Our Approach

At Washington Outdoor School, we cultivate learning and growth in joyful partnership with nature and our community. We believe interacting with nature encourages a sense of place, awakens curiosity and creates healthy minds and bodies. 

Our work is based on core values of strong communities, equal access to outdoor adventures, and stewardship of our natural world. We are a year-round program and children experience the natural world in all types of weather.

Celebrating 10 years of nature based education in Kittitas County, we are excited to welcome new opportunities for children and families.

Washington Outdoor School is the only licensed outdoor nature based (ONB) program in Kittitas County.

When your child participates in our program, they gain skills and enjoy experiences that are not possible in a four walled classroom.  

Every day is different at outdoor school and we embrace the world nature offers us and dive in with wonder and gratitude.  

Our teachers integrate academic skill building into daily exploration of the natural world.  What does that look like?  

  • Literacy skills integrate into nature immersion: “The sand at the star on the hill is slippery and we love to be there when it is sunny outside, but when it is windy we seek shelter under the sandstone cliffs nearby.” 

  • Pre-writing skills are reinforced when we write in the sand with our fingers or sticks and spend time in a sit spot then writing about or draw our experiences in our journals on our own or with teacher support.

  • Math skills are reinforced when we spend time constructing forts or keep track of the number of wooly caterpillars we find in the Fall or graphing our favorite outdoor activities using natural materials to build the graph, fir cones become units of measure, sticks become the lines of the graph.  Motor memory becomes physical memory that becomes a part of a child’s lived experience.

  • Social Emotional skills are strengthened and reinforced throughout every day as we manage our bodies in an ever changing environment, cooperate with our peers and teachers along trails that offer obstacles and frequent opportunities to work together.

Why nature based immersion learning?

    • Develop observation skills by slowing down and using our senses to take in information in our environment.

    • Plant and animal behavior and interaction reflection

    • Cycles and patterns in nature (life, hydro, rock…)

    • Identifying and classifying (plants, rocks, insects, animals, soils, waterbodies…)

    • Mapping and orienting to place (landmarks, directions, routes, tracking)

    • Predicting weather based on sky conditions and air movement

    • Writing, journaling, and recording observations

    • Inquiry Cycle- Ask, Investigate, Create, Discuss, Reflect

    • Students are guided in asking questions about a focus topic. We form a plan about how to get the information needed and the students decide how they will record this information to make something to show what they have learned to present to a peer, teacher, parent, community member. The students then get feedback and have time to reflect on the process and to improve on it or to form a new inquiry into something else.

    • Examine positive and negative impacts.

    • Leave no trace! Participate in keeping the areas explored clean.

    • Weigh needs and wants work toward sustainable habits.

    • Work at solving problems through the inquiry process.

    • Fresh air and less exposure to illness.

    • Build coordination, gross motor skills, body strength, and confidence.

    • Resilience and preparation for any weather condition.

    • Exercise and endurance.

    • Collaborative proactive solutions (Teaching staff identify challenges and work with the child proactively to come up with reasonable strategies to solve problems).

    • Evaluation of risk in the natural environment and adapting to the conditions.

Early Learning (Ages 0-5)

Washington Outdoor School sees learning as a continuum, and our Early Learning Program offers opportunities for our youngest learners to explore the natural world at their pace and from their perspective. WOS integrates outdoor child-led exploration, observation, and forest play.

  • This unique child with caregiver class offers outdoor experiences for children as young as newborns and the opportunity for families to create community with other caregivers. The class will end at the Roslyn Library just in time for the library's Storytime and Craft program!

    The class is an introduction to nature based, outdoor immersion learning. Parents and children socialize with other families as they learn, grow, and discover the wonders of the natural world.

    Upper County: Tuesdays 9:45am-11:15am

    Program Focus:

    Learning a routine, multi-sensory (sight, sound, touch, smell) child led learning inspired by nature, songs, stories, art projects, listening and speaking, developing fine and gross motor skills, develop confidence and resilience.

