The Day They Saw the Great Blue Heron

GBH

I have been seeing this Great Blue Heron just about every time I visit this spot. Perhaps that makes it even more exciting for me when it flies off, and I get the opportunity to witness it. The anticipation kills me with delight, every time. Or when a group of students unknowingly goes near it, I watch and wait for them to see it. It is usually my favorite part of the day.

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What They Really Learned at the Duck Pond

A respected colleague of mine (Inga!) often talks about what students really learn when they go outside. I love this because it’s so true! We intend to teach them about the water cycle, for example, and what they really learn can often be quite different, and equally as important. Sometimes they learn many things including what we intended, but what they really learn can be the most memorable.

This isn’t the best example of this, but see if you can hear what they really learned in this voice memo:

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What Some Parents and Teachers Have Shared

From a parent of a middle-schooler:
I had wanted to send you a message of gratitude for getting the kids out into winter. I think it’s the #1 thing we can do for them–for their mental health, for their bodies, for understanding the world. It’s hard to make it happen with grumpy teens!
New Year’s Day, we went sledding as a family, which Liam and his little sister and brother loved, of course. But the sweetest and best part of the day was his urgency to take us to the Duck Pond afterward. It was gorgeous. We walked to the pond, through the beautiful snow, over to the bridge/viaduct, where we stood in silence and watched 3 deer run through the woods. Liam was leading the way, telling us about his many trips there and where to go and how much he “actually likes school nature walks.” We don’t get a lot of enthusiasm from him these days of this kind, so I am deeply appreciative to you for helping to instill his love for that place and for being outside. I grew up going to that duck pond, so it’s very special for me that he has his own connection and memories to it.
Thank you!
Ceri — mom of Liam

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Fun Ways to Get Students More Comfortable Off-Trail

Here is a simple game of Tic-Tac-Toe. For this version of the game, the board is always located in a different place, off-trail, and in the woods. And it’s a bit of a hike to get there. The first three players on each team have the same colored bean bag and the tic-tac-toe board is located far way. It’s a relay race. If there is not a winner at the end of 3 plays (there usually isn’t), then the 4th runner can move one of their own team’s bean bags. It’s one of those games that makes you think, too.

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What the Teachers Had to Say the Day the Whole School Spent a Day Outside

Once a year we spend a day outside with the whole school. We call it, “Outdoor Day.” This year we went to a local park. We built forts, wrote poetry, hiked, spread seeds, practiced yoga, and ate lunch and snacks. It was a lovely day.

After the day, I asked the teachers my standard “thumbs up, side, or down” question. I wanted to see how spending a day outside affected the teaching staff.

I asked, “Thumbs up if you feel better than you normally do on a Monday afternoon, thumbs to the side if you feel the same or similar, thumbs down if you feel worse.” I asked them to consider how they feel in their mind and in their body. If they are different, which feeling influences your mood the most?  What did they say?

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The Day a Couple Former Students Came to Visit

council

We arrived to our spot in the woods, and the students had expected to begin playing Capture the Flag right away. Instead, we sat in a circle, and I invited them to share gratitude. It was a beautiful spring day, and we were sitting in a beautiful council right after a brisk walk. It just felt right. Well, it felt right to me. The students groaned. They moaned. They complained. They rolled their terrible eyes and gnashed their terrible teeth. (Not really, but they might as well have.)

And so I began and sent it around the circle. The two people to my left were 9th graders who opted out of standardized tests at their high school, so they had the day off and they came back to visit us at their old middle school.

I said I was grateful for the nice spring day, for being in the woods, or something like that. Here’s what the former students said:

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