The students were divided into two groups. One group visited Abbottsford, Edgar, Colby and Greenwood, while the other visited Independence, Blair-Taylor, Arcadia and Whitehall.
Students were matched with a professional in their area of interest and spent the day with educators in the classroom interacting with students.
Megan Graupmann, a sophomore special education and inclusive practices major, had never been to a K-12 combined school, so she found the experience very beneficial.
“Now I feel like I might flourish in a smaller school,” Graupmann says.
Helping UW-̽Ƶ Claire students step outside their past experience and meet successful rural teachers provides invaluable opportunities for them to ask questions, learn and consider new career paths after graduation.
Lane Reetz, a senior elementary education major, graduated from high school with a class of 950 students, so this was a new experience for him.
“I’ve never been in a school with K-12 classes, so I was excited to learn about the differences,” Reetz says.
When you teach in a smaller school, you become a part of the school community and a connected part of the entire local community, which, for some students, can be just the experience they seek.
Lexi Schultz, a senior elementary education major, came from a small rural school and feels that the more intimate setting has benefits.
“For me, a smaller atmosphere is a better environment,” Schultz says.
Results from the initiative have already been positive. A previous immersion student visited a school in Edgar and now has accepted a permanent position there.