Youth CLIMATE
leadership

Santa YNEZ RETREAT
AT Sedgwick Reserve

Land, Sea and Sky
March 1-7, 2026

Applications are due for this program by November 25, 2025. 

Imagine a world where you are the driving force behind climate change solutions. At Bluedot Institute, we are on a mission to turn this vision into reality.

Application deadlines:

  • Applications close: November 28, 2025 OR if program is full
  • Bluedot Institute accepts 20 students for this program

There are two steps in the application process:

An opportunity for:
High school students interested in nature, environmental and marine science, conservation, climate hope, art, and journalism.

You’ll gain:
• Leadership & Communication Skills
• A UCSB Reserve System Natural Experience
• Diverse Learning & Inspiration

Overview

This week-long intensive program trains high school students in vital skills needed for effective leadership in climate and environmental movements. University of California Santa Barbara's Sedgwick Preserve offers the perfect natural environment for students to relax, learn, and have fun. Bluedot partners with UCSB’s BREN School of Environmental Science to provide expert workshops, mentorships, and guidance for the students.

At Bluedot Institute, our programs orient around the land, sea, and sky. As a non-profit specifically focused on supporting youth interested in the environment and climate change, we choose to center the natural world in all aspects of our work. The following topics and skills are taught through that lens: leadership, narrative, communication, negotiation, and conversation.

Sedgwick Reserve Retreat Program Details

Program Dates

March 1-7, 2026

Tuition

$3,500

  • Tuition is all-inclusive except for travel to and from Santa Barbara, CA on March 1 and March 7, 2026.
  • The deposit to hold your spot once accepted is $1,000. Due upon acceptance.
  • The tuition remainder ($2,500) is due by Monday, January 20, 2026 unless other arrangements are made.
  • Bluedot considers financial aid on a case by case basis. To inquire about a needs based scholarship, email Leigh Anne Neal.
Questions

Questions? Contact Leigh Anne Neal or call 404.420.0999.

Daily Retreat Schedule Highlights

(subject to minor changes)

Sunday, March 1

Ground Zero for Action

  • Arrive in Santa Barbara – the birthplace of Earth Day.
  • Settle in at UCSB’s BREN School and get to know your fellow citizens on the retreat. Spend the evening in Santa Barbara beside the ocean.

Monday, March 2:

Our Landscapes: A Place to Begin

  • Travel to the Santa Ynez Valley and the Sedgwick Reserve.
  • Get oriented on the land we will share for the rest of our program.
  • Settle into rooms and get started with our curriculum!

Tuesday, March 3:

Leadership and the Land

  • Through group games and exercises, explore ideas of leadership: what it is, what it isn’t, and how to develop the skills needed in climate work today.
  • Then focus on the land with an environmental tour of Sedgwick Reserve, and learn from professionals, ranging from authors to scientists, how to protect the earth.

Wednesday, March 4

Leadership and Narrative

  • Together explore essential links between leadership and storytelling.
  • Develop stories that weave together your passions, the interests of your community, and the urgency of time in making your case about climate issues.
  • Then visit with folks who make their living on land and sea: fishermen and farmers.

    Thursday, March 5:

    Leadership and Conversation

    • Learn how to approach and navigate difficult conversations that climate work may entail. Through improvisation and role-playing, develop skills that allow you to turn opponents into allies and allies into fellow activists in the fight.

    Saturday, March 7:

    Leadership and Communication

    • Learn and practice public-speaking skills and how to handle speeches that vary in intention and structure. Learn how to speak off-the cuff, from notes, or from a written text. Learn how a speech to persuade differs from a speech to inform. Apply these skills to your own chosen speech topic, practice with a partner, and then share your short speech with us.
    • Finish the program with a farewell luncheon, featuring the natural bounty of the land!
    • On the way back to Santa Barbara, the group will visit gorgeous Lake Cachuma to celebrate their accomplishments.

      Friday, March 6:

      Leadership and Negotiation

      • Today we look at the art of negotiation: when and how to bargain and when to fight for what matters most. Learn how to seek common ground, how to find the best possible outcome, and what to do when that result might not feel within reach.
      • Talk with the country’s leading negotiation experts and hear what they have to say.
      • And end the day stargazing with a local astronomer as our guide.