  • This class is for children that are ready to be on their own for an extended amount of time. They can manage their toileting and dressing and undressing with little help, and can carry their own backpack.

    Upper County Licensed Program: Start Delayed

    Lower County: Mondays 9am-12pm

    Program Focus

    Social Emotional:

    This program is primarily child led and encourages children to develop and follow their own interests and imaginations within the structure of a daily routine. The daily routine encourages children to follow guidelines and abide by rules to keep us safe. Children build and develop relationships with peers and adults. Children are encouraged in self expression and learn and practice strategies to manage social challenges such as taking turns, taking breaks and sharing.

    We celebrate and learn about our similarities and differences and embrace diverse perspectives, experiences, family structures, languages and traditions.

    Physical:

    Develop and improve gross-motor skills through hiking, climbing, balancing and other actions required to maneuver in our ever changing natural environment. We develop fine-motor skills through practical activities such managing our own gear: opening and closing backpacks, snack boxes, food packaging, mittens/gloves, hats, boots; along with utilizing art materials such as pencils, crayons, markers, paint, and scissors.

    Cognitive:

    Multi-sensory exploration and inquiry using all our senses to learn from nature in a variety of weather and seasons.

    Math:

    Sort materials by various quality, size, shape, color.

    Expand counting skills (from 0 working towards 10 then 31 and beyond ) with various games and materials such as the calendar, hide and seek and counters such as stones, pinecones, sticks, and begin recognizing written numbers and practice writing them. Work to recognize a set of 4 items without counting and be able to combine sets and beginning addition.

    Use spatial awareness and problem solving through cooperative activities in nature, i.e. forts, dens and working with natural materials and classmates in realistic situations

    Language:

    Expand vocabulary through speaking and listening. Learn new words in a variety of languages including Indigenous and family languages represented in the class. Listen to stories, make predictions, become aware of the structure of how language is represented in writing (left to right top to bottom). Bring awareness to words that begin with the same sound and rhyming words though games and hand play.

    Begin to develop awareness of letter sounds and blending sounds together through written print, games and activities. Begin writing to represent ideas first as shapes that represent written language moving towards learning to form letters in their name and other letters in the alphabet.

    Science:

    The natural world ignites curiosity and children are encouraged to ask questions, make predictions and identify ways to find answers. They use tools such as magnifying glasses, binoculars, shovels, sticks, containers, tape measures, shadows, compass, clocks and more to observe, build, measure, and record findings and observations. Students are encouraged to go deeper when our interest is peaked and we want to know more about something we have observed or experienced.

    Social Studies:

    Explore our connection to family and place. Explore family relationships and traditions of our own, the communities we are a part of including the natural world. Begin to express own feelings and beliefs.

    Washington Outdoor School utilizes the Since Time Immemorial Curriculum to gain an understanding of our connection to the place we live from the perspectives of the Native people of the Pacific Northwest who have lived on and stewarded the lands on which we live since time immemorial.

    Become familiar with landmarks, sun, shadow and directions to navigate local areas and favorite spots.

    Arts: (Visual and Performance):

    Children are exposed to various art mediums. Songs with movements, story telling, dances, and dramatic play, cutting, pasting, sticking, painting with a variety of materials. Children are given great freedom in this area to express themselves and to develop their own interests.

  • This is a weekly class focusing on nature-based Inquiry exploration for students in Preschool through 5th Grade.

    It is a perfect opportunity for homeschool families to connect with others in an organic group that is reflective of community learning.

    Families can choose this as an independent class or opt to add it to a Preschool or K-2nd program schedule.

    Class Time: Friday 8:30-12:30

    Program Focus

    Social Emotional:

    We utilize the Plant Teachings for Growing Social Emotional Skills, Cultivating Resiliency and Wellbeing with Northwest Plants curriculum.

    We explore ways of being, acting, and reacting, inspired by Coast Salish Indigenous teachings of plants that help us learn to live a balanced life that embraces and celebrates diversity and gives us strategies to manage life's challenges.

