Sunday, April 6, 2014


The Tigard Community Supports
Alberta Rider Elementary School!

April showers bring May flowers! Our garden is starting to bloom, we have planted two beautiful plants called False Solomon’s Seal that were generously donated by community member, Lois Rutkin. Thank you Lois for your support!

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When you walk through our garden grounds with your children please step carefully to ensure any new plants can take root and continue to flourish!

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In other news, we are so pleased to announce that we have been awarded a grant for our garden from the Tigard Garden Club totaling $1295! These funds will be used to prepare planting areas, purchase mulch and other supplies as well as plants. The garden is an ongoing investment for our school and we are grateful for the support of our community partners at the Tigard Garden Club!

Thursday, April 3, 2014

What’s nature got to do with it?


A child’s day to day experiences today differ dramatically from those just a few decades ago.  Time in the natural world has decreased substantially for many children.  A day might start, remain, and end entirely indoors.  This phenomenon has resulted in journalist and author Richard Louv coining the phrase; “Nature Deficit Disorder”.  In Mr. Louv’s view the disconnect from the natural world has contributed to attention problems and obesity, among other issues present in our children’s lives today.  You can read more about Mr. Louv’s research and results in his book Last Child in the Woods available at our local Washington County library or on his website: http://richardlouv.com/.  

You might ask what does that have to do with our school garden?  The answer is everything.  We have an ideal location to introduce children to nature or to continue to strengthen their bond to the environment.  Our grounds provide the perfect forest getaway, literally in our school’s front yard.  Time spent in nature can reduce anxiety, improve focus, and enhance social skills in a variety of ways.  But it also impacts academics and, yes, can even improve test results.

Our children spend the day learning reading, writing, math, and more in the classroom.  All of those subjects can be enhanced with time in our school’s garden and outdoor classroom.  Science is a natural choice when we think of taking the classroom outdoors, students will be able to engage in hands on learning, they will observe, hypothesize, and then can perform tests to confirm their theories.  This can improve analytical thinking skills as well as observation skills-both needed when they return to their desks.  It brings an abstract concept into the real world and can make difficult concepts easier to understand.  

Math studies outdoors can mean taking a theoretical concept and putting it to real life use.  Estimating length, width, or diameter can be done with trees and garden pathways.  Once the estimates are in, it‘s time to bring out the tools to measure.  Searching for geometric shapes in nature can solidify those tricky terms.  After seeing real world examples of acute or obtuse angles going back and identifying them in the book just might be easier.  

Writing and reading skills can also benefit from time in our school garden.  Time spent outdoors quietly observing birds or bugs can be turned into creative poetry, this can also improve concentration and focus back in the classroom.   And why not Drop Everything And Read…outside?  The potential uses of our school’s garden and outdoor classroom are limitless!  It’s an exciting time to be a student at Alberta Rider Elementary school as we work to bring learning outside into nature.

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For more information about the benefits of bringing learning into nature please visit:

How can you help?  
  • Continue to support the Garden fundraising by purchasing Scrip.  If 100 ARE families purchased a $100 gift card to Safeway, Albertsons or New Seasons every week our school would earn $400.00 a week.  Do your grocery shopping with scrip and support the garden with every purchase!
  • Attend the April 12th garden clean up party from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm, bring your gloves, tools, and energy ready to get our garden beds prepared for planting.
  • Come to the spring carnival and silent auction on April 26th and buy a plant for the garden.
  • Come back in May with your family to plant it!  
  • Talk to your child’s teacher about how you can help bring the learning outdoors.  
  • Finally, check back to our blog often so you don’t miss a single thing!  

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Welcome Spring!


The chilly, rainy, winter months have officially come to a close.  Not that we don’t expect more rain, but things are looking up in the Garden!  


This has been a busy year behind the scenes for the Alberta Rider Memorial Garden committee as we work to bring to fruition a dream that started nearly ten years ago.  Even before the first students set foot in our brand new school all those years ago a group of dedicated parents, community members, and teachers envisioned a dynamic outdoor learning environment.  It’s taken years of hard work and dedication but we’re very close to seeing the dream become a reality!


