Sign In | Register
RSS Feed GO Children & Nature Network Archive About C&NN Who We Are Join the Network

NPR Visits High School in the Vermont Woods

National Public Radio – February 05, 2008
By Larry Abramson

Teachers across the country offer to take the class outside when the weather is nice, but one program offered by a high school in northern Vermont holds classes outdoors all year long.

The Walden Project is an alternative program focused on environmental studies and on the teachings of Henry David Thoreau, who did some of his best thinking outdoors at Walden Pond.

Life Consists with Wildness

Matt Schlein, a New York native, is 50 percent of the staff at Walden. After years teaching in a traditional high school, Schlein started a foundation that raised the money to buy the 260 acres that the Walden Project uses as its classroom.

Two or three days a week, Schlein drives through the farmlands around Vergennes, Vt., parks his well-used Toyota next to a 200-year-old barn, grabs some vegetables from a garden he maintains and walks nearly a mile through the woods.

On one school day in early January, Schlein gets to a spot where 19 students sit on a motley collection of old chairs and benches. Schlein starts to read from Thoreau's essay "Walking."

"Life consists with wildness. The most alive is the wildest. Not yet subdued to man. Its presence refreshes him," Schlein says.

Students switch classes without much ado at the Walden Project. There's no need to go out in the hall or grab a new book. That's because everything is related, so class discussion about the recent primary vote in neighboring New Hampshire is just another aspect of the school's simple mission. Like Thoreau, students are supposed to be exploring their relationship to self, their relationship to culture and their relationship to the natural world.

'H-Dog'

The natural world has a way of grabbing you by the lapels out here. The week prior, it was several feet of snow and sub-zero temperatures; now it's a sudden downpour. The students take shelter in the only escape they have from the elements: a rough-hewn tent that features donated sail material. It's just big enough to accommodate the class and a few visitors. Students continue their discussion of politics while rain patters against the sails.

Schlein seems aware that a curriculum shaped around Henry David Thoreau could be grim. The cranky 19th-century philosopher and naturalist who gave up on city life isn't exactly the kind of role model most teenagers would pick.

"Do you ever get tired of him?" I ask Beth Kirschner, a former student who is visiting the school during a break from her studies at the University of Vermont.

"We do, we definitely do," she says, laughing. "We make jokes about him, we make fun of him, but then in the more serious times, we kind of come back to him and his basic message. So it's a love-hate relationship with 'H.D.', as we call him, or 'H-Dog.'"

That same sense of humor led someone to affix a satellite dish to one of the trees that supports the shelter. It's not connected, of course, and there's no electricity out here anyway. But it's perhaps a nice reminder that Thoreau regularly went into town while he isolated himself out at Walden Pond.

Not a Pressure Cooker

The next class is ecology, and there's lots to study on the Walden Project plot. The group tramps through melting snow and arrives at a clump of hemlock trees.

The trees have grown tall and are blocking out other plants. One student, Jamison Bannister, has made a student project out of trying to manage this corner of the property. He's going to cut down a few trees and see if he can encourage a greater diversity of species.

On the walk back from the woods, some of the students horse around — a lot. In fact, it's a little hard to imagine how some of these students could ever sit still in class for a full day. Many students come here because they can't handle the confines of the classroom.

For others, they simply weren't thriving in traditional high schools.

Hillary Devoss, a senior in her third year at Walden, says she just wasn't happy in high school.

"I wasn't very engaged in my education. I kind of was failing all my classes. I really care a lot about my education now, which I didn't before," Devoss said.

The Walden Project wants to teach students about this place — rather than giving them the same lessons they could get anywhere in the country. That means students who choose to apply to this program have to give up something — there's no calculus, no lab science.

Jennie Johnson, a senior walking with her friend, Joe, says something else is missing — the social games that make high school such a pressure cooker.

"Like Joe and I would never have talked last year, and now we're really good friends," Johnson says. "He was a cool kid, I guess, and I wasn't. And we talk all the time, and it's nice."

On days when students are not in the woods, they pursue internships nearby in Burlington, Vt., or attend writing workshops. Walden kids are more likely to go to college than are students at the high school they came from.

But it's not for everyone. You have to like being with the same 20 students all year long, you have to like the cold, and you'd better like Schlein's winter specialty — garden-fresh, pan-fried kale.

FAIR USE NOTICE
This site contains copyrighted material. Click here for more information on C&NN's Fair Use Policy. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

Top Stories

American Public Health Association features a front page article on the movement

The October Issue of The Nation’s Health, The official newspaper of the American Public Health… [+]

How children lost the right to roam in four generations

Report warns that the mental health of 21st-century children is at risk because they… [+]

The Powerful Link Between Conserving Land and Preserving Health

Co-written by Howard Frumkin, M.D., Dr.P.H., Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Richard Louv… [+] [PDF]

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) says free and unstructured play is healthy and essential

This report offers guidelines on how pediatricians can advocate for children by helping families, school… [+] [PDF]

Kids Picking TV Over Trees

The Nature Conservancy-funded study reveals more evidence of a growing trend; children spending more time… [+]