Our Mission. Our mission is to provide a comprehensive Waldorf inspired education that engages and nurtures the child physically, emotionally, mentally, and spiritually. We seek to cultivate each student’s individual gifts, to encourage independent thinking and imagination, and to foster a life-long love of learning. Our goal is to enable students to become balanced, vigorous, life-affirming, and compassionate individuals who are able to meet the challenges of their lives and times. We advocate respect and understanding of all cultures and the natural environment. The school provides a non-competitive, physically and emotionally-safe learning atmosphere that encourages community involvement.
Taos Country Day School is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization. Our Board of Directors include: Jed Magee (President), Erin Doherty, M.D. (Secretary), Richard Massen, M.D., Alicia Graves, Tracy Jaramillo, John Woolery, Conrad Rehbach (Administrator) and Silke Markowski (Early Childhood Director).
Learning Sustainability & Stewardship of the Land - Land and Conservation Projects. A Conservation Easement will protect a three-acre piece of land which includes our beloved “Magic Grove”. This is a beautiful piece of land bordering the Taos Pueblo with a magnificent view of Taos Mountain. A grand willow tree welcomes all with its spreading branches. These acres will be used for orchards, biodynamic farming, and outdoor education. They will be protected from development and preserved for future generations. Most importantly, we will be demonstrating values that will influence and inspire our children. Seed and Garden Business. Third graders have started an organic seed business featuring the “Three Sisters”: corn, beans, and squash. These heirloom varieties will be planted this spring and collected as seed in the fall for next season’s seed sales. Currently, the class is weighing, packaging, and marketing lettuce, pea, flower, and many other varieties of seed. Making a Difference … One Tree at a Time. Designed to create awareness of local food sustainability and stewardship, the orchard project will preserve local apple tree varieties and the stories told by the elders that tend them. Students in 5th through 8th grade, along with orchardist Ron Boyd, have grafted 425 heirloom apple trees, enough for each student to take home an apple tree later this spring. An orchard will be planted at the school and additional trees will be donated to create a community orchard. This project is sponsored by a Classroom Education Grant from PNM. Outdoor Education. Our school is located in the Sangre de Christo Mountains of the Southern Rockies, near the Rio Grande Wild Rivers area. The immediate proximity to numerous national forests, parks, wilderness areas, and protected rivers gives us the opportunity to take Waldorf education to the outdoors. Through parent and teacher involvement, we have access to professional climbing, llama trekking, white water rafting, skiing, and back-country adventures. We are able to offer outdoor and adventure education to our students as well as classes from other geographic locations. Our Graduates. Our first eight grade graduating class of 2003 is now successfully completing their year of college. Please watch for the upcoming details of their adventure! We are also tracking our last graduating class who are now sophomores attending the Taos High School and Vista Grande High Charter School. Sharing Our Community - Making Ethnic & Economic Diversity Sustainable. We strive to keep our annual tuition low to make our program available to as many students as possible. Our goal is to reflect the ethnic and economic diversity of our tri-cultural community. Twenty-two percent of our students are Hispanic, Native American, African American, South American, and Asian. Thirty-five percent of our families receive tuition assistance. Native American scholarships are essential to support our neighboring Taos Pueblo students and other Native American students. This is a commitment made by the faculty to share Waldorf curriculum and resources. Foster Child Support has been an ongoing program for the past nine years. We provide annual tuition, language therapy, and other services to children in need. Outreach to our sister school in Peru is important to our community. Program founders from Peru have visited and shared native dance and music with our students. Their students have attended classes at our school for six weeks, and enjoyed skiing for the first time. Each year, we raise money and send Waldorf school supplies to our friends in Peru.
Contact Info:
Taos Country Day School
Mailing address:
Post Office Box 2276
El Prado, New Mexico 87529 USA
Physical address:
9 Don Ben Romero Road, El Prado, New Mexico 87529 USA
Inspired by my daughter, I helped create this school 15 years ago as I believed in an educational approach that truly met the essence of a child’s development. I feel lucky to have watched both her and the school flourish in that time. She’s now on the dean’s list in college, and Country Day is entering an exciting and dynamic period, with Conrad’s vast experience to take us forward. — Micah Roseberry, Founder/8th grade teacher, Parent of 2 Country Day Graduates