We have beautiful native plants already thriving in the Alberta Rider Memorial Garden and plans to expand the plantings this spring.  You will have an opportunity to help by participating in our garden clean up party on Saturday, April 12th.  We hope to see your family there, rain or shine, to help prepare the beds for the planting day in May.  Volunteering at the garden work party is an ideal family volunteering opportunity.  It’s important for our children to see us volunteer, and vital that they have a chance themselves to give back to the community.  Volunteering teaches children social responsibility, creates a lifelong ethic of service, and improves the community in countless ways.  Plus, this is a fun way to let them get their hands dirty!  Stay tuned for more details about the work party and how you can be involved!


If you have visited our garden recently-and we certainly hope you have-you will see that things look quite a bit different than they did just a few weeks ago.  We were very excited to see our first structure go in last month.  The shed will provide much needed storage for teaching and garden supplies.    









Now that we have the storage taken care of we’re on to the final exciting step, the outdoor classroom!  Teachers will have access to a covered classroom where they can take their students out to learn.  Not only do we have an ideal spot to teach our students about the environment but with the outdoor classroom our teachers can take their students out for any subject.  Reading, writing, and even math can all be done al fresco with great success!  


How can you help?  

  • Continue to support the Garden fundraising by purchasing Scrip.  If 100 ARE families purchased a $100 gift card to Safeway, Albertsons or New Seasons every week our school would earn $400.00 a week.  Do your grocery shopping with scrip and support the garden with every purchase!
  • Attend the April 12th garden clean up party from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm, bring your gloves, tools, and energy ready to get our garden beds prepared for planting.
  • Come to the spring carnival and silent auction on April 26th and buy a plant for the garden.  
  • Come back in May with your family to plant it!  
  • Talk to your child’s teacher about how you can help bring the learning outdoors.  
  • Finally, check back to our blog often, or subscribe for updates, so you don’t miss a single thing!  

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Welcome Friends of Alberta Rider Memorial Garden!

Mrs. Kintz, Principal and Leslie Tracy, Head Secretary at the Spring Work Party 2013

Welcome Friends of Alberta Rider Memorial Garden!

Did you know our school grounds offer a wondrous world of natural studies with all kinds of living creatures our children can explore hands-on?  Our students and teachers have an amazing opportunity to learn, walk, play, and study, right in our own front yard!

That's why we've been working hard over the past two years raising money to build an outdoor classroom space.  We are nearly there! Our outdoor classroom will allow teachers to take a hands-on approach, moving their educational curriculum outdoors, and make learning even more fun!  This cross curriculum integration helps students experience a deeper understanding of their studies and spurs their creativity and imagination. Here are just some examples of what students could be learning in our outdoor classroom space:

  • English contemplative, creative writing in journals, noting changes in the environment through the seasons, reading stories
  • Math - measuring plots, slope, elevation, calculating tree height and diameter, using a map and compass, looking for geometric shapes in nature
  • History - studying cultures of yesteryear, crafting tools early settlers used, making a time capsule
  • Music/Drama/Art - finding instruments from nature, singing songs, putting on plays, drawing natural landscapes, coloring leaf prints
  • Health/Nutrition - planting an edible garden, learning where real, healthy food comes from, practicing wilderness safety
  • Physical Education - playing outside games, hiking on the paths
  • Science - observing weather patterns, rock formations, soil and water samples, identifying plants, birds, and insects
  • Environmental preserving natural resources, composting
  • On-site Field Trips - listening to presentations by experts from other organizations on birds, trees, insects, gardening
  • Social and Life Skillscitizenship, ethical decision making, leadership, teamwork, responsibility, achieving goals, building relationships, communication, and self-esteem
Mrs. Troncoso's 3rd grade class, 2012-13 

Developing an outdoor classroom space will benefit our students in so many ways, such as increased physical activity, higher self-confidence, better attention span, as well as decreased stress.

You can help ~ donate your knowledge, time, or labor by:

  • Contacting Sherri Larson, Garden Committee chairperson at larsons2000@comcast.net for more information or to join the committee.
  • Subscribing to this Blog to receive updates about the ARE Garden all year long
  • Lending a hand at the Alberta Rider Fall Work Party coming up on October 12th from 9:00-1:00.
  • Buying SCRIP - half the proceeds will benefit the Garden Fund
  • Visiting the garden and woodland area in front of the school with your children.  Get them excited about the space and the possibility of learning outdoors!

Working together builds community,
and the results will be extraordinary!


~ Education, Naturally ~