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SPRING 2007 OUTLOOK NEWSLETTER (Click on image to download, 1MB)
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DECEMBER 2006: GREEN CORP feature: Branching Out-Tree Care Industry Article Please click here to read the article!
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OCTOBER 31, 2006: FALL OUTLOOK NEWSLETTER Please click here to view the FALL OUTLOOK! |
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SEPTEMBER 06, 2006: OVER 260 RUNNERS IN THE EQUITY OFFICE- THOMPSON ISLAND TRAIL RUN RAISED $20,000 FOR THOMPSON ISLAND OUTWARD BOUND.
BOSTON—Equity Office hosted its 7th annual Thompson Island 4K Trail Run on Thursday, August 31, 2006. The event, organized by Ryan Enright for Equity Office, in conjunction with legendary marathon-winner, Bill Rodgers, took runners around Thompson Island, one of the 34 islands in the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area. Equity Office’s trail run raised $20,000, benefiting Thompson Island Outward Bound’s programs for Boston area youth. Using the wilderness as a classroom, Outward Bound provides a variety of educational programs on Thompson Island, including the Choices program for the Boston Public Schools, School and Community Youth Groups, and Summer Outward Bound Expeditions in Massachusetts Bay and the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Corporate teams and individual runners tackled the challenging 4K (2.5 mile) trail run, weaving through the island's salt marshes, beaches and nature trails. Runners enjoyed spectacular views of Boston’s skyline as they raced around the island's scenic landscape. Scott Lundquist was the 2006 male winner, finishing the race in 13:28, with a running pace of 5:25 and Molly Taber, the female winner, completed the race in 14:54 with a running page of 6:00. (For further race results, please visit: www.coolrunning.com) Equity Office owns, manages and leases nearly 13 million square feet of office space in Greater Boston, including downtown properties such as 28 State Street, 100 Summer Street, One Post Office Square and Rowes Wharf. Thompson Island Outward Bound is a not-for-profit organization that uses adventure and challenge to help metropolitan Boston area youth discover their possibilities. Outward Bound’s experiential learning programs inspire character development, compassion, community service, environmental responsibility and academic achievement. |
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EQUITY OFFICE 4K TRAIL RUN ON THOMPSON ISLAND - AUGUST 31, 2006
THOMPSON ISLANDThe seventh annual Thompson Island 4K Trail Run, hosted by Equity Office, will be held Thursday, August 31, 2006. Honorary chairman Bill Rodgers, four time winner of both the Boston and New York Marathons, will once again lead the runners in the 2.5 mile race. This year over 300 runners will race along the winding trails on Thompson Island as they compete in individual and corporate teams. Proceeds from the race will benefit Thompson Island Outward Bound programs. The Trail Run will conclude with a post-race cookout and celebration. REGISTER TODAY! Click here to register online. You may also download a registration form [162 KB] RACE SCHEDULE:
All proceeds from the race benefit local school age children through its support of Thompson Island Outward Bound® scholarships. Last year the race helped contribute over $15,000 for Thompson Island Outward Bound scholarship programs. For more information please visit www.eop4k.com |
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TRUE NORTH SPRING-SUMMER 2006 BOSTONPlease read our Spring-Summer edition of the Outward Bound True North newsletter.
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APRIL 2006: BIRD SIGHTINGS ON THOMPSON ISLAND BOSTON- With Springtime in full swing bird watchers have been planning trips to Thompson Island. Below is a list of birds that have recently been spotted on island.