      Leadership Retreat
      Curriculum

      Introduction

      Our retreat curriculum focusses on these five strands of communication, allowing time for instruction and practice in small groups. Sarah Ream, an alumni and master teacher from Phillips Exeter Academy, is the program’s lead teacher and curriculum designer. With Sarah, the students focus on leadership, narrative, conversation, communication, and negotiation through games, improv, role-play, and interactive exercises.

      Leadership

      Workshops throughout the day allow students to discover the connection between self-awareness and effective leadership. Games and exercises provide opportunities for introspection, radical listening, and empathy; participants work with the idea that one cannot feel empathy for others without access to one’s own inner emotional life. As Daniel Goleman, author of Emotional Intelligence, puts it, “Leadership is not domination, but the art of persuading people to work toward a common goal.”

      Narrative

      Workshops today build on self-awareness tools. As students focus on the art and craft of storytelling, they work to create a story of “self”, a story of “us”, and a story of “now”. Each perspective combines to build a cohesive story around a chosen climate issue: Why does it matter to me and to us? Why must we address it now? Each student identifies a particular climate issue or topic of personal importance to explore in the days ahead. Opportunities for sharing and self-reflection conclude the day’s activity.

      Conversation

      Day three invites students to lean into difficult and inevitable conversations about climate issues in our world today. Bringing the work of day two into the classroom, we focus on how one listens with an open heart and mind to the ideas of others, how one reflects those ideas back to the speaker, and how one moves through conflict with finesse, rather than aggression to move the conversation forward. Students role-play conversations challenging their proposals and reflect together on the experience.

      Negotiation

      Today’s work drills down in depth on the previous day’s conversations, cracking open the elements of conflict to create space for negotiation and recognition of common ground. We look at specific tools to help bolster each student’s chosen cause, recognizing that sometimes the best tool is listening carefully to the opposition. Students learn about value creation, value claiming, building power, overcoming barriers, and the seven elements of negotiation.

      Communication

      On the final day, students explore the planning, design, and delivery of their specific climate issues. They try out tools of effective public speaking, addressing common fears and foibles that can limit the effectiveness of one’s delivery. Each student delivers a speech on their topic to persuade us all as to its urgency in the world today. Peers will practice offering effective feedback to each other. An opportunity for personal and group reflection marks the culmination of the week.

      How To Apply

      Applications are due for this program by November 25, 2025.

      All students who are interested in attending the Sedgwick Reserve Retreat: Land, Sea, and Sky, will be considered regardless of finances. Click the link below to fill out the application form. You will be asked to sign into or create a Google Account.

      Program Leadership

      Sarah Ream

      Vice President, Bluedot Institute

      Sarah Ream has had the climate and activism on her mind since circulating a petition to save the baby seals in grade school. Since then, she has worked as a theater director and teacher in the United States and England and taught English and Theatre for many years at Phillips Exeter Academy. Throughout it all, she has maintained a commitment to environmental issues in a variety of ways – none more exciting than her work with Bluedot.

      Victoria Riskin

      Bluedot Living Founder

      Victoria Riskin is the founder and publisher of Bluedot Living, a media company with a network of newsletters that tell the stories of change-makers addressing climate change and helping readers live more sustainably. With a background in psychology, creative writing, and human rights, she creates engaging and actionable content that connects with people at the local and national level, and sparks individual and collective action.

      Leigh Anne Neal

      Director of Student Development and Engagement, Bluedot Institute

      Leigh Anne acts as a link between Bluedot and the high schools involved in our work and manages new student recruitment for our programs. She is an artist, a teacher, and a weaver of stories and communities. Leigh Anne believes that creativity and joy play vital roles in our ability to stay present, create community action around climate hope, and enjoy a thriving life.

      Annabelle Brothers

      Board Member

      Annabelle Brothers graduated from Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School in 2023, Valedictorian of her class. Annabelle served as the president of her high school’s environmental group, the Protect Your Environment Club. She worked closely with the Bluedot Institute conducting interviews, writing essays, and was on-camera as a journalist for the Bluedot Institute filmed interviews. Annabelle is now a Sophomore at Yale University and is pursuing a major in Ethics, Politics, and Economics with a Concentration in Climate Science and Solutions. She is passionate about fighting climate change and has a particular interest in the intersectionality of climate work and the ways social and institutional problems exacerbate the challenges that communities face.

      Get in Touch

      For any questions about the program or how to apply, please contact us using this form. You can also call, text, or email Leigh Anne Neal: 404-420-0999/ leighanne@bluedotinstitute.org