All boys. All boarding. Grades 9-12.
Campus Life

Expedition Week

It's All About Connection

 
During Expedition Week, Woodberry focuses on these connections, creating time and space for boys to break out of their routine.
On every expedition, our boys are provided with an opportunity to step away from their screens and focus on what matters most.
The expeditions are unique to each form, creating a four-year curriculum, but they are bound together by a common experience of brotherhood, engagement with faculty, and asking big questions. Whether boys are sharing stories around the campfire after a day of rock climbing,
working as a team to replace the roof of a family in need, or walking the trenches of a Civil War battlefield,
Expedition Week is about breaking the mold and sparking connection.


 
 
 

Third Form Expedition

The third form departs for Camp Horizons in Harrisonburg, Virginia, where they stay on-site in an outdoor facility that includes two dining halls, sleeping cabins, equestrian facilities, a small lake for fishing and swimming, several playing fields, and two distinct high ropes courses. The boys are divided into teams of ten with a pair of Woodberry faculty. They are challenged during the day with team building activities and outdoor games. At night, they have an opportunity for self-reflection and time around a campfire.

Fourth Form Expedition

The fourth form departs for Wilderness Adventure at Eagle’s
Landing near Roanoke, Virginia. The boys are divided into
groups of twelve and spend their days hiking, caving, climbing,
and canoeing with professional outdoor guides. They prepare
all of their meals and camp outside each night, challenging
the boys to work together as a team. The expedition is
designed to strengthen relationships between new boys and
old boys and to push everyone out of his comfort zone.

Fifth Form Expedition

The fifth form is based on campus. Each boy will choose
from a list of four-day academic courses designed
by Woodberry faculty. These courses — grounded in
experiential learning — challenge boys in ways that are
not possible during the term, stimulating and satiating
their curiosity and advancing the school’s mission to
develop intellectual thoroughness. Learning on the fifth form expedition therefore moves beyond the four walls
of the classroom; students will explore conventional
academic topics from unconventional points of view,
utilizing Woodberry’s 1,200-acre campus or traveling, for example, to Washington, Richmond, Charlottesville, or Shenandoah National Park.

Sixth Form Expedition 

The sixth form departs for the Appalachia Service Project
Center in Jonesville, Virginia. The boys work in groups of
ten with a pair of Woodberry faculty on critical home repair
in rural Appalachia. Working alongside homeowners, the
boys are exposed to the lived reality of one of the poorest
areas of our nation, providing them with an opportunity
to both learn and serve. Bunking at the service center in
Jonesville, the boys work under the supervision of licensed
contractors to serve families in need during the day. At
night, the seniors have an opportunity to reflect on their
Woodberry experience and what the future holds.
Woodberry Forest admits students of any race, color, sexual orientation, disability, religious belief, and national or ethnic origin to all of the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, sexual orientation, disability, religious belief, or national or ethnic origin in the administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic or other school-administered programs. The school is authorized under federal law to enroll nonimmigrant students.