A school in Oregon City will be rolling on a new fleet of Specialized bicycles next year. The bikes will help them delve further into the natural world.
The Springwater Environmental Sciences School, a K-8 public charter based in a rural area near streams and woods, was one of 37 schools across the country (and the only one in Oregon) awarded a “Riding for Focus” grant by the Specialized Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the global bike company. The grants aim to fund programs where bicycles are integrated into the school’s physical education curriculum.
The students at Springwater caught the cycling bug from an unlikely source: The Oregon Timber Trail, the 668-mile (mostly) off-road trail that spans the entire state from California to the Columbia River. Last summer the school partnered with the Oregon Timber Trail Alliance and used the trail as a vehicle to study the rich geology and history it passes through.
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Students and school staff see tons of potential for making bicycles part of their daily approach to learning. Here’s more from Springwater’s winning application video:
Along with the fleet of bikes, the school will gain access to the Riding for Focus curriculum, a starter maintenance kit, and new helmets.
Next month, teachers from the school will attend a training at Specialized headquarters in Morgan Hill, California. The bikes are set to be delivered to a local shop for assembly in August and the program will be in place for Springwater’s middle school students by September.
Congratulations! We can’t wait to see what comes of this (we hear the school plans to build an Oregon Timber Trail-themed pump track)!
— Jonathan Maus: (503) 706-8804, @jonathan_maus on Twitter and jonathan@bikeportland.org
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