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Outdoor Education Trips: Expanding Students’ Horizons

Outdoor Education Trips: Expanding Students’ Horizons

At the start of every school year, Upper School students (Grades 5-8) at The Peck School celebrate a new school year with grade-level trips to the great outdoors.


Grade 5 spent a day whitewater rafting down the Lehigh River, while Grades 6, 7, and 8 overnighted at YMCA’s Fairview Lake, Camp Bernie, and Camp Linwood MacDonald respectively.


The overnight trips’ itineraries were packed with activities from rowing boats downstream and rock climbing to making s’mores around the campfire. The experiences that our students get while enjoying the great outdoors teaches them lessons that can’t be achieved in a normal classroom setting. These interactive and team-building trips encourage students to work together to complete tasks, challenge themselves mentally and physically, as well as better get to know their teachers and peers.


“Outdoor education trips are the perfect way to begin the school year,” says History Teacher and Outdoor Education Facilitator Dave Carlo. “They remove the pressure of jumping right into traditional classwork and instead place students in an environment where the goals are simple—get to know one another, work together, experience new and beautiful places, and, above all, have fun. These trips also give teachers the chance to see their students’ authentic selves outside of the classroom.”


Each trip’s itinerary is thoughtfully planned and provides age-appropriate activities that are challenging yet attainable. Students feel proud of their accomplishments by the end of their trips—whether fifth graders successfully paddling over class II rapids, or eighth graders who are putting their fishing skills to the test.


The trips are an excellent example of how Peck approaches middle-school education— providing students with unique experiences and opportunities that create memories for a lifetime!
 

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