Outdoor Education: GO Program, Grade 12 Hiking Adventure, and SK-Grade 3 Forest Days

Grade 12 Outdoor Ed:
On October 12, the Grade 12s travelled to Squamish for a one-day hiking adventure accompanied by Canada West Mountain School guides and YHS staff. This was a fantastic opportunity for Grade 12 students to get outside and bond with their peers as they start their grad year! Students had the opportunity to select their route and level of challenge for the day, hiking up either Mount Crumpit or the Stawamus Chief. Pushing  themselves and stepping out of their comfort zones, the students reached the summits collectively as a group, enjoying the rewarding view of the Howe Sound. The day was filled with big smiles and lots of laughter, and was a welcomed break from studying and university applications. 

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GO Program:
The GO (“Get Outside”) Program is the YHS Grade 10 Outdoor Education program and includes a cohort of 12 students this year. Students have selected this program as an opportunity to get outside more, explore, and become competent and mindful outdoor enthusiasts. The course is designed to be an experience of a lifetime and filled with opportunities for experiential learning and personal growth. Its aim is to promote self-discovery, leadership, interactive social skills, teamwork, as well as provide a more holistic understanding of the natural world through adventure and environmental education. 

This fall, students have embarked on afternoon excursions of kayaking at Jericho Beach and biking along the Arbutus Greenway, both in preparation for potential multi-day excursions in the new year. They also embarked on a full-day of hiking on the North Shore in Lynn Canyon. These excursions were opportunities for students to develop and improve their skills, as well as learn how to work together successfully to accomplish a task. 

On November 19th, the GO students were thrilled to embark on the first overnight trip in the past two years! Accompanied by Ms. Brennan, Ms. Raaflaub, and CWMS guides, the group traveled to Cheakamus River for a two-day hiking and camping trip. Over the course of the two days, students put into practice many of the new outdoor skills that they had acquired, including: knot tying, setting up tents and tarps, fire building, cooking over a stove, setting a bear hang, and staying warm during winter camping. The trip was an absolute success and a major highlight was gathering together around the campfire in the evening, making smores and sharing stories about the infamous Sasquatch!

The group continues the development of their skills, recently completing their Backcountry First Aid training and preparing for their Avalanche Safety Training in the upcoming weeks. These certifications will prepare the group for more multi-day adventures in the new year!

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Grade 1, 2 and 3 Forest Days:
In October and November, Grades 1, 2 and 3 participated in full-day excursions to Pacific Spirit Park to explore and immerse themselves in the wonders and beauty of the forest. Led by Ms. Katrina Brennan and Ms. Claire David, the students hiked through the forest on trails and small paths, learning about the plants and animals that call the BC forests home. Stopping periodically along the way, the groups engaged in creative and imaginative play, with activities designed to educate students about the environment and foster comfort and curiosity about the natural world. Embracing nature as an exciting new playground, the students enjoyed building forest forts, testing out their balancing and climbing skills, and getting their hands dirty as they fully engaged in the experience. 

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SK Forest Day:
For the first time ever, the SKs also participated in a Forest Day this fall! This was an exciting and thrilling experience for the Apples and Oranges, starting off with the bus ride, which was a first for many of the students! Traveling to Pacific Spirit Park for the morning, the students stepped out of their comfort zones, learning how to move and explore in nature. Through creative play and experiential learning, the SKs increased their confidence and independence over the course of excursion, embracing all the wonders of the natural world and beginning their life journey as outdoor enthusiasts.

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A Year in Junior STEAM

SK – Woodworking:
In Term 1, our Little School classes got to try their hand in woodworking. Students learned about safety with tools such as hammers, hand drills, sandpaper, and wood glue. Students made their own sculptures. Some students created fairy playgrounds, houses and theme parks, while other students created a more abstract sculpture. Once dry, students painted and embellished their creations with wire!

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Grade 1 – Winter Animal Ozobot Project:
In Term 2, students explored with one of our smaller robots, Ozobots. Using line and colours, students learned how to program these robots to change colours, zig-zag, spin, and backwalk, just to name a few. At the same time, Yorkies were learning about and exploring the Ozobots, they completed an animal research project in the Language Arts class. For a culminating project, students drew a habitat for their animal and included four different “points of interest” from their research, each associated with an Ozobot action. For example, a snowy owl may feed its eaglets, as represented by the Ozobot’s “pause” action. Once finished, students were able to explore each other’s habitats to learn about different Winter animals as experienced by the Ozobots.

