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Nature kindergartens
Learning outdoors
Kari-Anne Jørgensen
Associated Professor
Faculty for Humaniora and Education
University College of Southeast Norway
Plymouth 10.01.2016
What is going on out there?
• What does it mean for children’s experiences when the kindergarten is moving their everyday activities into nature-landscapes and its places?
• Doctoral thesis University of Gothenburg 2014
Plymouth 10.01.2016 [email protected]
3
Background
The National Curricula for the Content and Tasks of theKindergartens
Kindergartens shall provide children withopportunities for play, self-expression and meaningful experiences and activities in safe yet challenging surroundings (Department of Education2005:15)
Under learning areas:….love using the nature (Ibid2005:23)
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An increasing interest for outdooreducation in early years
•Affordance of the landscape(Fjørtoft:2000, Sandseter: 2010, Kytte: 2007,2009, Mårtensson: 2009)
•Use of outdoor areas in Kindergartens(Mårtensson 2004, Maynard: 2009, Arlemark-Hagser:2010)
•Learning outdoors (Thulin: 2011, Waller:2010)
•Schoolyards as sites for learning (Lindholm, 1995, Tranter and Malone 2007)
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Theories
•Relation between the affordance of a landscape ant the individual perception. The function of the landscape. (James Gibson, 1978)
Phenomenological approach as a reference «The livedbody and the pre reflecsive cogito (Merleau Ponty:1962)
‘Sense of wonder’(Rachel Carson, 1965)
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Experienced Place
•Edward Casey
- Displacement and implacement
- Wild places
•Otto F.Bollnow
Experienced space above mathematicalspace
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Children experiencing places outdoors
Narratives
Play and the wild places
The world of wonders
The lived body
The intertwining
place and body
Importance of sensory
experiences and the
sense of place
The senses
The function of the
landscape
Climbing, Hiding
Sliding
Swinging
Affordance
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Steps in the research process
Ethnographic fieldwork on children’s experiences of nature landscapes and its places in Norwegian Kindergarten groups
Field notes, informal conversations , photo
Narrative analyses of the data, thick descriptions(Geetz, Polkinghorn, Corsaro)
Narrative maps to place the wide range of imaginary play in the landscapes
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All the senses involved
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Sensory
experience
Visual
Kinaestetic
Olifactory
AuditiveTactile
Gustafactor
Humans - relationship
“Humans are tuned for relationship. The eyes, the skin, tongue, ears and nostrils - are all
gates where our body receives the nourishment of otherness.” David Abram 1997
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Environmental consciousness and the sense of wonder, two dimensions of environmental
learning
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The JellyfishesHow the jellyfish went ashore and how it entered the ocean again.
The group has gone over to the beach and finds a lot of jellyfish that that are left on the beach because the tide going back.Tom: “We have to bring them back to the ocean, if not they will die” In his hands the boy of four carries blue jellyfishes, one by one. He continues: “Many years ago there were lots of water in the ocean , and then the jellyfish were swimming in the sea, now the ocean has withdrawn. Good luck that we found them!”The boy and his mates- a group of ten children-boys and girls in the age from two –six years are all working on the rescuing project.
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Experiences and relatedness
• “Animate “ relatedness : The animal as us, The Jellyfish wanting to go home or Lilla Billy as a pet
• Intersubjective relatedness: The communication
• Linguistic relatedness : The process of use of language in shared stories
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Approaches on “the others”
•Antroposentric; From human perspective
•Biosentric; Other species with intrinsic values
•Value of an experience – get to know
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The others as ourselves-experience of other species
• The love of nature is a difficult topic because nature is a contested concept
• Looking at children’s play and exploration of other species brings up a more diverse approach on how they connect and develop relatedness to other animals, animated, Intersubjective and linguistic
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Anthropocentric or biosentric?
• Even if children understand the others from their own life-world perspective identification also leads towards an understanding of other species as animals with intrinsic values and needs
• Value of the experience is also links to the existential “sense of wonder” as a driving force to understand the others
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Experience and learning
• John Dewey: Experience is not learning, but a stepping stone towards learning
• Experience and reflection
• Socio-cultural learningPlymouth 10.01.2016 [email protected]
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Places and the sense of wonders
•‘If facts are the seeds that later promote knowledge and wisdom, then the emotions and the impressions of the senses are the fertile soil in which the seeds must grow.’ .
(Carson & Pratt, 1965).
Deep or shalow ecology – ecosohy(Ness, Arne
1973)
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The trolls made of ice
Per:« Do you know what this is?»
Me: «No»
Per: «It is the bones of the trolls prisoners. It is theentire family.» Per takes off his mittens placing his hands on the ice, smiling and nodding his head. «Right it is ice.» More children comes along. The play is goingon inside and outside the cave.
After a while one ice-troll is brought down to thefireplace. It transformes into water.Excitement and experiement. Scietific and imaginative explorations
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Negotiations in play - clans
The play of the Bakugas developed on a sandy part of the beach. It seemed to be an everlasting story that spring.
The malleability of the material is explored and manipulated in an imaginative and scientific way
All children involved during the weeks the play went on
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«OUH!!!!! Now she ruined everything» , one
girl is running across one of the Bakuga
spasceships made of sand.
Leif one of the main builders « Yes, but thet
was really fine, now we can build a new one.»
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Didactic implications
•Wonders , experiences and exploration on the agenda for the use of nature dominated landscapes and places
•Pedagogues should be able to find places that opens for play and playful learning and to use the landscapes and places for situated learning
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Results
Sensory experiences – the multi-sensoric aspects of the environments impact on children play and learningEnvironmental consciousness and the sense of wonder, two dimensions of environmental learningDidactic implications – Embodied experience exploration through movement connected to children’s learning. Social interaction and group organization in play, a way of learning for democracy
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References
• Abram, David(1997):: The spell of the sensous, perseption and language in a more that human world, New York: Vintage Books
• Casey, E(1992): Getting back into place, Bloomington&Indiana: Indiana University Press• Carson, R & Pratt, C(1965): The Sense of Wonder, New York: Harper & Row• Cladinin, D.J(2007): Handbook of narrative inquiry, mapping a methodology, Thousand Oaks Carlifornia: Sage• Connelly, M.F& Cladinin, DJ(2012): Stories of experience and narrative inquiry, in
Educational Researcher, vol 19, issue 5, p.2-14, USA : SagepubGeertz,,E(1993): The interpretation of cultures: Selected Essays, London: Fontana
• Jørgensen, K-A(2014): What is going on out there? - What does it mean for children's experiences when the kindergarten is moving their everyday activities into the nature - landscapes and its places, PhD, Universitu of Gothenborg
• Meyers,O.E, Saunders, C D(2002) Animals as links toward developing relationship, in: Kahn, P.H.jr., Kellert, S.R: Chlldren and nature, MassachusetsInsitute of technology
• Næss, Arne(1989) : Ecology, Community , Lifestyle, outline of an ecosophy, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press• Pink, Sarah(2009): Doing Sensory Ethnography, Los Angelse, London ,New Dehli, Sigapore, Washington DC: Sage• Pink, Sarah( 2012): Situating Everyday Life, Los Angelse, London ,New Dehli, Sigapore, Washington DC: Sage• Polkinghorne, D(1995) : Narrative configuration in qualitative analyses, in International Journal of Qualitative Studies in
Education, vol 8, issue 1 , p2-23, London: RoutledgeAll photos Copyright Kari-Anne Jørgensen
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