There are plenty of schools out there with green practices among their goals, but a new school opening this fall in Bali will be entrepreneurially green from top to bottom.
The Green School, which will offer preschool through year eight, aims to provide a place where students can become more curious and more passionate about their education and the planet. The school's eight-hectare campus in Sibang Kaja is divided by the Ayung River, on whose western bank are the school's classrooms, libraries, laboratories and kitchens. Aquaculture ponds, organic vegetable gardens, edible mazes and permacultural gardens are interspersed throughout the vast campus, which is built entirely of low-impact and environmentally conscious materials such as bamboo, alang-alang grass and traditional Balinese mud walls. For energy supplies, the school is experimenting with micro-hydro power generation as well as producing methane from cow manure to fuel stoves and developing a gasification unit that will use rice husks and other organic materials to produce electricity. A working organic chocolate factory, large sports fields, gymnasium, high ropes course and a network of bicycle paths are also part of the campus.
The Green School's curriculum, meanwhile, combines demanding academic content taught through a holistic approach that aims to inspire and enhance all of a child’s capacities. The school's Learning Village, for example, gives students a chance to apply lessons to specific disciplines and real business situations, making abstract ideas come to practical life. Students are involved in everything from manufacturing their own chocolate to helping manage the organic fields, bamboo plantations and rice paddies that are integral to the campus. The Green School is open to children from all over the world, with boarding available starting next year for those in seventh grade and up. Villas are available for international families whose children attend the school. Tuition ranges from roughly USD 4,000 to USD 9,000 per year, depending on grade.
It doesn't get much more eco-iconic than a thoroughly green school, and eco-minded consumers with the means to afford it will surely find the Green School compelling. Of course, the concept seems like one that could also work in other parts of the world. One to watch!
Website: www.greenschool.org
Contact: info@greenschool.org
Spotted by: Caramel
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Living in Bali near Green School I can tell you that they DO offer scholarships to local children. About twenty or thirty percent of their students are locals who pay just a tiny amount to attend this school.
Awesome story. Subscribed to your feed, and re-blogged the link @: http://www.echoinggreen.org/blog/micro-generation-blog-roundup
I visited in June. You can donate $100 and get your name carved into a bamboo pole that will become part of Bali's largest bamboo building! Great way to support a good cause and memorialize yourself.





The Green School is a wonderful idea. By coincidence we started something similar a while back but aimed at children from poor rural families in developing countries.
The twist is that instead of relying on high fees which the poor can't afford, the school is paid for entirely by income from its on-campus businesses.
These enterprises also allow students to receive an entrepreneurship focused education - meaning that when they graduate they not only have practical skills, but business experience which they can use to escape poverty.
For more info see www.teachamantofish.org.uk
Nik Kafka | July 11, 2008 3:10 AM