The Christian Science Monitor: Go Into the Woods Young Man Nov. 19th 2002
A Vermont alternative school taps
into native American survival skills to help boys focus and gain confidence
NEWFANE, VT. - Patience was not
exactly Andy Earle's strong suit. When he started attending the Kindle Farm
School five years ago, staying focused on anything for 15 minutes was a
struggle. He was so frustrated in his public school classes that he'd unleash
profanities, and his teachers often made him leave the room.
Now a high school senior, Andy has
been able to stick with his schoolwork without medication for the past three
years. Just a few weeks ago, he had another one of those moments when
perseverance pays off: After many attempts, he made a fire without matches. These
basic life skills - patience, communication, managing anger, and
problem-solving - are central to Kindle Farm's mission.
The academics required by the state
are covered as well, but one day a week, students trek to the woods just up the
hill from one of the school buildings for a wilderness program. Engaging their
senses in this natural setting, teachers say, sparks an interest in learning
and builds confidence among young people who haven't had much of either.
The other four days of the week include
morning classes and afternoon activities ranging from bike repair to
snowboarding.
Founder Bob Bursky started the
alternative school seven years ago with just three students, and he added the
wilderness lessons on the suggestion of a teacher. The all-boys school has
since grown to 80 students in Grades 3-12.
The boys come to the independent
school because their area public schools are at a loss as to how to educate
them. About 95 percent of the students here fall under the label of
"special education," and the others have been diagnosed with a
similar range of problems - learning disabilities, emotional troubles,
attention-deficit disorder. The students' school districts pay their tuition.
"By the time we consider Kindle
Farm, we've tried everything we can and we need to start thinking outside the
box," says Daniel Lafleur, special services coordinator for several school
districts in nearby southern New Hampshire. In the spectrum of services, Kindle
Farm's day program, with one teacher for every two students, is the last stop
before a student would be sent to a live-in facility for treatment. The $23,000
yearly tuition is at least three times the amount districts in New Hampshire
spend on a typical public school student. But residential treatment starts at
$60,000 and can rise to hundreds of thousands of dollars. By some estimates,
alternative schools educate about 200,000 students a year - or 5 percent of the
young people who leave the traditional K-12 system. As at Kindle Farm,
graduates of these programs often take jobs rather than go to college.
On a recent Monday, the
high-schoolers at Kindle Farm cut saplings to build a native American-style
shelter. Two weeks after Andy's first successful fire, the group again started
one by spinning a stick on a piece of wood until it created a smoldering dust
and ignited a loose ball of tinder.
On these wilderness days, teachers
also slip in academic lessons. Percentages come in handy when they talk about
the sustainable harvesting of wild crops - take only 80 percent, so the
remaining 20 percent can regenerate.
"In public school they throw
work at you," Andy says. "There's 20 kids sitting in a class ... with
one teacher. And you can't learn like that." Here, though, Andy is so
taken with the program that he says he'd like to become a naturalist.
His classmate Devin Whitman had a
similar disdain for school. When he arrived at Kindle Farm at age 11, he didn't
trust anyone, says Mr. Bursky, the school's executive director. Devin began to
build relationships as he busied his hands with tasks such as hollowing a cup
out of a piece of wood with a burning coal. Now a senior, he's described as
having an incredible work ethic and an interest in world politics.
Kindle Farm is a
"godsend," says Abby Dillon, director of special education for the
school district that includes Newfane and nine other towns in southern Vermont.
Just under the region's idyllic surface, she says, are concerns about violence,
drugs, and alcohol.
Kindle Farm, she says, gives
students a chance to be productive in class instead of spending time in the
principal's office or being suspended.
"It's allowed us to keep a
majority of our kids [with special needs] in our community," she says.