Miami Herald (Sunday)

Mackinac Island

offering remote learning escape for families

- BY PHOEBE WALL HOWARD Detroit Free Press

Dave Sullivan has gone from working quietly alone at his Ann Arbor, Michigan, home to spending every minute of every day alongside his wife and three young kids with remote learning schedules.

“We’ve been cooped up for six months, and just to top off 2020, the fantastic year it’s been so far, we’re now doing full-on virtual school,” he said. “We’re tired of seeing the same walls or computer screens. It’s not sustainabl­e.”

When Sullivan heard about special family remote-learning getaway packages on Mackinac Island, he planned to discuss the option with his wife, Kristy, immediatel­y.

Imagine, he said, taking the kids on an extended field trip as a celebratio­n to end a year that has offered little to celebrate.

Two popular hotels on Mackinac are capitalizi­ng on the idea of virtual learning in an American vacation wonderland, offering parents a place to work and escape with their children.

Lesson plans have been created to help parents explore the island and apply math and geography and history in conjunctio­n with the state parks. Schools won’t be offering those fields trips this year because of COVID-19 concerns.

This is the first time the island has promoted the idea of an educationa­l escape for families, in September and October. If not for the coronaviru­s, hotels would be packed with meetings and convention­s and major events, all of which have been canceled.

Internet and cellular connection­s have recently been updated on the island. Tourism officials said working executives at conference­s expect it. Now all that conference space and all those rooms are available to families. This is the first time hotels have organized major family events in the fall.

Educationa­l resources, now available to download in PDF format, have been refreshed by state parks workers to help guide children on island at this time of year. They include reading, activities, lesson plans, music and games.

Lesson plans include topics

such as the Straits of Mackinac, the fur trade and its voyagers, how a sawmill became Michigan’s first industrial complex, a day in the life of a soldier stationed at Fort Mackinac, native American contributi­ons, archaeolog­y, 18th and 19th century games, folklore tales, diets of native Americans, fur traders and soldiers of Mackinac and vocabulary lists.

“The island is breathtaki­ng but also interactiv­e,” said Liz Ware, whose family owns and operates the Mission Point Resort. “There are 70 miles of hiking and biking on the island. It’s 8 miles around the island. The interior is magical. The leaves are changing. This is a wideopen space, a historic destinatio­n, with turquoise water that looks tropical. We have biking and horses and history. It’s a perfect destinatio­n to bring your family for remote learning.”

The hotel has completed more than $12 million in renovation­s over the past six years, most recently updating its conference center to offer families space to work with their laptops. After parents finish their work and children finish their studies, families can do real-life learning, Ware said.

There is a library area in the lobby with books about the island and its topography, offering visitors an opportunit­y to learn about science and rock formations and water levels and the history of lakes. There are garden and history tours run by hotel staff.

At Mission Point, which sits on 18 acres of the sunrise side of the island, the two-day family package starts at $316 a night per adult, $160 per child ages 13 to 17 and $60 for children 12 and under. The package includes daily breakfast and a two-course dinner including a glass of wine for adults, half-day bike rentals, a round of golf at the Greens of Mackinac, Fort Mackinac tickets, Butterfly House tickets, round-trip ferry tickets on Shepler’s and luggage transfer and handling.

“Being outside and having a place to go that has a feeling of safety, this is what we offer,” Ware said. “Mackinac Island is 80% state park. When you are out of the downtown area of the island, there are places to spread out.

“The island is committed to face masks in public places and staying safe,” she said. “As a parent myself, it’s really important.”

Doug Dean, executive vice president of operations at the Grand Hotel, said life feels a lot like

Groundhog Day and the Grand wants to help.

“Families are connecting with nature and the beauty of the island, and the slower way of life seems to be particular­ly appealing,” he said.

The Grand Hotel is offering a family package of two adults and three children up to age 18 starting at $718 a night. That includes full breakfasts and white linen tablecloth dinners. If a family wants to extend beyond two nights, then the price is reduced. If a family stays three nights, the fourth is free.

There are golf discounts and children 17 and under play for free. And the pecan ball dessert draws raves.

“It’s a real chance to turn what is a stressful and challengin­g time for the entire family into something I hope people will come back and say, ‘Remember the time we went to Mackinac Island and we did this,’” Dean said. “We’re open until Nov. 2. It’s just nice to be able to get outside and unplug.”

Dominick Miller with Mackinac State Historic Parks has created many programs for children; he welcomes people to head to the island and check it all out.

Fort Mackinac was built by the British starting in 1779, right in the middle of the American Revolution, Miller said. “It puts you right in the middle of history.”

There are island links to the War of 1812, too, he noted, as one of the very first battles of the war occurred there.

“We’re looking at new ways of presenting our wealth of resources to the public,” Miller said. “By re-imagining the way we present our resources, we’re hoping we can reach a broad audience, especially in the current environmen­t.”

 ?? ERIC SEALS Detroit Free Press/TNS ?? Vacationer­s bike along Main Street in downtown Mackinac Island, Michigan, in July 1.
ERIC SEALS Detroit Free Press/TNS Vacationer­s bike along Main Street in downtown Mackinac Island, Michigan, in July 1.
 ?? ELLEN CREAGER Detroit Free Press/TNS ?? Horses pull a carriage on the grounds of The Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Michigan.
ELLEN CREAGER Detroit Free Press/TNS Horses pull a carriage on the grounds of The Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Michigan.
 ?? ERIC SEALS Detroit Free Press/TNS ?? A Shepler’s ferry heads toward the dock near Main Street in downtown Mackinac Island, Michigan, in July.
ERIC SEALS Detroit Free Press/TNS A Shepler’s ferry heads toward the dock near Main Street in downtown Mackinac Island, Michigan, in July.

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