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| APRIL 2006 : INTERCEPT PROGRAM EXPANDS
Challenge Grant from Michael Gordon Foundation boosts Thompson Island Outward Bound’s Intercept Program for Youth-At Risk BOSTON, MA April 24, 2006. The Michael Gordon Foundation offered a $50,000 challenge grant for Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center to expand their youth-at-risk program, Intercept. A $50,000 match grant received from the Ludke Foundation helped fund a new Intercept group model for agencies that serve groups of youth-at-risk in the city of Boston. “The Intercept program has had a powerful and positive impact on its participant’s lives. The matching grant from the Ludke Foundation will help us reach out to more teenagers at risk and help turn their lives around,” noted longtime Intercept supporter, Jim Gordon. Jim Gordon established the Michael Gordon Foundation in memory of his brother, Michael. Since 1996, the foundation has supported the Intercept program, which has served over 355 youth-at-risk. Many of these young people who participated in the course have benefited from scholarships provided by the Michael Gordon Foundation. To date, 24 students are enrolled in the 2006 summer Intercept White Mountains expeditions. Of these students, half will receive some form of scholarship as a result of the generous support of the Michael Gordon Foundation. The grant from the Ludke Foundation enabled Thompson Island to develop a group Intercept program for urban youth-at-risk over the April vacation. Thompson Island Outward Bound partnered with MissionSAFE, a youth development program in Roxbury and The Michael Gordon Foundation’s mission is to help youth achieve their full potential by supporting charitable organizations whose efforts educate and develop children from lower income homes. Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center is a not-for-profit educational organization whose primary purpose is to provide adventurous and challenging experiential learning programs that inspire character development, compassion, community service, environmental responsibility and academic achievement. Thompson Island Outward Bound serves youth from all economic and social communities of greater metropolitan Boston. Through adventure and challenge, Thompson Island Outward Bound helps young people discover their possibilities. Our experiential learning programs emphasize personal growth and help students develop self-reliance, responsibility, teamwork, confidence, compassion, leadership, and environmental and community stewardship.
Thompson Island Outward Bound serves approximately 5,500 young people through Outward Bound summer expeditions; school and community youth group programs, and the Choices program for the Boston public middle schools. Thompson Island is located in the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area and been the site of an educational organization for over 175 years. Profits from our enterprise businesses, Thompson Island Conference Center and Outward Bound Professional, help support Thompson Island’s mission programs. For more information, please visit: www.thomspsonisland.org. |
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APRIL 27, 2006: EVENING EXPEDITION: BLACK TIE AND TENNIS SHOES Mayor Thomas M. Menino was honored with the North Star Award for his commitment to improving the lives of young people in |
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APRIL 24, 2006: THOMPSON ISLAND CHOICES PROGRAM IN BOSTON HERALD BOSTON- On April 24, 2006, an article written by Michele McPhee was published in the Boston Herald highlighting Mayor Thomas M. Menino's recent visit with students from Thompson Island Outward Bound's Choices program. The students shared their Outward Bound experiences with Mayor Menino at the Mildred Avenue Middle School. Please click here to read this article. Arthur N. Pearson, President of Thompson Island Outward Bound, sent this Letter to the Editor in response to the article mentioned above. |
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APRIL 20, 2006: NEW BOAT READY TO JOIN THE FLEET BOSTON- A new boat, called the Invictus, has become the latest edition to Thompson Island Outward Bound's fleet. This 27 passenger vessel will be used in addition to the M.V. Outward Bound to transport passengers and cargo between Boston and Thompson Island. An article about the Invictus was recently published in the News Tribune. Please click here to read "Vessel's designers fill a niche" by David Colbert. |
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BOSTON—Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center was a 2006 Boston Athletic Association Boston Marathon Charity. Fifteen invitational runners ran the Boston Marathon and raised over $42,000 on behalf of Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center. Two Thompson Island staff members, Jim Scully, Chief Operating Officer, and Logan Westmoreland, Director of the Willauer School, were among these 15 runners. Thompson Island’s marathon team included: Caitlin Cusack of Sudbury, Christopher Deschenes of Lynnfield, Ryan Enright of Hingham, Erin Finn-Welch of New York, New York, Tom Goss of Springfield, Missouri, Karlene Lihota of Brighton, Mark Morwood of Bedford, Jeremy Rose of Chicago, Illinois, Michael Salguero of Brighton, Jim Scully of Needham, Tara Taylor of Enfield, New Hampshire, Logan Westmoreland of Boston, Lynn Wilcox of Milton, Michael Wilcox of Milton and Andrew Wilkins of Brighton,
Jim Scully
Logan Westmoreland (left) and
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APRIL 2006: SPRING EDITION OF OUTLOOK NEWSLETTER BOSTON, MA- Please click here to read the Spring edition of our Outlook Newsletter
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MARCH 2006: 4th ANNUAL EVENING EXPEDITION BOSTON-On April 27, 2006 Thompson Island Outward Bound will hold its 4th Annual Evening Expedition:Black Tie and Tennis Shoes. Please click here for more information about this event.
