Kent’s Pine Tree students explore the outdoors

Pine Tree Elementary students received hands-on environmental education at YMCA's Camp Seymour.

Pine Tree Hill elementary sixth-graders learned about the environment by doing outdoor activities.

Pine Tree Hill elementary sixth-graders learned about the environment by doing outdoor activities.

Pine Tree Elementary students received hands-on environmental education at YMCA’s Camp Seymour.

Sixth graders Jason Snow, Samantha Domingo and Amanda Elmer studied marine ecosystems, sea creatures and their impact on the environment, from Oct. 31 through Nov. 3.

“At camp, you get to do things that you really can’t learn in a classroom,” Snow said. “We got to learn how to boat, and we got to touch starfish with our hands.”

The students said it was great to be outdoors, away from the classroom.

“It doesn’t even feel like you’re learning because it’s really interesting” says Domingo.

Seymour occupies 180 acres and a shoreline on the Key Peninsula, 30 minutes from Tacoma.The education program introduces a variety of environmental topics, such as water quality and treatment, preserving the forest, understanding what lives in the Puget Sound and tips on how to enjoy the outdoors responsibly.

YMCA staff naturalists come from across the country to share their knowledge and enthusiasm when teaching classes. The program serves 8,000 participants from 96 different schools.

Students participated in classes emphasizing the importance of group work and what it entails.

“Cooperating is so important because you’re going to need to know how to work with other people in your life” Snow said.

Snow, Domingo and Elmer were just three of 68 students spending three nights and four days at Camp Seymour learning about the outdoors and their impact on our environment through the camp’s education program, which enhances the Washington State Essential Learning Standards. Accompanied by volunteer chaperones, teachers and classmates, students participated in canoeing, the climbing wall, squid dissection and marine science.

“Co-op was a good learning opportunity, and it helped us to make friends and to open our minds to new ideas” says Elmer.

Students said after taking classes on sustainability and human impact on the environment, they are more aware of their personal influence on the earth.Snow and Domingo are both going to try to recycle more and try to use less plastic.

“Hands-on experiential education meets students’ needs on so many levels,” said Becca Gjertson, outdoor environmental education director. “Kids need opportunities to be and learn outside.”


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

Courtesy File Photo, U.S. Immigration and Customs
Kent School District issues staff protocols for ICE

Message aims to prepare staff should immigration authorities appear at or near schools

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Train strikes, kills Kent man, 64, in wheelchair on tracks

Feb. 4 incident at East James Street second death by train in three days in Kent

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Kent Police Blotter: Jan. 12-18

Incidents include attempted robbery, carjackings

File Photo, Kent Reporter
Kent woman standing on tracks struck and killed by train | Update

Woman identified; reportedly waving at train Feb. 2 in the 1000 block of First Avenue North

Image courtesy King County Sheriff's Office
Super Bowl patrols underway as part of ‘Night of 1,000 Stars’ campaign

Emphasis patrols will be active in King County to encourage safe driving

COURTESY PHOTO, Sound Transit
No light rail service in Kent on Saturday, Feb. 7

Sound Transit to close line between Federal Way and Angle Lake for maintenance; buses will run

t
Kent high school students hit streets to protest ICE

Hundreds oppose actions that resulted in deaths of protesters in Minneapolis and removal of immigrants

United States Courthouse in Seattle. COURTESY PHOTO, USDOJ
Man pleads guilty to home invasion robberies in Kent, elsewhere

Armed, masked men entered homes in 2022 and tied up victims as they ransacked places

t
King County Metro rolls out new fleet of battery-electric buses

Routes in Kent, Auburn and Renton among the cities that will feature the new buses

Kent Police arrest a suspect Jan. 16 after he reportedly stabbed a man earlier in the day at the Kent Library. COURTESY PHOTO, King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office
Man, 37, faces assault charge in Kent Library stabbing

Reportedly stabbed 18-year-old man in arm Jan. 16 in unprovoked attack

U.S. Courthouse in Seattle. COURTESY PHOTO, USDOJ
Man found guilty of robbing multiple people in King County

2-hour carjacking spree in 2022 covered Kent, Bellevue, Redmond, Seattle and ended in Renton

t
Kent man sentenced to over 10 years for Auburn bank robbery

The defendant had multiple felonies on his criminal record.