About Field Station

Field Station Cooperative is a Not-for-Profit 501(c)3 organization

Field Station Cooperative Preschool is centered on nature study and seeks to develop in all of its students a love of learning, critical and independent thinking, creativity and imagination, social skills, and improved self confidence and self esteem. The curriculum includes all pre-reading and math skills appropriate for the pre-kindergarten age group and more advanced instruction for the kindergarten enrichment age group.

Our Mission

To create sustainable educational programs based on nature study which develop in our students:

  • A love of learning

  • Critical and independent thinking

  • Creativity and imagination

  • Social skills

  • Self confidence and self esteem

  • Environmental responsibility

  • Respect for our natural surroundings

We are a Cooperative; we are managed and run by parent volunteers.

We have a partnership with the Indiana Dunes National Park. Our current and future facilities are owned by the National Park. We have a mutually beneficial relationship: they help us by providing the resources needed to have a nature based school; we help them by promoting the park, introducing its great benefits to children and families in our community, and by helping them preserve a historical structure on their property. The National Park also helps the school promote environmental stewardship with special lectures, hikes, educational materials, and events.


Field Station Cooperative is dedicated to education reform through parental involvement. By creating a sustainable preschool that promotes environmental educational activities, Field Station will bring the natural environment into early childhood education with the long range goal of environmental consciousness and respect for our natural surroundings for both preschoolers and their parents.

The importance of nature-based preschool

Due to over-scheduling, the explosion of indoor electronic play, parental fears of unsupervised outdoor play, and a lack of neighborhood green spaces, “nature play” has become a rarity for today’s children. Studies have shown that exposure to nature can be a powerful form of therapy for many familiar maladies: depression, obesity, and attention deficit disorder. Exposure to nature has also been shown to reduce stress and increase attention spans. Nature-focused Preschools may be the best structured approach for simulating the bond-forming, unstructured childhood explorations of nature that were once so common but now seem so unattainable.

According to an article in Environment and Behavior, Vol.34, No. 6 (2002) titled Environmental Socialization: Quantitative Tests of the Childhood Play Hypothesis (Bixler, Floyd and Hammitt) children who are exposed to natural environments early in life show later environmental preferences in the 'life domains of work, leisure, and school’. According to the researchers, children who played in woods and other wild settings up to age four showed greater interest in pursuing careers outdoors or in the natural environment, as well as a greater interest in activities tied to outdoor recreation and education. As a preschool dedicated to exploring the natural environment, the Field Station is able to promote long range environmental stewardship while reaching short term environmental and academic educational goals.

According to Richard Louv, author of Last Child In the Woods: Saving Our Children from

Nature-Deficit Disorder, “Kids who have direct access to nature are better learners.” Involvement in nature has also shown to reduce stress and increase attention spans. Louv

credits the positive effects of nature to heightened sensory activity (hearing, seeing, smelling, and touching) that occurs when people get involved in the natural environment. As stress and attention deficit disorders continue to rise in this country, the Field Station’s approach to environmental education is a needed component in current educational reform.

Since our community’s public school system currently focuses very little on environmental

education prior to the fourth grade, the Field Station fills a needed void in current academics. The National Center for Educational Statistics 2004 reveals that school spending has been declining in Indiana. According to local educators, experiential environmental education is getting filtered out of our children’s curriculum, another indicator of the need for the Field Station Cooperative.

Field Station Property

Located on Indiana Dunes National Park property, Field Station consists of two historic buildings; a 1920s-era house and a two-story barn. Ample wooded outdoor space for playing and activities lay between the buildings, with access to trails for short hikes and adventure at the edges of the property.

In conjunction with the Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana, we are in the process of saving a structure that is historically significant to our community. Rehabbing this site will most likely save it from being torn down. The site is very important to the cultural history of the Swedish settlement known as Baillytown. It was one of four original log cabins to be built there and we are hoping to soon have it be listed on the National Register of Historic Sites.

Start the adventure today.