Eight Tips for Teaching in the Outside Classroom

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Perhaps it was the COVID-19 pandemic that got you teaching preschool in your outdoor space or maybe something else entirely, like a visit to a nature classroom, that inspired you to try something new. Thats fantasticresearch suggests that outdoor learning has many benefits for young children, including helping them to regulate their emotions and increase their泭nature knowledge.
We can support childrens development and learning outdoors through intentionally designed spaces and mindful interactions. As teachers who were already scheduled to teach outside due to pandemic precautions and then experienced an epic flood that ruined our classroom floor, we learned many things when teaching outside was not so much a choice as a mandate.泭Though initially we struggled and grumbled and got very wet, we came to a place where the practice is manageable and we are confident. Even now, as pandemic restrictions have eased and we have a lovely new floor, we still enjoy a vibrant outdoor classroom thats paired with indoor learning.
Here are eight泭tips泭that we discovered to be essential for learning outdoors.泭We think you can use them too, whether youre looking to establish an outdoor program, finetune an existing one, or simply get outside泭more often.
- Consider your space.泭Include a welcome area for signing in and putting away personal items, and set up designated, predictable spaces for specific activities. Children thrive when there are opportunities for the creative arts, blocks and cognitive play, literacy, science, and movement. Select locations so that an adult can easily oversee several areas at once. For example, an adult could supervise both an art project table and a block table, but gluing and coaching children on trikes is泭much harder.
- Articulate and document your daily schedule.泭Both children and adults appreciate having a daily plan: it helps children who struggle with separation or are anxious to track the time, and it makes teamwork go smoothly. You can adapt your daily schedule to accommodate the amount of time you have outdoors and the different interests, strengths, and needs of your group. For example, our schedule looks like free play, cleanup, circle, snack, free play, cleanup, circle. We take pictures of these events, pair them with words, then laminate the schedule and post it where everyone can泭reference it.
- Let the environment and childrens interests guide areas of investigation and the time allotted to them.泭You can study insects all year long, moving from snails in the fall, to earthworms as it begins to rain, to cabbage caterpillars in the spring. Or you might have intended to explore seed planting one day, but you discover ice in the watering can. Go ahead and pivot! Be a person who models泭biophilia, or connecting to natureits okay to let that pumpkin fall apart long past October, become compost, and even sprout into new pumpkins. Gooey can be interesting too!泭Or try making a river in the sand when it gets hotits amazing what you can use as泭a boat!
- Be a reader and a writer outside.泭Use easels to write down childrens ideas, and read what you write back to them. Bring books outside to read, and create a designated place for reading and resting. Be intentional about providing and reading environmental print. While you may not be able to label as many things as you would indoors due to weather conditions, you can bring out labeled bins. You can use props (such as cake boxes that have the image and word泭cake泭on them), and you can design your泭large- and泭small-group activities to include images泭and words.
- Dont forget about science and math.泭Its tempting to say that everything outdoors relates to science or math and put that area on the backburner. Instead, invite children to learn about gardening, to create an insect tank and research whats inside, and to use magnifying glasses to look more closely at the nature around them. There are so many things to count outdoors and so many sizes to compare. Once you do this, you can chart and graph what泭you find.
- Use your sandbox for dramatic play.泭With just a bit of laminated money and a few cash registers or shoeboxes, you can create a store. Freeze colorful ice balls, and maybe its an ice cream shop. Ask families to bring in their empty grocery containers for home-to-school connections. Provide brooms for the children; they can help you sweep escaping sand back into泭the sandbox.
- Plan for the weather.泭Weather happens. We had to talk with families about clothing choices and ask them to supply back-up clothing. We needed more towels to dry surfaces and dry wet children, more shelter, and more泭set-up泭and cleanup time. We also needed to be more careful with items such as easels, puzzles, and wooden blocks.泭We needed to be more intentional with our curriculum, putting it under our awning so we could stay relaxed if it rained. We learned that plastic toys and most science tools can handle getting muddy and wet, so we presented those in a separate, unsheltered area of our yard. You may find it useful to have mats, tarps, towels, pop-up shelters, folding tables, bins, and backup clothing available. Families, consignment shops, and garage sales can be great sources for泭these items.
- Encourage adults to participate.泭While play and exploration are important, adult interaction deepens childrens learning. Is your staff sending messages that they are childrens learning partners? Make sure theyre comfortable being low to the ground, engaging in your space, and handling materials. Adults tend to stand and cross their arms when theyre cold or avoiding the mud. The deliberate placement of mats, use of tarps, and inclusion of low chairs can bring them down to the泭childs level.
High-quality practice is possible, indoors and in the yard. The key is to be flexible, creative, and intentional in how you design your space and how you interact once youre there. You also must be patient as you adapt to wind, rain, sun, fog . . . but you can泭do it!
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Photograph: 穢 Getty Images
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Julia Luckenbill泭is the director of Davis Parent Nursery Schools Danbury site and an adult educator with the Davis Joint Unified School District. She is retired from泭her work as a full-time lecturer and program coordinator at the Center for Child and Family Studies Laboratory School and is enjoying afternoons with her daughter.
Kathleen Reddick泭is a teacher at the Davis Parent Nursery Schools Danbury site in California.