Written by Julie Povolo on . Posted in School. Leave a Comment
Written by Julie Povolo on . Posted in School. Leave a Comment
I wish for a day I could be in high school again, and be on that campus!!! Best school and best place on earth!! Bevan Gottlieb (from Facebook)
We used to make cinnamon butter toasts on the way to Mr Wheeler’s senior English class until the chef started locking the cafeteria during class periods. I was reminded by the toaster station in the pix. Jacob Jung Sung (from Facebook)
I recently graduated from the Leelanau School on June 12th 2014. This school changed my life. I started here lost and in another place, but I left it more grown up. I’ll be completely honest, I didn’t like being in a boarding school but it changed my life, it made me become way more confident than I was before. I met a variety of people and really built a bond among a few good friends and really bonded with the faculty and staff. Raoul Vardhan (from Facebook)
What a beautiful place to attend school! Love Mom Gail Dressell (from Facebook)
Written by Julie Povolo on . Posted in School. Leave a Comment

In the past few decades, a great deal of research and many theories have been developed to explain how students learn. This is a growing area of research to help answer the questions about why students can achieve more in response to some teaching styles than others.
Since its founding, The Leelanau School has offered rigorous college preparatory curriculum delivered in a magnificent setting and has educated students with an appreciation for each student’s unique learning styles.
Looking back through historic documents and our archives, in The Leelanau School’s first several decades, teaching for unique learning styles was based on the Beal’s and Huey’s approach which included work programs, and investigatory methods. Later decades involved teaching styles that were more typical of a traditional college-prep lecture-style, but the natural setting as a learning laboratory was a well-used enhancement.
In recent years, The Leelanau School’s educational philosophy integrated theories of multiple intelligences and the understanding of students having various learning styles, while incorporating hands-on teaching strategies. This combined approach allows us to teach our students well beyond the short-term knowledge needed to pass a test, by helping them process not only the “what,” “when” and “who” but the “why” and “how.” For the motivated student, The Leelanau School’s approach ignites a passion for learning which helps our students thrive in school and beyond.
Leelanau students gain awareness of their individual learning styles, build skills and strategies to maximize their full learning potential, and as a result, are able to grow into independent thinkers and learners. Through discovery of each child’s unique gifts, The Leelanau School creates a culture of acceptance, while offering a rigorous academic program which results in placement of all our graduates in outstanding colleges and universities.
Academics are only part of the equation – we also weave into our daily lessons important opportunities to learn life-skills and the following values: stewardship, leadership, awareness, integrity, resilience, courage and interconnection.
While equipment and textbooks may have altered slightly over the decades, The Leelanau School’s philosophy that students learn best by experiencing the lesson in multiple ways has remained a constant.
“Tell me and I forget, teach me and I may remember, involve me and I learn.”
― Benjamin Franklin
The Leelanau School is as unique as each one of our students and our alumni. Simply put, The Leelanau School believes there are many ways to be smart!

Written by kmccaw on . Posted in Winter Term 2018. Leave a Comment
Exploring Art, Culture, and Service in Peru –
Working side by side with locals, students will gain insight into the challenges they face and build lasting solutions to help empower the community. Students will connect with local communities in the Sacred Valley and learn how they preserve their history, art, and their language.
Written by kmccaw on . Posted in Winter Term 2018. Leave a Comment
This class will cover a wide range of skills and knowledge. The main goal of the class is to learn as much about the physical science of cold and snow along with the adaptations of plants and animals to living in the highly variable environment of Northwest Michigan. We will also discuss and practice cold weather survival methods and we will be learning and practicing different modes of transportation including snowshoeing and cross country skiing.
½ Science Credit
Instructor: Cal Meyers
One Old Homestead Road
Glen Arbor, MI 49636
231-334-5800
The Leelanau School ignites a passion for learning in a boarding school where students thrive by engaging academically and by celebrating everyone’s unique learning styles in a culture of acceptance, leading to successful and meaningful lives in college and beyond.