Flipping through, I found the "Special Events" section. There was the "Great Oregon Trail Simulation" of November. Mr. Henderson, the gym teacher, had rigged up a literal wooden wagon in the cafeteria. The photo shows thirty of us, dressed in oversized flannel shirts and bonnets made from pillowcases, looking genuinely grim. We had just "lost" half the class to simulated cholera during the lunch rush. In the background, you can see the cafeteria lady, Mrs. Gable, handing out "hardtack" (which was actually just stale Saltines) with a look of profound pity.
Because the classes are small, the yearbook becomes a census. Everyone knows everyone, and the yearbook reflects this intimacy. The "Superlatives" section—often a source of comedy—takes on a local flavor. You won’t find "Best Dressed" or "Most Likely to become a CEO." Instead, you find categories born of local lore: "Most Likely to Own a Ranch," "Best Pickup Truck Driver," "Fastest on the Track," or "Quietest Reader." frontier primary school yearbook
Sections dedicated to Integrated Project Work (IPW) and special workshops like MakerEd . Flipping through, I found the "Special Events" section
: School booklists for 2026 indicate that parents are encouraged to purchase school materials (including potential year-end publications) through the Pacific Bookstores online portal or at the school bookshop on designated dates in December. Henderson, the gym teacher, had rigged up a
: The school recently marked a major milestone with a 10th Anniversary Special Edition of its school publications.