At Jeffers Pond Elementary, fifth-graders learn about Americans' westward expansion in a novel way — after organizing students into families, teachers set up a path on school grounds mimicking the Oregon Trail. Using a map and activities their teachers created, the kids get outside and start trekking.
"They have a blast, and they learn what it was really like on the Oregon Trail," said Lindsay Comstock, fifth-grade teacher.
From snowshoeing and canoeing to measuring water erosion and learning about circumference using trees, kids at Jeffers Pond interact with the great outdoors frequently because of their school's environmental education focus.
And it doesn't stop there. It's an emphasis shared by the entire Prior Lake-Savage School District, written into its strategic plan.
Several weeks ago, both the school and the district as a whole were recognized under the U.S. Department of Education's Green Ribbon Schools program. The school was among 64 nationallly, and the district among 14, to be recognized. Eight district representatives will go to Washington, D.C., on June 3 to accept.
This is the second year of the school recognition program and the first that districts were recognized. Both involve a "really complex and involved application" and high standards, said Jeff Ledermann, the Minnesota Department of Education's environmental and outdoor education coordinator.
"It's really unusual for a district of that size to make that commitment," Ledermann said. "They're including environmental education across subject areas, not just science."
The awards aren't centered on curriculum alone. To win, a district must excel in three areas, or pillars, Ledermann said, including energy use, health and wellness and environmental and sustainability education.