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| BOSTONPlease read our Fall-Winter edition of the Outward Bound True North newsletter. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JANUARY 11, 2006: BLANK FOUNDATION AWARDS $500,000 TO OUTWARD BOUND ATLANTA, GAThe Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation today announced it has awarded $500,000 in grants that will be shared among all four domestic U.S. operations of Outward Bound, to help young people build character and gain self-esteem through outdoor adventure. Foundation Chairman Arthur Blank is a long-time supporter of the organization and serves as board chairman of Outward Bound USA. Grants will be distributed as follows:
My goal in making these grants is to help Outward Bound continue to impact the lives of young people and to disburse the funds in a way that most efficiently and directly reaches kids throughout the country, Blank said. I see it as a long-term investment that can potentially lift-up and strengthen these young people and have a positive effect on others they will touch throughout their lives. Outward Bound, the nation's leading, nonprofit experiential education organization, emphasizes personal growth through experience and challenge, and facilitates self-reliance, responsibility, teamwork, confidence, compassion, and environmental and community stewardship. Outward Bound in 2005 celebrated 45 years of experiential education in the United States, touching the lives of over 70,000 individuals a year. Since 1992, Blank personally or through his family foundation has contributed $6 million to Outward Bound organizations, including an endowment paid annually to the North Carolina Outward Bound School. Founded in 1995, The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation is focused on enhancing education, preserving green space, sustaining the arts and sparking collaboration among its nonprofit partners, primarily in Atlanta. Arthur M. Blank is owner & CEO of the Atlanta Falcons and Georgia Force. He co-founded The Home Depot, the worlds largest home improvement retailer, in 1978 and retired from the company as co-chairman in 2001. Through his generosity, the foundation, along with Blank and his wifes personal giving, has granted more than $200 million to various charitable organizations. For additional information, please contact Brian Farley, 404-367-2070. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
OCTOBER 2005: STEM TO STERN BY CAL PIFER GALVESTON, TX- We are featured in the October 2005 ELISSA Log, the official newsletter of the Texas Support Museum volunteers. Please click here to read "Stem to Stern" written by Cal Pifer (reprinted with permission from the ELISSA Log) |
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| SEPTEMBER 16, 2005: ARTHUR N. PEARSON NAMED PRESIDENT AND CEO OF THOMPSON ISLAND OUTWARD BOUND EDUCATION CENTER BOSTON, MAAndrew Bendheim, Chairman of the Board of Trustees of Thompson Island Outward Bound announced today that Arthur N. Pearson of Belmont has been named the new President and CEO of Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center. Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center is located on Thompson Island in the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area and serves youth from all socioeconomic reaches of the greater metropolitan Boston.
In addition, Thompson Island Conference Center provides corporate outings, events, meetings, and Outward Bound Professional courses for adults. Mr. Pearson has been passionately involved with Outward Bound as an instructor, program director or trustee for 30 years. His commitment to experiential education developed in the 1970s and 1980s during a decade and a half of work as an instructor, course director and program director for Outward Bound. In addition to fieldwork at the Hurricane Island Outward Bound School and the Dartmouth Outward Bound Center, Pearson has been a deck officer on the sail training schooner Westward and a Member of the Corporation of the Sea Education Association. He worked with the Scientific Exploration Society in London developing opportunities for young people to work on scientific expeditions in the Indonesian rain forest. He was instrumental in developing Outward Bounds Florida Sea Program and served as its director before becoming director of the Baltimore Outward Bound urban center during its founding years. In recent years Mr. Pearson has been active as a volunteer and chaired the national Outward Bound Wilderness Sales and Marketing Committee from 2001 to 2003. Most recently he served as Chairman of the Board of the Hurricane Island Outward Bound School. For the past 14 years Mr. Pearson has worked in the energy industry. He was instrumental in building a start-up company into a $300 million energy marketing enterprise and most recently has been vice president of a firm that provides data processing and revenue management services to energy retailers across the country. Pearson lives in Belmont with his wife and four sons. Thompson Island Outward Bound is a 501 (c ) (3) not-for-profit educational organization that uses adventure and challenge to help youth discover their possibilities. Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center empowers youth to develop their character and leadership skills by putting them in challenging situations that foster self-confidence, compassion, and the ability to work with others. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| SEPTEMBER 8, 2005: THOMPSON ISLAND OUTWARD BOUND EDUCATION CENTER ACCEPTS ONLINE GIVING BOSTON, MAThompson Island Outward Bound Education Center now has online giving. Using PayPal as their online provider, Thompson Island Outward Bound now accepts donation from their home page: www.thompsonisland.org by "clicking on the Donate Online" button. Donations made be made by using MasterCard, VISA, Discover, and American Express. In 2003, online donors in the United States contributed $2 billion to various charities and non-profit organizations. Recent studies have shown that online gifts average two to three times the amount of those from alternate fundraising methods! With the average American spending 11 hours each week of personal time on the Web, we hope our online giving program will be a successful addition to our development and marketing efforts. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JULY 25, 2005: THE GREEN CORPS ON CAPE COD
SOUTH WELLFLEET, MAThe Green Corps and Trail Blazers students met with Cape Cod National Seashore Park personnel to kick off a three-day work program at the Park. Green Corps is a summer work program in partnership with the National Park Service and Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center. Trail Blazers is a National Park program of the Boston African-American National Historic Site, which is funded by the Public Lands Corp and Youth Conservation Corps. Students camped at Nickerson State Park and participated in community service work projects within the Cape Cod National Seashore.