    Curriculum Overview

    Physical:

    Continued physical development and stamina to improve gross-motor skills through hiking, climbing, balancing, bending, twisting reaching and other actions required to maneuver in our ever changing natural environment. Games and activities that require throwing and catching, dodging, and striking (with bat/stick) to develop aim and accuracy and agility.

    We develop fine-motor skills as we manage our own gear- opening and closing backpacks, snack boxes, food packaging, mittens/gloves, hats, boots, along with using art materials such as pencils, crayons, markers, paint, and scissors.

    Cognitive:

    Multi-sensory exploration and inquiry using all our senses to learn from nature in a variety of weather and seasons.

    Social Studies and Science:

    Through exploration and project based learning in the natural world, we will use various lenses of Social Studies and Science. We will utilize the Since Time Immemorial curriculum along with inquiry concepts: form (what is it?) , function (how it works?), causation( why is it like that?) connections, responsibility and reflection.

  • Upper County: Programs will take place in the Roslyn Urban Forest. Our drop off point for most of our programs is at the Episcopal Church in Roslyn. At times we may meet in other areas for special events or field trips. We hike and explore the areas in and around the Roslyn Urban Forest.

    Lower County: Programs will take place in Ellensburg City Parks, McElroy or Paul Rogers Wildlife Park and a new location in the Manastash Canyon.

  • 0-3 w/Caregiver (Per Family up to two children in the same household ages 0-3.)

    Upper County Only:

    • Full Year- Pay at registration (10% Discount): $567

    • Monthly: $70

    Pre-K (Per Child)

    Upper County Licensed Program (Monday-Thursday): TBD

    Lower County (Monday):

    • Full Year- Pay at registration (10% Discount): $1296

    • Monthly: $160

    Forest Fridays(Per Child)

    Upper County Only:

    • Full Year- Pay at registration (10% Discount): $1458

    • Monthly: $180

School Age (K-2nd Grade)

Our School Age Program offers opportunities for older learners including supplemental learning for Home Schooled students.

WOS ingrates outdoor child-led exploration, observation and forest play with inquiry and project-based learning, the Since Time Immemorial Curriculum, and The Plant Teachings Curriculum.

  • This program will run through the school year, and will be led by a certified teacher who will integrate learning in all subject areas meeting each child where they are academically.

    Full day program that would substitute for traditional school. (Mon- Thurs + Optional Mixed-Age Exploration on Friday)

    Upper County Licensed Program: Start Delayed

    Class Time: M-TH 8:30-3:00

    Program Focus

    Social Emotional:

    We utilize the Plant Teachings for Growing Social Emotional Skills, Cultivating Resiliency and Wellbeing with Northwest Plants curriculum.

    We explore ways of being, acting, and reacting, inspired by Coast Salish Indigenous teachings of plants that help us learn to live a balanced life that embraces and celebrates diversity and gives us strategies to manage life's challenges.

    Curriculum Overview

    Physical:

    Continued physical development and stamina to improve gross-motor skills through hiking, climbing, balancing, bending, twisting reaching and other actions required to maneuver in our ever changing natural environment. Games and activities that require throwing and catching, dodging, and striking (with bat/stick) to develop aim and accuracy and agility.

    We develop fine-motor skills through practical activities such managing our own gear: opening and closing backpacks, snack boxes, food packaging, mittens/gloves, hats, boots; along with utilizing art materials such as pencils, crayons, markers, paint, and scissors.

    Cognitive:

    Multi-sensory exploration and inquiry using all our senses to learn from nature in a variety of weather and seasons.

    Math https://learning.ccsso.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Math_Standards1.pdf (From OSPI)

    Counting K- up to 100 and 1st & 2nd beyond. Sequencing and comparing numbers, moving from simple addition and subtraction to more complex problems with regrouping to gain an understanding of the operations in Base 10 (K up to 10; 1st and 2nd grade up to 20) . Extend patterns and number sequences, moving toward skip counting and transitioning to multiplication in Grade 2. Categorizing objects moving towards representing and interpreting data using graphs and charts. Measuring with nonstandard and standard units. Identifying and reason with 2D and 3D shapes. Learn to tell time, and work with money appropriate for grade level.

