Education Program

We aim to inspire, prepare, and empower the next generation of leaders.

Photo by Alex Harris /
Raincoast Conservation Foundation.

Education opportunities with Raincoast

Through engaging virtual, classroom, field, and boat-based learning, we connect students to British Columbia’s coastal environment and conservation initiatives.

The education program blends Indigenous Knowledge and Western science using hands-on, interactive, and experiential learning in watersheds, forests, estuaries, and oceans to help youth understand their coast. Raincoast’s 68’ research sailing vessel, Achiever, serves as a floating classroom for our boat-based learning throughout the Salish Sea.

Students visit and learn about culturally significant sites including ancient middens, burial grounds, and clam gardens. Youth also visit wildlife hotspots such as sea lion haul-outs, bird sanctuaries, salmon streams, and Southern Resident killer whale critical habitat to learn about key research and conservation efforts.

Three students on a boat looking at a map.
Riley Seward and Kaleah Claxton learning how to chart distances aboard Achiever. Photo by Alex Harris / Raincoast Conservation Foundation.

Resources for teachers

Raincoast’s education program has developed a broad range of educational materials for teachers of grades 9-12  to use in the classroom based on education objectives of BC’s curriculum, or for anyone with an interest in coastal and marine environments.

Online learning

Raincoast has hosted a live and interactive online learning program, Coastal Insights, for the last two years that brings science, stories, culture, and conservation through virtual lessons and interviews with some of the coast’s leading experts and inspiring young leaders. 

Salish Sea Emerging Stewards 

The Salish Sea Emerging Stewards Program offers hands-on learning where participants link learning concepts directly to the places and experiences of the program as they immerse in local forests, intertidal, and oceans to understand their local environment and its conservation challenges. 

Participants engage all their senses as they explore the rich biodiversity of the coast and visit sites of ecological and cultural significance throughout the Gulf Islands. The boat-based learning provides opportunities for transformative and inspiring visits to British Columbia’s diverse habitats such as oceans, forests, and beaches, access to traditional territory, and encounters with iconic wildlife such as eagles, sea lions, porpoises, and killer whales.

Raincoast scientists learning with a camper on making grizzly bear paw cast
Raincoast scientists learning with a camper on making grizzly bear paw cast. Koeye camp, photo by Mike Morash of One Island Media.

Our approach to education

Our approach is community engaged, collaborative, and inclusive. In collaboration with an extensive network of community partners that lend their expertise, our multi-faceted programs engage students through place-based learning, mentorship, and leadership training. 

All of our programs use the “Two-eyed seeing” guiding principle, or the braiding of strengths from Indigenous and Western Knowledge systems to approach learning about environmental conservation and stewardship.

The programs align with the BC curriculum and are geared towards High School students (grade 9-12) in the subjects of science, social studies, geography, and Indigenous studies in BC.  

Reducing barriers

All of our online learning programs are 100% free for educators to access anywhere, anytime. To reduce barriers to experiential and place-based learning, full sponsorship for our boat-based learning program is available to local Indigenous and non-Indigenous youth from underserved communities throughout Greater Vancouver and Vancouver Island.

Support our programming

You can join us and support the Salish Sea Emerging Stewards program.

Recent articles

A grizzly bear sits in the water munching on a salmon in their hands.

Persistent Organic Pollutants in British Columbia’s Grizzly Bears: Consequence of Divergent Diets

Christensen, J.R., MacDuffee, M., MacDonald, R.W., Whiticar, M., Ross, P.S. 2005. Persistent Organic Pollutants in British Columbia’s Grizzly Bears: Consequence of Divergent Diet. Environmental Science and Technology 39: 6952-6960. View the paper in .PDF
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Wayward Course: British Columbia’s Failure to Meet Protected Areas Standards for Grizzlies

British Columbia Fails to Meet Protected Areas Standards for the Conservation of Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos) Populations and Habitat in the Northern Great Bear Rainforest. Dr. Brian L. Horejsi and Dr. Barrie K. Gilbert Wayward Course
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Great Bear Rainforest Agreement

An ongoing assessment of British Columbia’s efforts in protecting the Great Bear Rainforest September 1, 2005 Proposed land use plans for Great Bear Rainforest scientifically inadequate The British Columbia government is currently deciding whether or not to legally implement a new conservation blueprint for the Great Bear Rainforest. After years of consultation with the forestry…
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Grizzly Politics in British Columbia

Raincoast has attained a copy of a soon-to-be published opinion piece that calls for the grizzly bear to be de-listed from the US Endangered Species Act. The opinion piece is scheduled to appear in the next issue of the International Bear Association’s official publication, urging the association’s membership to support the Bush administration’s proposed grizzly…
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What Comes Around, Goes Around

As I set out, at first all I hear are the drips from my paddle as I enter a secluded lagoon. After several hundred strokes,however, their howls begin to echo along the rolling hills on either side of me. I’m searching for signs of the elusive coastal wolf near an estuary sheltered from the powerful…
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You Are What You Eat

Our grizzly bear field crew canoed leisurely down the winding Koeye River, in search of not only the elusive bear itself, but all the evidence it had left behind. Our paddling became soft and rhythmic, yet our eyes scanned each shadow beneath every cedar, and our ears were tuned to any wrestling of leaves or…
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The Longest Journey

“You only get one propeller,” someone shouts half-jokingly as we head off from his dock towards Roscoe Inlet.  We are all excited to finally be starting Raincoast’s juvenile salmon migration project.  As we cruise the boat near the shore in search of salmon fry that have recently left their spawning streams for the open ocean,…
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Hope Springs Eternal

Hope springs eternal – at least that’s how it feels right now on BC’s c Central coast. The juncos, warblers and sandhill cranes have returned from their wintering grounds in the south. Hummingbirds are everywhere, searching out the sweet salmonberry blossoms. And grizzly bears have been awake and active for almost a month, gorging themselves…

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