On hand to greet the group, was Cape Cod National Seashore Park Superintendent, George Price. Mr. Price was the former Superintendent of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area, of which Thompson Island is one of 34 islands. Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center used the opportunity to thank Mr. Price for all his support and efforts on behalf of the Thompson Island and the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area and presented Mr. Price with a photograph of Thompson Island. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JULY 22, 2005: ENVIRONMENTAL EXPEDITIONS IN GLOUCESTER
GLOUCESTER, MAThompson Island Outward Bounds Environmental Expeditions summer course docked at the Gloucester Marine Heritage Center in Gloucester on Cape Ann as part of their 14 days course. At 8 a.m. three of Thompson Island Outward Bounds pulling boats, the Marshall Dodge, Sallie Drew and Frankly Bonnie pulled up and tied to the dock, as 36 students, instructors, and watch officers disembarked for a morning at the center. Ann Ogilvie, education director for the center, welcomed the students and conducted the main tour of the boat yard, marine railroad, and exhibits.
The Gloucester Marine Heritage Center is a nonprofit organization and the only historic working waterfront in the Northeast where visitors can see wooden boats being restored on the 19th century marine railroad. The Environmental Expeditions students enjoyed the dory exhibits, boathouse, Sea Pocket Lab (live marine exhibit) and dive exhibit which is owned and narrated by Paul Harling, an enthusiastic diver who was the first person to dive on the Andreadoria. Currently, the boat yard is restoring and building the tea party ships that will eventually be exhibited in Boston at the Tea Party Museum in the Four-Point Channel. Environmental Expeditions is a coeducational 14-day Outward Bound sailing course for students ages 14 17. The course has a marine biology focus and the New England Aquarium designed its curriculum and conducts the ongoing marine biology instructor training. The sailing course area includes Boston Harbor to Cape Ann, and the Gloucester Marine Heritage Center is an integral part of the learning expedition. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JUNE 17, 2005: THE WILLAUER SCHOOL CLASS OF 2005 GRADUATES THOMPSON ISLANDThe eleventh graduation of the Willauer School was an extremely successful event with 190 in attendance. Each of the 17 eighth graders wrote and delivered a speech about their successes and sometimes failures during their time at the school. For the first time at a Willauer graduation there was a guest speaker, invited by the students themselves. Channel 7 Investigative Reporter Hank Phillipi-Ryan spoke about her experiences in school, growing up and the lessons that she learned along the way. Ms. Phillipi-Ryan created a learning expedition as part of the preparation of her speechshe had assigned students investigative reporting assignments that she incorporated in her speech.
