- Academics
- Overview
- Catalog
- General Education
- Majors & Minors
- All Majors & Minors
- Art
- Biology
- Business
- Business Management
- Chemistry
- Ecological Restoration
- Education
- Education
- Faculty Profiles
- Broad Field Science Education Major (B.S)
- Broad Field Social Studies Education Major (B.S.)
- Elementary/Middle Education (Middle Childhood to Early Adolescence) Major (B.S.)
- Secondary (Early Adolescence to Adolescence) Education Major (B.S.)
- Education Department Website
- Career Opportunities
- Photo Gallery
- Schedule a Visit
- Environmental Geosciences
- Fisheries Ecology & Management
- Geology
- Humanities
- History
- Humanity and Nature Studies
- Mathematical Science
- Meteorology
- Music
- Native American Studies
- Natural Resources
- Outdoor Education
- Pre-Professional Programs
- Public Affairs Management
- Sociology and Social Justice
- Sustainable Community Development
- Spanish Program
- Water Science
- Wildlife Ecology & Management
- Writing and English
- Course Offerings
- Off-Campus Programs
- Academic Calendar
- Faculty Profiles
- Advising
- Accreditation
- Registrar
- Policy and Procedures
- Lecture Series
- Library
- Admissions
- Overview
- Admissions Checklist
- Application for Admission
- Financial Aid
- Tuition Match - Access Guarantee
- Affordability Tips
- Parents
- Transfer Students
- International Students
- High School Counselors
- Alumni Success Stories
- Admissions Staff
- Visits and Events
- Request Information
- Student Life
- Athletics
- Sustainability
- Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute
- Overview
- LoonWatch
- History
- Nature Writing Awards
- Lake Superior Binational Forum
- Chequamegon Bay Area Partnership
- Student Opportunities
- SOEI Staff
- Support the SOEI
- Contact Us
- Visit the SOEI
Northland College Faculty
Faculty are at the heart of Northland College. Click below to view individual profiles and to learn more about our incredible faculty.
Grant White
Title: Associate Professor of Outdoor Education
Office Location: Wheeler 312
Phone: (715) 682-1350
Email: gwhite@northland.edu
At Northland Since: 1982
Education
B.S., Bowling Green State University M.S., Mankato State University
Profile
I grew up in northwestern Ohio, on the floor of Lake Erie’s now extinct Great Black Swamp: former stomping grounds of the brilliant Shawnee leader, Tecumseh, frontiersman, Simon Kenton, and general Mad Anthony Wayne. I graduated from Bowling Green State University, in 1974, with K-12 teaching certifications in Physical Education and Health Education, along with four years of intercollegiate gymnastics experience, competing in all six events. In 1976, I earned a Master of Science degree in Experiential Education from Mankato State University, Mankato, Minnesota. My master’s paper was entitled: An Orienteering Model for Use in Camps, Schools, and Recreation Programs.
I began a six year professional association with Mankato State in the summer of 1976, teaching in the Master of Science degree program, with the rank of Instructor. While there, I adjusted the program focus from general Outdoor Education to a professional skills training program for outdoor educators. I conceived, developed, directed, and instructed one of the first semester-format Outdoor Education programs in the United States, providing classroom, and experientially-based laboratory experiences for up to ten graduate students, for each of the three, ten-week sessions per year. The program was housed at Bemidji State University’s Bald Eagle Outdoor Learning Center, Cass Lake, Minnesota from Fall, 1978 until the Center’s closing in Summer, 1981. The curriculum included expedition nutrition, wilderness emergency care, CPR, rock climbing, flat water canoeing, canoe tripping, white-water canoeing, orienteering, cross-country skiing (beginner through competitive), winter camping, natural history, traditional woods-craft, applied exercise physiology, and authentic teaching and leadership experiences.
I’ve had the good fortune to work for Northland College from Fall, 1982 to the present. Here I’ve had the opportunity to teach all of my favorite classes from my undergraduate and graduate studies, and develop others, while exploring areas of personal interest. My teaching responsibilities have included Wilderness Emergency Care, Theory of Teaching Physical Skills (Motor Learning), Sports Medicine (through Winter, 2000), Search and Rescue, Musculoskeletal Anatomy, Analysis of Human Performance (Exercise Physiology and some Biomechanics), Snowshoeing, Cross Country Skiing, Advanced Cross Country Skiing, Basic Canoeing, Orienteering, and Rock Climbing.
I have the incredible good luck to live within sight of Lake Superior, and surrounded by the Chequamegon (“Soft Beaver Dam”) National Forest, in extreme northwestern Wisconsin. I work for an outstanding small college, with an important mission, and a commitment to outstanding teaching. I share the Outdoor Education Department with faculty colleagues who are dedicated to excellent, creative, and innovative teaching, as well as service to our students, and to our profession. I teach students who are talented, unique, interesting, and, in some cases, lifelong friends. This is an environment in which it is easy to do good work.
I have particular interests in search and rescue, open boat canoeing, cross country skiing, traditional woods skills, natural history, musculoskeletal anatomy, and exercise physiology. When away from the office, I can be found (or not found) out exploring the local woods while shooting my longbow, paddling my Bell Wildfire canoe, cross country skiing, or snowshoeing.



