprint on you like looking at a plant in an outdoor setting, plus some characteristics aren’t about appearance. Which conifers are prickly, for example, or the scent of sassafras, even the sound of cottonwood leaves clattering in late summer breezes. Being “with” a tree and a group of students energized by walking and discussing made Plant Materials the class that determined my career path, and teaching it a few years later was probably the most fun job I’ve ever had. I loved grading the tests, since the results were my own test of how well I was teaching. And yes, the Dirr is still the standard in spite of the years. No other text has so much cultural information, or has the frank warnings against plants that are finicky or disastrously successful, especially especially for regional differences. I was immediately attracted to Dirr’s passion or loathing, personal relationships with plants and people, so much so that I read it from Abelia to Ziziphus. Mike and Bonnie (who did all the drawings and is equally as good a plantsman as Mike) are national treasures. It’s the one book that is never put away, and sits vigil beside my computer as I type this.”
- From a designer ,”If you memorize your plants to where you can recognize them on the fly, you will find yourself noticing how and where they’re growing and thriving. From a pro standpoint that’s pretty critical to being good at what you do.”
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“‘Necessary’ is specific to the individual. Necessary for what, exactly? If you’re in a LA program (or any Hort-adjacent field), there’s a spectrum of plant knowledge that you can expect of yourself. If you want to be an LA that intimately knows plants, their associations, and there needs in order to set yourself apart from, then do that. I think it’s important, but I love woody plants and see the immense need for this skill in the LA field”.
- “Plant ID is kind of a superpower for me. many years ago i competed in and won high school and collegiate competitions for it. I delineated hundreds of wetlands and did endangered plant surveys for about 15 years. I was initially threatened by ID apps but once i saw how inaccurate they were i got over it.”
- Remembering their professor as “so inspiring. Learning to identify all those trees and shrubs has been incredibly useful in varied jobs in and out of horticulture!”
- “27 years ago as part of the Environmental Horticulture with the great Jerry Sotomme at Santa Barbara City College – plant ID was just about my most useful class – even though I live in the Northeast now and many of the plants I memorized do not grow here
– the method of learning how to id plants has made me an id “whiz” even at 60 I trust my brain to be faster and more accurate in the field then calling up an app on my phone. So yes, I think plant ID is a very important, maybe even necessary skill for all the varied professions in the realm of horticulture.
- From another designer: “Having those plants in my memory bank is great. I do check my memory against newer lists and such. To be able to make some small tree suggestions on a consult in the field lets the client know I have some knowledge. And I enjoy the personal satisfaction of identifying plants as I drive down the road. Of course, at the Community college level most of us were staying local so having the experience of the instructors as to what grows here has been great.”
- “At Delaware Valley University we teach science with practice. So not only do our students learn to ID plants, but they learn how to plant, maintain and use them in the landscape.”
- “I appreciate all the time and effort I spent in my Plant ID class, which paid dividends in my observational skills and in understanding the natural world. IMO, time spent observing nature that intentionally is never wasted.”
- “There is nothing like knowing the entire gestalt of a plant in all it’s stages (think holly leaves when mature and immature). I can id plants based on “overall leaf color tone” and growth habit, and even veination while the id apps are still fumbling around and finding the wrong plant.”
- “I personally wouldn’t hire a landscape architect who had to use an app to identify what are presumably commonly used plants.”
- “In my opinion learning to ID plant material is still a valuable skill. And demonstrates a level of professionalism.”
- “As a garden professional is it compulsory? Of course not. As a garden professional is it useful and expected by others? Yes, I think so. And it’s great fun!”
More Stories from Plant ID Classes, and a Suggestion
- Another remembered his Plant ID classes at Cal Poly SLO, “learning 250 different plants per quarter and three quarters for the series. Hardest was winter ID from dormant twigs. And then there was Botany plant ID staring thru a microscope for hours keying out native plants to species. Good times.”
- Another remembered the NC Certified Nursery Professional course and exam that used botanical names only. “All the course IDs were in the field done in 2 area arboretum(s) of mature woody plants to prepare for the exam. The course and ID exam of 200+ woody plants concluded in late October after two hard frosts. The exam was the ID of mostly dormant juvenile plants, all in one-five gallon pots. That’s when it became important to recall the classroom instruction which covered dormant or semi-dormant twigs.”
- Memorization tips, like “Also, flash cards for botanical names. All. Day. Invent unique and crazy ways of remembering these names. The wilder the better.”
