Classroom With a View, Contd. AMC Helps Students Learn Nature's Lessons By Peter Bergh AMC Outdoors, July/August 2008 A WARM SAFE PLACE When students gather after Newton North’s first night, they recount their breakfast. “Bacon, eggs, sausage, French toast, fruit bowl, orange juice,” Jibrie says. Others pipe in, adding oatmeal, pancakes, cereal, and hot cocoa, even the occasional piece of fruit to the list. A sometimes-overlooked benefit of A Mountain Classroom is AMC’s meals and facilities. Students from visiting schools routinely report that home-cooked family meals are a rarity. Working parents, hectic sports and social schedules, and after-school jobs all contribute to the decline. Both students and teachers value AMC’s family-style meals, even with all of the “pleases” and “thank yous.” In fact Burnell is so convinced of their value, at the suggestion of his A Mountain Classroom “graduates,” his school now serves lunch family-style once or twice a month. He laughs at how quickly the food goes from platter to students’ plates, but also notes how meals provide important lessons. “It’s great to see how students watch out for each other to make sure everyone gets enough food.” Access to gear is a big plus of AMC’s frontcountry lodges. Newton North teacher Hazeltine says, “The fact that our kids don’t need much in the way of gear is huge. Without the available gear, that would be a show-stopper.” Another key element, particularly for students from an urban setting, is that they can be close to nature in facilities that have many of the comforts of home. “For a lot of the kids here, because nature is so new to them, initially they might not view it as a positive experience—because new things can be scary,” says Colleen Meigher, a school psychologist for Newton North. “So this is an incredible time for them to both be exposed and have it be safe, in a really structured, nurturing way.” NORTH COUNTRY OUTREACH Instructor Weston has an unusual relay race in store for elementary school children from Lancaster, N.H. After learning the importance of dressing in layers for the outdoors, 14 second-graders are split into two teams with the challenge of dressing into a full set of winter clothes, mittens and hat included, running across the room and back, then passing them on to the next kid in line.As children carom across the carpet in slippery snow pants, third grade teacher David Houle explains that the fun is all part of Lancaster Elementary School’s Iditarod Day—a program that integrates classroom and outdoor activities with learning about the famous dogsled race. The program is designed to help students learn about geography, math, and animals, in addition to outdoor skills. Located 160 miles north of Boston, Lancaster is one of a number of communities AMC has collaborated with through its North Country Youth Outreach program called Community Partnerships for Youth. AMC has a long history of involvement in northern New Hampshire and neighboring Maine and Vermont communities. Past efforts have included staffing community activities, such as the Wildcat Mountain’s fishing derby and participating in special programs at local schools. In 2007, AMC received a $40,000 grant from the Neil and Louise Tillotson Fund of the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation to expand its educational programming and outdoor experiences in Coos County, N.H. Grant money has allowed AMC to offer day programs to area schools “north of the notches” for no cost and overnight trips at a significant discount. “We’re now able to reach out to new communities and we’re doing more after-school and school vacation programs, like the winter skills work we’re doing with the North Country Boys and Girls Club,” says Emily Mitchell, coordinator for North Country Youth Outreach. “Also, AMC is now making gear, like snowshoes, backpacks, and sleeping pads, available to area schools and scouting groups.” Dave Backler, principal of the elementary school in Milan, N.H., says AMC’s expanded focus in the North Country has allowed him to do more to integrate the school’s A Mountain Classroom experience. “We’ve been working with AMC to help us develop a whole new science program—one that integrates with New Hampshire’s new science framework. With AMC’s support, we are able to offer an overnight trip to Pinkham Notch—and Emily (Mitchell) has been coming to our different classrooms here in the school. Neither of these would be possible without their North Country Youth Outreach effort.” Through the hikes and the games, the instructors, and the lodges, the magic of A Mountain Classroom is in the children, like the sixth-graders who recently waded around Pinkham’s Cutler Stream in too-big rubber boots, dip nets in hand, looking for stream life. As Backler will attest, “One day out in the field, actually catching and identifying critters in the stream, is worth a week of classroom experience trying to teach the same principles.” Peter Bergh is a freelance writer and part-time instructor for A Mountain Classroom. He lives in New Castle, N.H.
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