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Grade 2 – Water Exploration:
As an extension of their Science unit on the water cycle and their Social Studies unit, Responsible Citizenship, Grade 2 students engaged in a project to help water in our community. Students learned about how water comes to our school, how it is used and what happens to it when it goes down the drain. Classes adopted four catch basins at Alexandra and 27th street through the city of Vancouver’s Adopt a Catch Basin program. Each class cared for their catch basin by cleaning any garbage or leaves blocking it. Students then thought about one water problem in our community that they would like to help with and created their own solution to their identified problem. Some students created paintings, posters, and videos to educate our community about these issues while other students created garbage picker-uppers and acrylic paint collectors as tools to help people change their actions.

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Grade 3 – Environmentally Friendly Homes:
This winter Grades 3 students engaged in an integrated unit to design, build and test environmentally friendly homes. This unit included their Science unit on thermal energy, their Social Studies unit on First Peoples’ knowledge and their measurement unit in Math.

Students learned about local First People’s traditional knowledge of thermal energy and environmentally friendly design. We looked at both traditional Long Houses and Pitt Houses, and contemporary indigenous architecture. We focused on architect Alfred Waugh, and his First Peoples’ house at The University of Victoria. To learn more about thermal energy, students conducted experiments on how heat moves through conduction, convection and radiation. We also learned about how passive homes are environmentally friendly by not letting heat out and conserving energy.

With this understanding, students were then challenged to incorporate this rich knowledge and engaged in a group project of designing and modeling an environmentally friendly home using cardboard construction techniques and a variety of materials.

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Grade 4 – Digital Fabrication:
This year Grade 4 students became experts in digital fabrication! Using their measurement skills, students created their own 3D printed pencil holder. Students first learned how to use the Tinkercad program to create and modify shapes digitally. Then they used the program to design their pencil holders.

This winter, students also had an opportunity to create their own unique clock using our new laser cutter! Students design the shape of their clock face using google draw, which was then cut out with our laser cutter. Students then drilled a hole in the centre and painted it with organic or geometric shapes. Finally, students learned how to put together the clock mechanism to create their working clock! 

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Grade 5 – Body Systems Project with Hummingbird Robotics – link to photos
In Term 2, students in Grade 5 were learning about the body systems in Science. First, Yorkies developed their skills with Hummingbird Robotics, where they attached and programmed different outputs such as LED lights and servo motors. Once students gained an understanding of the three body systems of focus (respiratory system, musculoskeletal system and digestive system), students worked with a partner to model a part of the system of their choosing. 

Student projects ranged from showing the diaphragm moving up and down in the chest to seeing the path a piece of “food” would travel after being swallowed. Students created and troubleshooted both their code and the physical mechanisms with cardboard and other materials in order to get the components of their program working as it would in the human body.

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Grade 6 – Refugee Art
In Term 3, Grade 6 students engaged in a project to honour and bring awareness to the experience of refugees. The process began in January, starting with research on human rights and the way these rights are violated around the world. Students gained empathy for refugees through a day-long simulation activity. After the simulation, students were tasked with writing a reflection or a story about their experience.  

Next, the Grade 6 students read “Refugee” by Alan Gratz and interviewed Marcelle Kitengie, Hassan Al Kontarpeople, and Laurie Cooper about their experience as a refugee or working with people who are refugees. The Grade 6 students documented what they learned by creating a visual artwork to honour the story and help others empathize. To scaffold the process of creating a visual artwork of such a sensitive subject matter, classes brainstormed key elements and symbols that could represent this experience. Students created individual artworks including paintings, sculptures, mixed media, installations, and digital art. 

Grade 7 – Career Ed Project
In Term 2, Grade 7 students chose a career to learn more about and develop an app to meet the needs of their user. Beginning with research, students learned more about this profession using guiding questions. Then, they reached out and interviewed a professional in the field to not only develop a better understanding of this profession, but also to identify a need or a problem in this field, potentially based on changes made as a result of the global pandemic. Students narrowed down their research to focus on a single problem that they would be able to help with, or solve, by way of a mobile app. Using code.org’s App Lab platform, students learned the basics of coding an application for a mobile device. Using a detailed plan, students coded their app. Many students were able to get feedback from the individual they interviewed in order to improve and make their project as useful as possible. Finished apps helped in many ways, including connecting employees with each other to help with social isolation to helping restaurants with their user experience when making reservations online.