Crew Training & Education

Crew Training & Education2018-07-12T10:55:34-04:00

Training

The NorthWoods Conservation Corps provides extensive training to all of its employees through several weeks of staff training. Crew Leaders are trained in group facilitation and leadership, program documentation and assessment, and conservation work skills. Crew member training places greater emphasis on group dynamics and team skills as well as basic work and conservation skills. In 2002, the Kingdom Corps added a second week of Crew Leader training to accommodate more in-depth project site visits and to certify leaders in a SOLO Wilderness First Aid (WFA) course.

*Training for crew members is an unpaid, mandatory requisite for employment in the Corps

 

Conservation Corps Training Topics

Crew Leaders

  • Group facilitation
  • Program documentation
  • Performance evaluation & assessment
  • StEP facilitation
  • Tool care & maintenance
  • Wilderness First Aid
  • Photography
  • Wildlife monitoring
  • Apple Tree Release
  • Tree planting & care
  • Trail maintenance
  • Project site visits

Crewmembers

  • Team dynamics & leadership
  • Tool use & safety
  • Education & StEP

Education

The Kingdom Corps program includes an educational structure that emphasizes natural science investigation, hands-on learning, and personal growth. Kingdom Corps crews participate in daily readings and discussions and each crewmember keeps a written journal to record their thoughts and reflections.

In addition, crew members must complete a summer-long Stewardship Education Project (StEP) that enables them to explore and learn about a work-related topic of their choice.  These projects are presented to friends and family at the Corps’ annual end-of-summer celebration.

Past StEP Topics:

  • History of the Gore Mtn Fire Tower
  • Deformed Frogs
  • Edible & Medicinal Plants
  • Northern Forest Trees
  • Log Drives on the Connecticut River
  • Invasive Plant Species
  • Macro-invertebrates and Stream Health
  • Trail Design and Construction
  • Trail Bridges
  • History of the CCC
  • GPS Mapping
  • Loon Nesting Platforms
  • Vermont’s Wildflowers
  • Trout Habitat
  • Geology of the NEK
  • Trail signs
  • Peregrine Falcons
  • Riparian Buffer Zones
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