This seventeenth of June, 2005 marked the graduation of the eighth grade at the Willauer School, the first graduating class in history from Thompson Island to include young women. Departing the dock for the last time this year, the Outward Bound boat was filled with proud parents, aunts, uncles, cousins, brothers and sisters. It was this group of committed parents that had believed their children were truly extraordinary, and made it possible for them to attend a truly extraordinary school. Although we have been traveling together, my boat and I are ready to be launched, said Jalix Delacruz, one of the young women graduating from the Thompson Island Outward Bound Willauer School. Jalix referred to the full size West Greenland skin on frame Kayaks that she and her classmates had built during their school year, powerfully relating her boat to the journey she was beginning to high school and beyond. The other graduates, a group of truly extraordinary young people, spoke about topics as varied and deep as teamwork, self-confidence, leadership, and appreciation of the natural world and success and failure. The Willauer School is operated by Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center. It is an independent co-educational middle school located in the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area and the site of the first vocational school in the United States. The schools educational philosophy combines academic rigor with learning by doing, challenging students to engage themselves in their community. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
APRIL 18, 2005: MARATHON TEAM RAISES $48,000 FOR CHARITY BOSTONThompson Island Outward Bound Education Center was a 2005 Boston Athletic Association Boston Marathon Charity. Fifteen invitational runners ran the Boston Marathon and raised over $48,000 on behalf of Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center. Thompson Islands marathon team included: Hilary Bowie of Clinton, James Bradley of Melrose, Joshua Busby of Somerville, Jonathon Cash of Somerville, Gina Clark of Boston, Ying Dong of Boston, Eric Eilbacher of Cambridge, Ryan Enright of Hingham, co-captain, Matthew Fonte of Charlestown, Nicholas Gilbert of Wellesley, Christina Helsinger of Miarnisburg, Ohio, Lyn Paget of Jamaica Plain, Sarah Puglia, CO-captain, of Somerville, Jessica Slusser of Boston, and James Topper of Boston. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| THOMPSON ISLAND, BOSTONStudents at the Willauer School launched hand-built kayaks from Thompson Island on April 14, 2005. The launching represents a culmination of a five-month learning expedition where students built kayaks as part of the school curriculum.
The Willauer School is an independent coeducational Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound middle school located on Thompson Island in the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area. The school continues the 172-year educational tradition of Thompson Island. The schools curriculum is based on learning by doing. Learning expeditions include practical applications of science, math, humanities, and writing. The schools guiding philosophy is that academic rigor, combined with social and emotional growth, is essential to a successful middle school experience. Students are challenged not only to meet high academic standards but also to become engaged in their learning. This process is facilitated by a high teacher-student ratio of approximately one teacher to eight students. Thompson Island Outward Bound Education Center is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization that provides adventurous and challenging experiential learning programs for early adolescents from metropolitan Boston. Using the remarkable resource of Thompson Island as a classroom, the organization delivers programming based on the philosophy of Kurt Hahn, Outward Bounds founder. The Willauer School is currently accepting applications from boys and girls for the fall of 2005. Call 617-328-3900 x147 for more information. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| APRIL 7, 2005: AN EVENING EXPEDITION
BOSTONThompson Island Outward Bound Education Centers An Evening Expedition 2005 was a great success, with over 450 guests and corporate donors raising $291,000 and enjoying an evening on stage at the Wang Theatre. Both a live auction and a silent auction helped with the success of the fundraiser. Guido R. Perera, Jr. was honored with the North Star Award for his years of dedication to Bostons youth and his long association with Thompson Island. Willauer and Choices students entertained the audience as they dined on stage. Students performed three skits in the balcony of the theatre, depicting the long educational tradition of Thompson Island, Learning by Doing at the Willauer School, and a Choices expedition on the Alpine Tower. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| MARCH 2005: SPRING EDITION OF THE OUTLOOK NEWSLETTER BOSTONPlease read our Spring edition of the Outlook Newsletter. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Thompson Island supports our troops and the Red Sox! Staff at Thompson Island Outward Bound gathered for photo and special message for our troops in Iraq on Tuesday, October 26, 2004. Captain Susan Kane, co-director of Thompson Island Outward Bound's Choices program for the Boston Public Schools, is stationed in Iraq and is an ardent Red Sox fan. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| OCTOBER 6, 2004: HUNDREDS OF BOSTON OFFICE WORKERS RALLY TOGETHER TO RAISE MONEY FOR THE THOMPSON ISLAND OUTWARD BOUND SCHOOL BOSTONEquity Office hosted its fifth annual Thompson Island 4K Trail Run in September. The event, organized in conjunction with legendary marathon-winner, Bill Rodgers, took runners around Thompson Island, one of the 34 islands that comprise the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area.
