The Times-Tribune recently featured the Keystone College Environmental Education Institute's beekeeping program at the Everhart Museum in Scranton. Read the story (Subscription required) More News
Streams, meadows and winding woodland trails aren’t just window dressing. They’re here for you to enjoy and learn.
Keystone’s Woodlands nature area includes a large network of hiking trails leading to the College’s Sugar Shack, suspension bridge, vernal pool, biology pond, and more.
The Woodlands Campus is an extremely valuable educational resource for Keystone students, proving a perfect area for a variety of scientific and environmental studies. Few colleges in the nation offer students such a pristine natural environment for education and recreation.
The Times-Tribune recently featured the Keystone College Environmental Education Institute's beekeeping program at the Everhart Museum in Scranton. Read the story (Subscription required) More News
WNEP-TV recently featured the Keystone College Environmental Education Institute's beekeeping program at the Everhart Museum in Scranton. View the segment More News
FOX-56 recently featured the Keystone College Environmental Education Institute's beekeeping program at the Everhart Museum in Scranton. Read the story More News
Keystone College Environmental Education Institute offers a variety of hands-on workshops, outdoor educational experiences, presentations, and week-long courses for formal and non-formal educators, students, naturalists, life-long learners and community members.
The College dedicated a portion of its beautiful 170 acre Woodlands Campus as a nature preserve, that will not be developed in any way, to honor the years of dedication of Professor Howard Jennings.
Keystone College is very fortunate to have its own small maple sugaring operation that includes a sugar shack with a hobby-sized evaporator, and of course a sugarbush, where we have approximately 275 taps deployed.
Keystone College’s 170-acre Woodlands Campus features a stream, seven miles of hiking trails, and meadows and is home to a nature preserve and maple sugaring operation. The outdoor classrooms and field stations provide unparalleled opportunities for outdoor discovery and a wonderful learning atmosphere for our environmental education courses and workshops.
Maps, guides, and signage for Keystone’s Woodlands Campus sponsored in part by the Endless Mountains Heritage Region, the Lackawanna Heritage Valley Authority in partnership with the Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, and the National Park Service.