I don’t know what your destiny will be, but one thing I do know: the only ones among you who will be really happy are those who have sought and found how to serve.
-Albert Schweitzer
In the popular Exchange guidebook,
Caring Spaces, Learning Places: Children's Environments that Work, Jim Greenman, observes, "Both at home and in child care, children are losing time, space, and the variety of experience outdoors that has been integral to the development of humankind. They are losing habitat... They are losing necessary experience and gaining weight." Greenman goes on to cite eight reasons children need to experience nature, including...
- Nature is bountiful. There are shapes and sizes, colors and textures, smells and tastes; an enormous variety of substances. In a world of catalogs and consumable objects, designed spaces and programmed areas, sometimes it helps to remember that the natural world is full of multi-dimensional, unassailing educational experiences for children. Nature is hard, soft, fragile, heavy, light, smooth, and rough. Armed with our senses, we explore the world and call the adventure science, or if you prefer, cognitive development, classification, sensory development, or perceptual-motor learning.
- Nature nourishes and heals. Human beings evolved outdoors. Our bodies need sunlight and fresh air. Our minds need the experience and challenges that nature presents. Our souls need the day-to-day appreciation for the miracle of the world and all its complexity. Without a deep sense of awe at the vastness and majesty of the nature world that humbles us, and a simultaneous ennobling sense that we are intrinsically a part of that world, we are diminished.
Caring Spaces, Learning Places: Children’s Environments That Work is a book of ideas, observations, problems, solutions, examples, resources, photographs, and poetry. Here you will find best of current thinking about children's environments — 360 pages to challenge you, stimulate you, inspire you.
Comments (2)
Displaying All 2 Commentscolor outside the lines
tyler, TX, United States
this is so well stated that it has been printed and placed in a notebook that is being used to instigate the building of a nature p ark for children in this city of Tyler, Texas. thank you. Sunny Davidson
maine afterschool network
farmington, maine, United States
It is utterly and completely true that a nature connection is rapidly being lost for the current and coming generations of humans, and we can only speculate about the intellectual, spiritual, physical health and general consequences for them! Whenever I consider child/human development, I attempt to place it in the context of our evolutionary heritage, and say "if it was part of what contributed to our human-ness, it has to be respected." Quite possibly the interaction with nature is essential in some Another way, and the author correct in proposing that its absence may leave us a diminished species.
Can we think about nature education more seriously as a part of our public curriculum?
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