There is a particular kind of joy that comes from learning outdoors in winter. This past stretch of snow and cold has reminded us why an outdoor-focused approach to education is such a gift. While many schools closed their doors, ours stayed open—not because we ignored the weather, but because we leaned into it.
Wrapped in proper coats, boots, hats, and mittens, our students stepped outside to meet the day as it was given. Crunching snow underfoot, breath visible in the air, hands busy and minds alert, they explored God’s world not from behind a window, but from within it.
Cold weather has a way of sharpening the senses. Students notice more. They listen differently. They move with intention. A frozen creek becomes a lesson in patience and observation. A bare tree invites questions about life, seasons, and waiting. The cold itself becomes a teacher: asking students to persevere, to prepare well, to care for one another, and to discover that discomfort does not mean danger, and challenge does not mean retreat.
This kind of learning forms grit and resilience, yes, but it also forms gratitude. There is gratitude for warm layers and a warm classroom afterward. Gratitude for classmates who help zip a coat or offer a glove. Gratitude for a school culture that says: We are capable. We are equipped. We are not afraid of hard things.
Outdoor learning in all-weather reminds our students that the world is not something to avoid when it feels inconvenient. It is something to engage with thoughtfully, reverently, and courageously. God’s creation is not paused by snow, and neither is our curiosity.
We are deeply thankful to be a school that can say yes to this kind of education: one that trusts children to rise to the occasion, honors the goodness of creation in every season, and finds joy—not in perfect conditions—but in faithful presence.
Winter has much to teach us. We’re grateful to keep learning right in the middle of it.