    Language: https://learning.ccsso.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/ADA-Compliant-ELA-Standards.pdf (From OSPI)

    Phonological Awareness (Sounds in spoken language)

    Understands spoken words, syllables, rhyming words, blend sounds in a word, isolating individual sounds, beginning, middle and end sound (in 3 letter words) add or substitute sounds. Distinguish long and short vowel sound in single syllable words.

    Print Concepts

    Follow words from left to right, top to bottom, and page by page and that print represents spoken words.

    Recognize and name all upper and lowercase letters and associated sounds. Read one-syllable words and high frequency words for grade level. Use reading strategies to break apart and blend words moving from emergent to fluent reader considering both accuracy and comprehension for grade level.

    Begin and develop writing skills for various purposes moving from pictures with words to sentences and then into paragraphs while using the writing process.

    Social Studies and Science

    Through exploration and project based learning in the natural world, we will use various lenses of Social Studies and Science. We will investigate utilizing Since Time Immemorial curriculum along with other concepts: form (what is it?) , function (how it works?), causation( why is it like that?) connections, change, perspectives, responsibility and reflection.

  • This is a weekly class focusing on nature-based Inquiry exploration for students in Preschool through 5th Grade.

    It is a perfect opportunity for homeschool families to connect with others in an organic group that is reflective of community learning.

    Families can choose this as an independent class or opt to add it to a Preschool or K-2nd program schedule.

    Program Focus

    Social Emotional:

    We utilize the Plant Teachings for Growing Social Emotional Skills, Cultivating Resiliency and Wellbeing with Northwest Plants curriculum.

    We explore ways of being, acting and reacting, inspired by Coast Salish Indigenous teachings of plants that help us learn to live a balanced life that embraces and celebrates diversity and gives us strategies to manage life's challenges.

    Curriculum Overview

    Physical:

    Continued physical development and stamina to improve gross-motor skills through hiking, climbing, balancing, bending, twisting reaching and other actions required to maneuver in our ever changing natural environment. Games and activities that require throwing and catching, dodging, and striking (with bat/stick) to develop aim and accuracy and agility.

    We develop fine-motor skills especially as we manage our own gear- opening and closing backpack, snack boxes, food packaging, mittens/gloves, hats, boots, along with using art materials such as pencils, crayons, markers, paint, and scissors.

    Cognitive:

    Multi-sensory exploration and inquiry using all our senses to learn from nature in a variety of weather and seasons.

    Social Studies and Science:

    Through exploration and project based learning in the natural world, we will use various lenses of Social Studies and Science. we will utilize the Since Time Immemorial curriculum along with inquiry concepts: form (what is it?) , function (how it works?), causation( why is it like that?) connections, responsibility and reflection.

  • Trailblazers is a new class for older students to go deeper in the natural world through all seasons by cultivating: leadership skills, nature knowledge, and relationships with ourselves, others, and the world around us.

    This is a weekly class focusing on nature-based Inquiry exploration for students in 5th through 8th grade.

    It is a perfect opportunity for homeschool families to connect with others in an organic group that is reflective of community learning.

    Upper County: Thursdays 12:00-2:30

    Program Focus

    Social Emotional:

    We utilize the Plant Teachings for Growing Social Emotional Skills, Cultivating Resiliency and Wellbeing with Northwest Plants curriculum.

    We explore ways of being, acting and reacting, inspired by Coast Salish Indigenous teachings of plants that help us learn to live a balanced life that embraces and celebrates diversity and gives us strategies to manage life's challenges.