The evening event raised $17,500, benefiting Thompson Island Outward Bound Choices program, which brings students from Boston public middle schools to the island for a 5-day character-building expedition. Using the wilderness as a classroom, Outward Bound provides a variety of educational programs on Thompson Island, including the only Outward Bound middle school in the world, The Willauer School. There has been an educational institution on Thompson Island for over 171 years. Corporate teams and individual runners tackled the challenging 4k (2.5 mile) trail run, weaving through the islands salt marshes, beaches and nature trails. Thompson Island is situated just one mile from Downtown Boston and the skyline provided an inspiring backdrop to the race. Equity Office was also honored with the Founders Award given to honor those whose dedication and extraordinary efforts have significantly furthered the aims of the Thompson Island Foundersto enrich the lives and improve the education of youth in need. The award was given out at the 171st Annual Thompson Island Founders Day. Equity Office owns, manages and leases nearly 13 million square feet of office space in Greater Boston, including downtown properties such as 28 State Street, 100 Summer Street, One Post Office Square and Rowes Wharf. Thompson Island Outward Bound is a not-for-profit organization that uses adventure and challenge to help metropolitan Boston area youth discover their possibilities. Outward Bounds experiential learning programs inspire character development, compassion, community service, environmental responsibility and academic achievement. To learn more about Thompson Island Outward Bound please visit: www.thompsonisland.org. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| AUGUST 5, 2004: EQUITY OFFICE 4K TRAIL RUNON THOMPSON ISLANDSEPTEMBER 9, 2004
REGISTER TODAY! RACE SCHEDULE:
All proceeds from the race benefit local school age children through its support of Thompson Island Outward Bound® scholarships. Last year the race raised nearly $20,000 for Thompson Island Outward Bound scholarship programs. GO THE EXTRA MILE FOR BOSTONS YOUTH | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JULY 20, 2004: WILLAUER SCHOOL STUDENT TO GAVEL IN THE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION BOSTONKristin Turner, who will be an eighth grade student at the Willauer School in the fall, will gavel in the Democratic Convention on Tuesday evening July 27th. Kristens essay, Im Not Too Young, won the Democratic National Conventions Gavel in the Future contest from a field of five Boston finalist. She joins co-winner, Steven Ruperto of Pennsylvania, in this prestigious honor. Kristin wrote in verse about how age is not related to the ability to express ones opinion. In her essay, Kristin points out how a young person can participate in the political process: I'm not too young to learn how the political system works and the system's tools. To learn when to telephone elected officials or write editors or gather neighbors' signatures on petitions or to hold up signs at demonstrations. Read Kristens complete essay. The Willauer School is an independent coeducational middle school on Thompson Island in the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area and the only middle school operated by Outward Bound® in the world. The schools unique curriculum is guided by the Outward Bound and Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound values of adventure and challenge, compassion and service, social and environmental responsibility, character development and learning by doing. The Willauers educational philosophy states that academic rigor, combined with social and emotional growth, is essential to a successful middle school experience. Kristin embodies the schools goal of guiding middle school students into competent, self-aware, and self-motivated young adults. The Willauer School became coeducational in the fall of 2003, and Kristin was a pioneer, joining the inaugural class of girls. Previously, there has been a boys school on Thompson Island for over 170 years. The Willauer School is a nonprofit education organization that serves students from Boston metropolitan area regardless of race, gender, nationality or ethnicity. Students represent a broad spectrum of socioeconomic circumstances and scholarships are available. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JULY 7, 2004: THOMPSON ISLAND HOSTS CHERNOBYL SURVIVORS 110 Afflicted Children Visit Thompson Island and Participate in Outward Bound Activities BOSTON110 child survivors of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster visited Thompson Island in Boston Harbor on Tuesday July 6, 2004. The days events included theater, music, rope climbing, and a cookout. Students from the Willauer School helped host the children. The children are visiting the United States to receive much needed medical attention. All 110 children were adversely affected when the reactor in the Chernobyl power plant exploded in 1986 and released radiation for ten days. Over 100,000 people lived in areas contaminated by the disaster. The accident is known to have caused thyroid cancer in a number of children affected. The Thompson Island Outward Bound program has been working to provide experiential learning opportunities for the school children from the metropolitan Boston area since 1988. Thompson Island is the site of the first vocational school in the country as well as the only Outward Bound middle school in the world, The Willauer School. