The Island School

Island School
Location
Eleuthera
The Bahamas
Information
Type experiential, coeducational
Established 1999
Faculty 25
Grades 10 and 11
Enrollment 48 per semester
Campus rural
Website www.islandschool.org

The Island School is located 1 mile (1.6 km) from Powell Point near the southwestern-most tip of Eleuthera, The Bahamas.

Semester programs

The Island School offers two 14-week semester programs each year and a 6-week summer term. Fall semester begins in late August and runs through early December and spring semester begins in late February and ends in the beginning of June. Summer term runs from late June to early August.

Fall and spring semester program students complete a course of study in seven classes including Marine Ecology, Human Ecology, Applied Scientific Research, Literature of The Sea, Histories of The Bahamas, Mathematics, and Environmental Art. Students also participate in weekly Community Outreach classes with the Deep Creek Middle School. Summer programs focus on Applied Scientific Research and Human Ecology.

History

The Island School was founded in 1999 by Chris and Pam Maxey with support from The Lawrenceville School in New Jersey. Chris Maxey taught at the school and in 1996, he received the Joukowsky Fellowship allowing him to work towards his master's in Marine Resource Management at the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science at the University of Miami. He initiated the Cape Eleuthera Marine Conservation Project (now the Cape Eleuthera Foundation) and began to set the framework to build a school and research station at Cape Eleuthera in The Bahamas. The project received a donation of 18 acres of land donated by the Cape Eleuthera Resort & Yacht Club. Construction on the campus began in fall 1998. On March 15, 1999, Pam and Chris started the first 14-week, one-hundred-day Island School semester which included 22 students and 6 faculty members.

Facilities

Island School Entrance

What began as a three-building campus grew into a diverse system of interconnected facilities. The current campus comprises a faculty office and school store, two large dormitory buildings, four main classrooms, a boathouse, dining hall with outside patio seating, a student life and medical center, two two-story faculty apartment buildings, two open-air gazebos, a living-roof multi-use building, a farm and orchard, a bio-diesel production facility, woodshop, a resource processing center, and in addition, the adjacent campus which hosts the Cape Eleuthera Institute.

Ecological design

The 10-acre (4-hectare) campus is powered by systems that allow the school to reduce its ecological impact. Rainwater from the roofs is captured for use, and collected into a system of cisterns with 82,000 gallon (310,403 liter) storage capacity. Water is heated through solar thermal collectors. Buildings are designed and constructed from local materials where possible and without air-conditioning. Furniture for the school is hand-crafted on campus out of Casuarina, a local non-native species of tree. The school generates the majority of its electricity through its 29 kW photovoltaic array and 10 kW wind turbine mounted on a 100 ft (30 m) tower above campus. The school seeks to transform its waste outputs through its constructed wetland which captures nutrients, and filters waste water before being used to irrigate landscaping. The school seeks to revolutionize its waste processing through the adaptation of its newly constructed bio-digester which will convert human waste into usable energy. In 2003, a student research group pioneered the biodiesel program which annually transforms 18.000 gallons of waste cooking oil, collected from local restaurants and cruise ships. The biodiesel powers Island School's fleet of 9 boats and 11 vehicles, and backup generators. The school’s permaculture, aquaculture, and aquaponics programs, seek to reduce the amount of food imported annually. The school also invests in local agriculture by partnering with farmers to provide locally sourced fruits, vegetables, and meats.

Outdoor programs

Students undergo PADI Open Water Scuba Certification so that the ocean can become their classroom. They learn about concepts of marine ecology and then interact with knowledge through direct observation of the marine world. Students may also be required do dive as part of their coursework in Research classes.

All students participate in two kayak expeditions during the course of the semester. The initial three-day kayak trip teaches basic skills of ocean kayaking, camping, team building and serves as and introduction to exploring the island. Later, students complete an 8-day kayak trip that covers 30 nautical miles of the southern point of Eleuthera which further develops students’ kayaking skills while focused on leadership training. The kayak trip culminates with a 48-hour solo experience in which individual students are spread out individually in assigned spaces along Lighthouse Beach. Solos are overseen by on-sight faculty who support this opportunity for self-discovery.

References

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