Oak and Orca

Bioregional School

Oak and Orca is a small elementary school in Victoria, B.C. Our programs cater to all types of families who are looking for an alternative program to educate their children. Children are provided with many choices and options so that they can be free to make educational decisions for themselves.

The Program

Information

Summary

Oak and Orca is a British Columbia certified school.

We do not judge or grade our learners.





Bioregional Education

The school uses a framework of bioregional education around which knowledge and skill in all subject areas is built. Components of bioregionalism are integrated into a bioregional curriculum and the lifestyle of the Oak and Orca experience. Study of the local bioregion, experiential learning, consensus decision making, participatory democracy, ecological education, field work, nature interpretation, nature awareness, and deep ecology are all bioregionally related concepts integrated into student life at the school.


Bioregional Education in Action

The focus of bioregional education involves encouraging participants to:


Others on Bioregional Education

What others say about bioregional education:

"The human race is challenged more than ever before to demonstrate our mastery -- not over nature but of ourselves." Rachel Carson

"Truth is eternal. Knowledge is changeable. It is disastrous to confuse them." Madeleine L'Engle

"Education is our passport to the future, for tomorrow belongs to the people who prepare for it today." Malcolm X

LINKS:


Bioregional Books

What others have written on bioregional education:

READINGS:


Contact Us

Victoria: (250) 383 6619
BC: 1 888 383 6619
2738 Higgins Street
Victoria BC Canada V8T3N1
yj383@victoria.tc.ca

Enrollment

Other Information

Check Us Out!

The best way to get a good idea of what goes on at Oak and Orca is to take a tour. Our tour coordinator is ready to show you around the school and answer your questions. Give us a call to schedule your tour.

A Few Links

Non-Violent Communication
The Bioregional Congress
Kids In Victoria