Pacific Ridge High School Educational Programs Visit

Once again Educational Programs has been out having a blast, all the while teaching and learning in the field.

This time, four high school boys and their chaperone teacher Melissa Sullivan visited us all the way from Pacific Ridge High School in Carlsbad, California. The group was with us for twelve days, and we got to spend much of their time working with researchers in the field or in the lab. Expecting to come here and experience nothing more than white sand beaches, the students were surprised by how much valuable knowledge they had learned by the end of their stay here. They left happy knowing that they had gotten to know some of the finer details of the real Bahamas and some of the major challenges and opportunities of the area.

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Introducing Cameron Powel!

Please join us in welcoming Cameron Powel (F04) to The Island School staff.  Cameron will return to the island this July as the Alumni Relations and Communications Associate.  This won’t be Cam’s first time back on campus since her Fall 2004 semester.  She interned in the summers of 2006 and 2007 and joined the Island School Summer Term staff last year as a Summer Term mentor.  Cameron recently graduated from Bates College in Maine with a BA in Sociology.  She hails from Shaker Heights, Ohio and enjoys running, traveling, being with friends, and playing tennis.  “I’m excited to return to Eleuthera in a whole new role and experience the semester from the faculty perspective,” says Cam.  We are thrilled to have Cameron joining the staff and look forward to her return to Eleuthera.

Cacique Update June 5, 2011

The day had come.  Either by choice, or because we were forced to: every student packed one of the large duffels that they came with.  These bags would be sent ahead of our flights on Wednesday, so as to not over-weight the planes we depart on.  In just two days we will meet our bags back home.  T-shirts were exchanged, tears were shed, and at some point in time people came to the realization that we only have 2 days left. With our material items cut in half, we were set free once again at1:15after our last Sunday brunch. During our last exploration time, some visited the places that had become sacred to them, Continue reading

We Started the Fire!

We Started the Fire- with Biodigestion

At several points during our Island School journey, we experience many firsts. Only minutes ago, our biodigestion team went down in Bahamian history by producing and using the first biogas produced from an anaerobic digestion system. Just recently, we added a new system with 7% glycerol called “Hal-Drew,” named after a visiting master teacher and an Island School alum. Earlier this afternoon, we found this new addition to our digestion fleet to have several leaks in the gas tubing, disturbing the biogas production process. We quickly remedied this leaky situation by wrapping the holes in electrical tape. Our eyes lit up at the sight of the water level rising before we had even finished this process. Continue reading

What is The Island School?

As part of the Spring 2011 Human Ecology Course at The Island School, a creative group of students made this movie to help explain the journey students experience on Cape Eleuthera. Mario Sacca, TJ Thran, Lindsey Springs and Lizzie Ayoub describe the semester through a student lens as a way to share with world what a semester with The Island School entails. Don’t worry, they haven’t exposed everything so there are still plenty of surprises to experience for all future students on their 100 day journeys.

Small Feet – Human Ecology Measured

by Anne, Adam, Annie, and Nick

The Island School prides itself on being an environmentally conscious institution; yet how kind is the school to the earth? Yes, we make our own biodiesel and compost, have solar panels and a wind turbine, we even pump our sewage into manure for bananas, but what is our carbon footprint? Up until this point in time, the actual carbon footprint of the school had not been calculated and this human ecology group set out to do just that. Carbon outputs, as many of you know, pollute the atmosphere and play a large role in climate change. Though poorer nations like The Bahamas do not have the largest impact on the global carbon footprint, islands like Eleuthera are vulnerable to the effects of climate change. We felt it was our responsibility to understand our carbon impact on the world so that we could make steps towards living more within the school’s pillar of “sustainability.” Continue reading

Cacique Update June 4, 2011

by Caciques Brontë and Jack

Saturday was a day full of exciting events. The final research symposium was held on campus, transition classes were held, themed dinners and conch fest was celebrated.

The research symposium was a rewarding experience considering the fact that alumni, research specialists, and government officials traveled to hear about the research we conducted during the semester.  We were excited to be high school students whose work and discoveries were not only valued by our teachers and The Island School, but would also become useful to the scientific community. Continue reading