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JULY 1, 2004: WILLAUER SCHOOL STUDENT ENTERS DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION ESSAY CONTEST BOSTONKristin Turner of Boston and the Willauer School entered an essay, Im Not Too Young, in the Democratic National Convention Essay Contest: Gavel In the Future. Please read her award winning essay below. I'm Not Too Young I'm not old enough to vote yet but I am old enough to form opinions about what see and what I would like the world to be like when I do turn 18. I am old enough to care about right and wrong. I'm not too young to learn to develop good citizenship skills. I am old enough to care about right and wrong. I'm too young to cast a vote but not too young to learn about the process. I'm not too young to learn how to gather information, to weigh evidence, to evaluate sources. To learn to put together and present information so that others will be willing to read it and understand what I am saying. I'm not to young to share my passion for a cause. I'm not too young to learn how the political system works and the system's tools. To learn when to telephone elected officials or write editors or gather neighbors' signatures on petitions or to hold up signs at demonstrations. I'm not too young to work on developing my skills not only to see a problem but to try and propose a way to make it better. I'm not too young to take advantage of the educational opportunities I have been given to learn to state my concerns more clearly. I'm not young to learn to listen to others with respect so that they will give me their respect. I'm not too young to learn how to give others a chance to express themselves and to learn to listen with an open mind. I'm not too young to be part of the political process. I am old enough to know my heart and to follow it. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| SEPTEMBER 12, 2003: CORPORATE TRAIL RUN RAISES FUNDS FOR YOUTH PROGRAMS
THOMPSON ISLANDEquity Office hosted its fourth annual 4K (2.5-mile) Corporate Trail Run on Thompson Island on Thursday, September 4, 2003. The event, hosted by four-time marathon winner, Bill Rodgers, raised over $15,000 for Thompson Island Outward Bounds youth programs. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| SEPTEMBER 4, 2003: THOMPSON ISLAND SCHOOL WELCOMES FIRST GIRLS 170-Year-Old Education Tradition Goes Co-Ed BOSTON HARBORThe site of the first vocational school in America will welcome its first female students at 7:30 a.m. on Thursday, September 4, 2003. Sixth and seventh grade girls will board the morning boat at Drydock Avenue in Bostons Marine Industrial Park for their first 30-min ride to Thompson Islands Willauer School in Boston Harbor. Thompson Island, part of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park, became the site of the first vocational school in the country in 1833. Today the islands Willauer School is the only academic institution in the world operated by an Outward Bound® organization. The co-educational independent middle school serves students from the Boston metropolitan area. Thompson Islands Willauer School offers a unique education curriculum based on Outward Bound principles that emphasize learning by doing, with a particular focus on character growth, teamwork, reflection and literacy. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| AUGUST 2003: SHORE THING IN SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE In the new Boston Harbor Islands national park area, city dwellers can escape the madding crowds. Read about Thompson Island and the Boston Harbor Islands National Park Area in Smithsonian Magazine, Shore Thing. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| JUNE 6, 2003: THE WILLAUER SCHOOL GRADUATES ITS NINTH CLASS THOMPSON ISLANDThe Willauer School, an expeditionary learning Outward Bound middle school located on Thompson Island, graduated twelve students from the 2003 eighth grade class on Friday, June 6, 2003.
The ceremony was held in the Football Field Tent on a beautiful sunny day in this island setting. Proud parents and siblings enjoyed a barbecue with their graduate after the ceremony. The Willauer School is an Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound middle school. This unique day school encourages students to explore academic subjects through hands-on learning expeditions. Students take classes in leadership, practice environmental stewardship and go on several wilderness expeditions each year. By developing self-reliance and teamwork, students prepare to meet high academic standards and learn the skills necessary for success in high school and life. The Willauer School is the only middle school in the world run by Outward Bound. In the fall of 2003, the Willauer will be accepting its inaugural female students, making the school coeducational. For more information about the school, call 617-328-3900 x146, or e-mail willauer@thompsonisland.org. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| MAY 31, 2003: ISLAND JAMBOREE, THOMPSON ISLAND
THOMPSON ISLANDBoston Harbor Islands National Park Area celebrated its summer kickoff on Thompson Island as part of Bostons Seaport Festival. Co-sponsored by the Boston Harbor Islands National Park, the Island Alliance, and Thompson Island Outward Bound, the festivities were geared towards families and funk/jazz fans. In their first island appearance, Addison Groove Project played a free concert, doing their self-described funk, fusion, exploratory rock thing. Other activities for festival-goers, included:
