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Mount Rainier National Park
Education Partners
 

The Mount Rainier Education Program proudly partners with the following organizations:

Columbia Crest School
This K-6 school is located in the gateway community of Ashford. The park provides curriculum enrichment and special event programming for our partner school.

US Geological Survey (USGS) Cascades Volcano Observatory (CVO)
This is where the scientists who study and monitor Mount Rainier, the volcano, work. Their web page is full of great information and additional resources. They assist the park with staff training, public education programs, and development of geology-related curriculum. We are currently working with them on development of a middle school curriculum that focuses on volcanic processes, products, and hazards.

Nisqually River Education Project (NREP)
The NREP is part of the Nisqually River Council that focuses on the science, issues and educational opportunities related to the Nisqually River. The NREP has partnered with the park and other agencies in the Nisqually River Watershed to develop a series of curriculum guides. The first in the series, Where the River Begins focuses on the glaciers and headwaters, the uppermost part of the river, located in the park.

Little Bear Snowshoes SnowSchool Program & Winter Wildlands Alliance
Through their SnowSchool Program, Little Bear Snowshoes donated snowshoes to the park's Education Program to facilitate winter and spring programming. The SnowSchool site provides great curriculum resources on winter ecology.

BEST OF THE NORTHWEST REGIONAL EDUCATION CONSORTIUM
We are excited to be part of a regional education consortium, the Best of the Northwest, that offers new multi-day collaborative educational programming allowing you can maximize your students' learning while visiting our area. You can book three-day, four-day, or five-day educational experiences with your students focusing on the themes of: 1) forestry, 2) regional human history and use of the environment, 3) wildlife and habitats, or 4) a regional overview based on the unique resources each site has to offer. This program is targeted at upper elementary level students. Check back regularly for more information. Each of these sites also offers their own independent programming.

Camp Arnold
Cispus Learning Center
Environmental Education Association of Washington (EEAW)
NorthWest Trek
Pioneer Farm Museum & Ohop Indian Village
Tacoma Power
Tahoma Audubon's Morse Preserve (contact Thelma Gilmur at (253) 564-8210)
University of Washington's Center for Sustainable Forestry at Pack Forest

Drawing of apple, books, chalkboard with letters written on it.
For Teachers
Learn about curriculum materials, edcuational programs and teacher workshops at Mount Rainier.
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Mount Rainier summit with Mount Adams in the distance.  

Did You Know?
At 14,410 feet Mount Rainier is the highest peak in the Cascade Range. From various locations around the park you can see four other Cascade volcanoes: Mount St. Helens, Mt Adams, Mt Baker, and Glacier Peak. On a clear day, you can see the tip of Mt Hood, in northern Oregon, from Paradise Meadows.

Last Updated: March 29, 2007 at 12:09 EST