A Classroom Without Walls

The Camden Rockport Middle School (CRMS) has added a brand-new classroom, without walls! This open-air educational space is the result of a collaboration between the middle school and Coastal Mountains Land Trust. In a time when screens and speed are a way of life, the middle school is so grateful to have expanded outdoor access to their students.

The Land Trust has a progressive outdoor learning program, Learning Landscapes, designed to eliminate barriers to outdoor learning by responding to teachers’ visions for moving their curriculum outdoors. Their “River Walk Classroom” was envisioned by Jaime Stone, the school principal, Elphie Owen, the school’s Math intervention teacher and environmental club leader, and John Dietter, the school’s innovative seventh-grade science teacher.

The Land Trust and the CRMS faculty worked together to map out an educational space that emphasizes the beauty of their landscape and offers a location to teach all subjects, providing the potential for students to be outside multiple times throughout the day. Since the classroom is nestled in a hemlock grove, students can experience the mental health and emotional regulation benefits of being immersed in a biodiverse space, while continuing to learn.

Camden Rockport Middle School and Coastal Mountains Land Trust would like to acknowledge the generosity of the community, which made this project feasible. Tamarack Builders created and installed the outdoor chalkboard, donating all their time and materials. The West Bay Rotary of Camden funded an exquisite piece of slate, locally sourced from the family-run business, Sheldon Slate, in Monson, Maine. Treeworks, a local arborist company, cut and delivered stump seating and donated woodchips to protect the forest floor from compaction. Camden High School’s Hatchery program created up-cycled benches. John Powers, a local craftsperson and long-time Land Trust volunteer, offered his time to draw the initial design of the chalkboard. Additional supportive partners throughout the project include the Stewardship Education Alliance, the Learning Landscapes committee and administrators from the greater Five Town school district.

The fact that all the materials were sourced from Maine (or up-cycled) and built by locals speaks to the community-oriented nature of this project. Stay tuned for continuing and future collaborations between Coastal Mountains Land Trust and local schools!