Consider our beautiful island destination for your special event! For more information about events and conferences, call 617-426-0177 x202 or e-mail: jscully@thompsonisland.org. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| APRIL 2003: THOMPSON ISLANDS WILLAUER SCHOOL ADMITS GIRLS BOSTON HARBORIn the past 175 years, several different schools have been in existence on Thompson Island. One factor they all had in common was they only served male students. In September 2003, Thompson Islands Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound Middle School will go coeducational, admitting its first class of girls. The island and its expeditionary learn-by-doing model is just a short 25-minute school boat ride from Bostons urban neighborhoods. Part of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park, Thompson Island is known as the most pristine of Bostons harbor islands, and ideal for parents seeking a (different kind of) high quality middle school dedicated to the success of all learners. The islands Willauer School seems a world away, but is within reach financially for parents looking for a unique, successful educational experience for their children. Sending our son Rory to the Thompson Island school is the best decision we have ever made, said Donna McGarrigle, whose son is currently an eighth grader at the school. His sister Maura will be first in line when they start interviewing girls for the Fall 2003 class, she added. Because of its affiliation with Outward Bound, the Willauer encourages students to explore their academic subjects through hands-on learning expeditions. That means students take classes in leadership, practice environmental stewardship, and go on several outdoor expeditions each year all the while studying math, science, literacy and the humanities. Learn-by-doing is at the core of the Willauer experience. For example, sixth graders take part in the Atlantic salmon learning expedition, raising these endangered fish in their classroom and doing research at the national fish hatchery. They learn chemistry, ecology and biology as they seek to understand the water, the river ecosystem, and the salmons life cycle. History might take in the study of the Merrimack River, from the Native People who inhabited its banks to the Industrial Revolution to the present. Willauer Middle School students come from all over the metropolitan Boston area and approximately 80 percent receive full or partial scholarships. More than 75 percent of Willauers graduates go on to independent, parochial or public exam schools, including The Commonwealth School, Brimmer and May, Boston College High School, Thayer Academy, Proctor Academy, St. Marks, City on a Hill Charter School, Boston Latin Academy, and Boston Latin School. For more information about the school, call 617-328-3900 x146, or e-mail willauer@thompsonisland.org. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| APRIL 19, 2003: AN EVENING EXPEDITION GALA
BOSTONThompson Island Outward Bound held its first annual benefit dinner at the Fairmont Copley Plaza Hotel, which raised almost $400,000. About 450 guests gathered to raise money for Outward Bounds programs for inner-city students and to honor John F. Magee for his dedication and commitment to Thompson Islands mission to empower Greater Bostons youth. Thompson Island Outward Bound is a nonprofit organization whose primary purpose is to provide adventurous and challenging experiential learning programs that inspire character development, compassion, community service, environmental stewardship and academic achievement. Thompson Island offers a unique outdoor classroom just minutes from downtown Boston, located in Boston Harbor and part of the Boston Harbor Islands National Park area. Through the generosity of donors, benefactors, corporations and foundations, Outward Bound is able to deliver programs to a diverse group of Bostons urban students who would otherwise not be able to participate in an Outward Bound Course. Outward Bounds mission-based programs include: Choices program for the Boston Public Middle Schools, the Willauer Middle School, a coeducational expeditionary middle school located on the island and Summer Expeditions for adolescent girls and boys. For more information on making a donation, call 617-426-0177 x 206, or e-mail agoldberg@thompsonisland.org. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| MARCH 2003: WILLAUER SCHOOL STUDENTS STUDY NATURAL HISTORY THOMPSON ISLAND, BOSTON HARBOR7th-graders at the Willauer School gave guided tours through their natural history museum this week, wowing visitors with the breadth and depth of their project.
Students transformed a hallway into a life-sized cave complete with drawings of prehistoric animals. They built a small archaeological dig site and demonstrated how paleontologists find fossils. To show how early human civilizations built shelters, students constructed a home made from the teeth of a wooly mammoth. The museum project illustrates the unique way of learning at the Willauer School, which uses the Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound® curriculum. This approach gets students working on semester-long projects called learning expeditions, which have a real-world application, a service component, and require students to develop a broad range of skills. With the museum project, for instance, students had to study history, science and anatomy; perform research; and present their findings through oral presentations, writing, drawings, sculptures and video. The Willauer School is located on Thompson Island, in Boston Harbor. Its approximately 45 middle school students, grades 6 through 8, commute each day by ferry. In addition to doing hands-on projects, students at the school take a class in leadership and go on several Outward Bound expeditions each year. In the fall of 2003, the Willauer School will accept its inaugural class of girls in the 6th and 7th grades. For more information about the school, call 617-328-3900 x146, or e-mail willauer@thompsonisland.org. |