Curriculum

Sustainable Farming

Work and learning on the farm forms is a core piece of our curriculum. Participating in the cycle of the garden is a direct way in to broader concepts of sustainability, and Gappers learn to grow their own delicious food! Projects and skills depend on the timing of the season:

  • Harvesting delicious home-grown crops

  • Mulching, weeding, and preparing beds for winter

  • Starting seeds in the greenhouse

  • Regular care of laying hens, collecting eggs

  • Rotationally grazing sheep on pasture

  • Building coops or fencing for animals

Nature Connection

We aim to foster a reciprocal connection to nature that enables us to be effective stewards of the Earth. Every skill, trip, and adventure is an opportunity for resilience-building, practical learning, and healing in the natural world:

  • Backpacking and canoeing expeditions

  • Survival skills: friction fire-making, shelter building, dutch oven cooking, knots, knife skills

  • Local ecology and natural history explorations

  • Wildcrafting mats and baskets

  • Wild edible and medicinal plants

Highlight: Wilderness Trips

Trips are an opportunity to learn expedition leadership, push our physical boundaries, work together, summit mountains and paddle rivers, and immerse ourselves in the beauty of the regional wild landscape in New England and Canada. We’ll embark on four wilderness adventures, from canoe camping to backpacking to a survival skills week that concludes in a 24-hour forest solo.

Homesteading Skills

By learning the skills to transform the abundance of the season into the things we need, Gappers experience the joy and satisfaction of creating with their hands. Sustainability is experienced through projects and creativity:

  • Fiber arts from Glen Brook wool

  • Carving canoe paddles using traditional hand tools

  • Crafting herbal remedies like teas and salves

  • Basic carpentry

  • Simple, nourishing, seasonal cooking from the farm

  • Food preservation: canning, drying, fermenting

  • Cider making from our fruit trees

  • Blacksmithing

Intentional Community

Being together can serve as the antidote to the isolation that is so common in our world, and help Gappers to learn about their own gifts and challenges. Living and working together is a skill! Here are the elements of our community:

  • Cooking meals for one another

  • Weekly community process meetings and check-ins

  • Sharing chores, cleaning, and house upkeep

  • Communication practices and tools

  • Self-governance strategies

  • Explorations of power and privilege

Self-Inquiry

We balance active inquiry–through readings and discussions, and experiential activities–with restorative practices of mindfulness, solo time in nature, and rest and self-care, in order to create a holistic environment for us to engage with the important work of exploring who we are.

  • Regular Sit Spot practice at a special place in nature

  • Weekly journaling time

  • Meditation and mindfulness

  • Weekly readings

  • 24 hour Solo in the forest as a culminating experience

Week-by-Week

  • A week of relationship building to the cohort, the land and our purpose. Gappers settle into daily routines of farm and house chores, shared cooking, and daily mindfulness. We’ll create community agreements, learn tool safety, and get to know the natural history of the land at Glen Brook. Orientation week culminates with a short overnight backpacking trip to test out gear and learn introductory skills.

  • Two weeks of digging deeper on the farm and in the kitchen. Gappers rotate between farm projects in the morning and culinary skills in the afternoon. Farm mornings include an introduction to animal care; learning how to harvest, weed, and prepare beds; and exploring soil science. We’ll do basic culinary skills like knife use, bread baking, all the ways to cook an egg, and food safety. We’ll also spend a day assisting with the chicken harvest. Gappers can choose if they would like to participate in ethical animal slaughtering and/or learning the art of butchery.

  • Every Gapper will take on a leadership role for this trip, from planning and packing food to tending the fire each night. We’ll spend four days out on the water, paddling through down the Connecticut River as we explore natural and human history of the valley along the way.

  • Two weeks of learning by doing, focusing on Farm, Kitchen, Stewardship, or Outdoor Education. Apprenticeships are led by Glen Brook’s skilled year-round staff: our farm manager, head chef, facilities manager, and outdoor educators. Gappers can choose which track they want to dig deeper into. During one of the two weeks, there is an opportunity to interact with the children on-site, helping them with outdoor skills, fire cooking, and garden harvesting.

  • Four days on the trail at the prettiest time of year in New England, putting expedition skills to the test and carrying everything we need on our backs. This trip is a chance for Gappers to practice outdoor leadership skills, including Leave No Trace, navigation, group dynamics, trail cooking, and wilderness skills.

  • Two weeks of chose-your-own intensives focusing on sustainable living skills. Forestry, fiber arts, herbal medicine, blacksmithing, carpentry, woodworking, wildcrafting…

  • A week of developing bushcraft skills through place-based immersion, sleeping in canvas tents and living by candlelight. As the season turns inward, we will too, focusing on crafting and community in our forest encampment. Wild Camp culminates with a 24-hour solo for each Gapper, which is a chance to connect deeply with your inner knowing and with the natural world.

  • The semester ends with a week of project finishing, gleaning for a local food pantry, and reflections on our time together. We’ll close out with an Ancestor Feast with all the Glen Brook staff and residents, where everyone is invited to bring a dish they’ve made from their heritage. Appreciations and discussions about “taking Glen Brook home” wrap up our time.

Join Us This Fall