Teaching with Small Boats Conference in Alexandria, VA, March 12-14, 2010

If you run, or are starting a program using small boats in an educational program, this conference is for you!
Currently Planned Topics:
• Program Design and Implementation
• Academics and Teaching Tools
• Boatbuilding Approaches
• Funding Strategies
• Evaluation and Program Metrics
• Forming a National Organization: yes or no?
Excellent speakers with experience from current successful programs; ample time to ask [...]

Why wood?

 
Wood is an accessible and adaptable material. The boat can be as simple as a “six hour canoe” or as complicated as a Herreshoff daysailer. The material is still wood. It’s easily machined by basic, familiar tools. If the correct design is selected, the building process is accessible to any skill level. Usually, supplies are [...]

Why boats?

 
Boat building is out of the ordinary. In most cases the kids aren’t familiar with it and don’t think they can succeed. Overcoming these hurdles is a tremendously powerful experience for these young people. Add to this the use of the boat which requires balancing the individual, the boat and mother nature in order to [...]

Show the project off

 
Get people to see what you’re doing while the boat is being built. Seeing young people build a boat is a more powerful image than seeing a finished boat sitting somewhere. Make sure that the press, community leaders, politicians and other potential groups see the work being done. It will excite them. Remember that if [...]

Getting Started

 
Potential instructors get tied up in knots over what the first day is going to be like. How you teach is up to you. Your technique will probably be a reflection of your personality. Each group I work with differently. With some, I explain the whole project, have them build models and then start cutting [...]

Take care of the basic mundane things

 
You’ll need shop space, tools, materials, liability insurance. Make sure these things are buttoned up before you start. For your first project, you may want to work under the umbrella of an existing organization that has some of these things. Schools, churches, municipalities are all

Find the kids

 
Picking the right “first group” is vital to getting the program off the ground. Select a group that already exists, where the adults already do a good job with the kids. The adults in the group will know what the kids need. Make sure they have an integral part in setting the project’s goals. This [...]

Gut Check

Now you’re getting a picture of what it takes to start a community program. Before you cut a piece of wood and get a group of kids and adults pumped up, do everybody a favor and take a “gut check.” Do you really want to do this? You won’t make any money. It’s an emotional [...]

Establish Goals and Vision

You’ve gotten your team together to build a boat with kids. What are your goals? What do the kids walk away with? What do you walk away with? What rewards do the people who helped you get? What happens to the boat? What has building the boat done to further the program? Your goals should [...]

Get Partners

After you’ve identified the need, you have to find people to work with. You can’t do this type of project alone, you’ll become isolated, you’ll burn out and the work won’t be sustainable over the long run. So who do you work with? The answer is simple to say but hard to do. You work [...]