    Curriculum Overview

    Physical:

    Continued physical development and stamina to improve gross-motor skills through hiking, climbing, balancing, bending, twisting reaching and other actions required to maneuver in our ever changing natural environment. Games and activities that require throwing and catching, dodging, and striking (with bat/stick) to develop aim and accuracy and agility.

    We develop fine-motor skills especially as we manage our own gear- opening and closing backpack, snack boxes, food packaging, mittens/gloves, hats, boots, along with using art materials such as pencils, crayons, markers, paint, and scissors.

    Cognitive:

    Multi-sensory exploration and inquiry using all our senses to learn from nature in a variety of weather and seasons.

    Social Studies and Science:

    Through exploration and project based learning in the natural world, we will use various lenses of Social Studies and Science. we will utilize the Since Time Immemorial curriculum along with inquiry concepts: form (what is it?) , function (how it works?), causation( why is it like that?) connections, responsibility and reflection.

  • Upper County: Programs will take place in the Roslyn Urban Forest. Our drop off point for most of our programs is at the Episcopal Church in Roslyn. At times we may meet in other areas for special events or field trips. We hike and explore the areas in and around the Roslyn Urban Forest.

  • K-2nd (Per Child)

    Monday-Thursday: TBD

    Trailblazers(Per Child)

    Upper County Only:

    • Full Year- Pay at registration (10% Discount): $1134

    • Monthly: $140

After School (K-5th Grade)

At Washington Outdoor School, we believe children need the space to explore the natural world to decompress and challenge their minds and bodies in ways not typically integrated in the traditional school day.

  • Washington Outdoor School has offered outdoor nature-based, education opportunities for children and families in Kittitas County for 10 years and an after school program with CERSD for the last three years.

    Our fourth year at CERSD brings a shift; CERSD is no longer subsidizing WOS's after school program and has given permission for WOS to offer a pay for service program at the school. The current program will be a one day a week program on Tuesdays and will continue to be offered by session: Fall, Winter, Spring or year.

    Our program at CERSD offers an after-school program for K-5th grade students that immerses students in the forests just beyond the walls of the school.

    Child-Led As a child-led program, our outdoor activities vary greatly. Although we have daily educational activities and games at the ready, our teaching staff is open to exploring what is of interest to our students. Being outdoors with the different plants, animals, and insects that share our environment provides the perfect opportunity for this kind of flexibility.

    Benefits of Nature Immersion The benefits of fresh air, extended time in nature, and the freedom to explore is what makes our students willing and happy to endure even the most trying elements which also builds their resilience, confidence and grit—transferable lifelong skills we want students to gain as they grow toward adulthood.

    Enroll Here

  • Our Early Release Wednesday class gives students the opportunity to decompress and challenge their minds and bodies in ways not typically integrated in the traditional school day.

    Students will meet at McElroy Park.

    Families must provide private transportation or arrange bus transportation with the Ellensburg School District. Space on the buses is not guaranteed and needs to be confirmed prior to registration as WOS is unable to refund tuition.

    Routes

    • Valley View: Bus 16 to 18th and Brook Ln.

    Program Focus

    Social Emotional:

    We utilize the Plant Teachings for Growing Social Emotional Skills, Cultivating Resiliency and Wellbeing with Northwest Plants curriculum.

    We explore ways of being, acting and reacting, inspired by Coast Salish Indigenous teachings of plants that help us learn to live a balanced life that embraces and celebrates diversity and gives us strategies to manage life's challenges.

    Curriculum Overview

    Physical:

    Continued physical development and stamina to improve gross-motor skills through hiking, climbing, balancing, bending, twisting reaching and other actions required to maneuver in our ever changing natural environment.

    Cognitive:

    Multi-sensory exploration and inquiry using all our senses to learn from nature in a variety of weather and seasons.

    Social Studies and Science:

    Through exploration and project based learning in the natural world, we will use various lenses of Social Studies and Science.

    Enroll Here

  • CERSD: K-5th Tuesdays (Per Child)

    Ellensburg: K-5th Early Release Wednesday (Per Child)

Enrollment Information