- “The curriculum should shift from bombing with facts to emphasizing how to find (and vet) information. In terms of process skills, the dynamics of gardening changes as well as, for example, considering perennial plants in terms of 20 years of predictable climate change or incoming pests. In both of these dimensions–the shift from facts to quickly locating them and the shift in the time dimension because climate change, new curriculum and new styles of teaching is required. Too often it is not done. Two more dimensions merit reform. The esthetic of garden design, its relation to local ecology (eg pollinator support, xeriscaping) is becoming more important as the conventional assumptions about local gardening are no longer applicable.Finally, the standard methods of pedagogy (classes, powerpoints, etc) have displaced on-site instruction of how to plant a tree or a shrub or undercover, or mulching with widespread adverse effects on hobby gardeners.” They seem like good points!
In This Corner, the Apps!
Source: Google Lens
Naturally people had lots to say about plant ID apps, the oft-mentioned alternative to memorization.
- UMD’s Petroff wrote “On the subject of apps, I read an article that stated that Google Lens could identify plants in any photo you’ve taken with just a swipe up and query and the first photo I opened, Myrica pensylvanica or northern bayberry was misidentified as a rhododendron LOL.”
- “Apps are often incorrect. I have used them both “for fun” to test and tested them with colleagues/students, they often fail at the level of genus and species. They are also not great with cultivars.”
- “They will improve as people upload images with correct IDs for these search engines to compare them to (such as Google Lens or iNaturalist), but learning to ID based on physiological traits and seasonality is more reliable. Some engines will ID North American shrubs as woody plants that live exclusively in South Africa, for example.”
- “I suspect many people, however, use the apps as entertainment…a brief, shallow distraction on the way to their next impulsive moment, but would be happy to be proven wrong.”
- “I always cross check apps but to add some data to ‘How accurate are photo-based plant identification apps?‘ by Illinois Extension.”
- “Apps may shortcut the experience and may bypass the deeper knowledge that an observed life can bring. But, they are useful as a starting point.”
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“From my own review of plant ID apps, Google lens is best. I’m sure that this is ever-changing though.”
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“There are great plant identification books (some focus on herbaceous plants, some on trees, some include both, etc.) made for professionals and enthusiasts.”
- Make AI better by contributing to it, with date, so we can improve profession by our sharing. It spews out answers in seconds. “It’s a brave new world for home gardeners.”
- Suggesting that we make AI better by contributing to it, with date, so we can improve profession by our sharing. It spews out answers in seconds. “It’s a brave new world for home gardeners.”
On teaching plant design

A landscape architect friend of mine, who’d taught Dirr’s books at a DC-area college, attended the
Conway School of Sustainable Landscape Planning and Design, which specializes in sustainable and practical design. He remembers going on plant walks 2-3 times/week, identifying five plants a day. They were taught groups of plants in terms of function, then of style. So that’s different from traditional teaching, which he says is “all about history, theory, and traditions, but aren’t progressive.” Over the 10-month program the students work with 3-5 actual clients (residents pay the school $100 for student help) do site surveys, and are required to present and defend their design and its feasibility. There were guest lectures and plant ID throughout.” The focus on DOING is so great. It’s in Northampton, Mass, where Smith College is.
I’d heard favorable mention of Conway before but now I did some reading and found
this page about its curriculum – where I see mentions of grading calculations, engineering, and design software to master, all the stuff I avoid! Though honestly I could have benefited from instruction in grading – it’s been a big issue in my gardens and I’ve had to learn by doing it wrong. But for professionals the program sounds amazing!
Another landscape architect friend, Billy Goodnick in Santa Barbara, CA, told me he’s “shocked to hear LA students must take plant ID but not planting design. “My analogy is that it’s like going to cooking school and taking a class in ‘ingredients’ but no ‘cooking’ classes.” In his practice he uses the PlantMaster app, for its huge database searchable by regions, height, culture, design styles, uses, attraction for pollinators, nativity, and more. He says it’s replaced the 15 books he used to carry with him on client visits. Asked where he thinks the LA profession going, he says “Sadly, hort seems to be losing priority in the profession.”
My Woody Plant ID class: Is memorizing Dirr’s text still the best way to teach? originally appeared on GardenRant on February 2, 2025.
The post My Woody Plant ID class: Is memorizing Dirr’s text still the best way to teach? appeared first on GardenRant.
* This article was originally published here
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