Elementary Schoolyard Landscapes as Outdoor Learning Environments


Book Description

So that children can be exposed to a more stimulating outdoor educational experience, the United States public education system developed and implemented strategies to accomplish an integrative approach between indoor and outdoor learning (Gardner 1991; Wells and Evans 2003; Titman 1994; Moore 1986). One of these strategies is to allow for an enhanced connection between children and the outdoor environment through the betterment of school landscapes. As described by Wohlwill (1983), the outdoor environment is - that vast domain of organic and inorganic matter that is not a product of human activity or intervention. The purpose of this study is to obtain descriptive opinions from North Texas public school stakeholders regarding integration in their respective schools of the Federal No Child Left Inside Act of 2009 (NCLIA). The study explores the perceptions of administrators, school designers, and parents regarding the benefits of children's exposure to and interaction with the outdoor environment in general. This qualitative study provides a better understanding about the importance of incorporating the outdoor environment into children's educational experience in North Texas public schools. The No Child Left Inside Act aims to expand the understanding of public school stakeholders about the importance of outdoor experiences in elementary education. This initiative gives incentives to schools to encourage learning through various educational activities in the outdoor environment, which provides opportunities for children to enhance their physical abilities and intellectual development and to use multiple sensorial experiences to strengthen their learning. A connection with the outdoor environment has health, social, psychological, intellectual, and physical benefits for children (Kellert 2005; Louv 2008; Maller 2006; Malone 2003; Orr 1992; Taylor 2000; White 2004). Successful implementation of NCLIA strategies requires the cooperation and engagement from various sectors in the educational community, including administrators, teachers, and parents. The design of this research study combined a review of relevant literature with personal interviews. The interview sample was composed of 12 subjects, including four school principals, four school designers, and four parents. The sample represented schools that were built after introduction of the NCLIA in 2009. The study revealed that in only three of the schools do children use the outdoor environment extensively (the outdoor environment is an extensive part of the children's education experience). Half of the respondents expressed that the outdoor environment is only used for physical education (PE) and play, versus three other respondents who said that the outdoor environment is used mostly to teach science. The majority of the respondents, 11 out of 12, had no prior knowledge of the NCLIA, and only one had knowledge of the NCLI movement. The study further revealed that the NCLIA has not been implemented or adopted in North Texas schools. Half of the respondents perceived the Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills (TAKS) test as the main barrier for NCLIA adoption in schools. However, nine respondents expressed positive opinions about implementing the Act in their schools. The results of this study strengthened the importance of integrating the outdoor environment into class curriculums and general experiences of children in their schools. It also reinforced the need to establish and sustain NCLI design requirements in the scope of elementary school design planning.










Moving the Classroom Outdoors


Book Description

Designed to provide teachers and administrators with a range of practical suggestions for making the schoolyard a varied and viable learning resource, Moving the Classroom Outdoors presents concrete examples of how urban, suburban, and rural schools have enhanced the school site as a teaching tool. --from publisher description.







Asphalt to Ecosystems


Book Description

Case Studies from North America, Scandinavia, Japan, and Great Britain demonstrate natural outdoor teaching environment that support hand-on learning in science, math, language, and art in ways that nurture healthy imagination and socialization Asphalt to Ecosystems is a compelling color guidebook for designing and building natural schoolyard environments that enhance childhood learning and play experiences while providing connection with the natural world. With this book, Danks broadens our notion of what a well-designed schoolyard should be, taking readers on a journey from traditional, ordinary grassy fields and asphalt, to explore the vibrant and growing movement to "green" school grounds in the United States and around the world. This book documents exciting green schoolyard examples from almost 150 schools in 11 countries, illustrating that a great many things are possible on school grounds when they are envisioned as outdoor classrooms for hands-on learning and play. The book's 500 vivid, color photographs showcase some of the world's most innovative green schoolyards including: edible gardens with fruit trees, vegetables, chickens, honey bees, and outdoor cooking facilities; wildlife habitats with prairie grasses and ponds, or forest and desert ecosystems; schoolyard watershed models, rainwater catchment systems and waste-water treatment wetlands; renewable energy systems that power landscape features, or the whole school; waste-as-a-resource projects that give new life to old materials in beautiful ways; K-12 curriculum connections for a wide range of disciplines from science and math to art and social studies; creative play opportunities that diversify school ground recreational options and encourage children to run, hop, skip, jump, balance, slide, and twirl, as well as explore the natural world first hand. The book grounds these examples in a practical framework that illustrates simple landscape design choices that all schools can use to make their schoolyards more comfortable, enjoyable and beautiful, and describes a participatory design process that schools can use to engage their school communities in transforming their own asphalt into ecosystems.




An Investigation of Wisconsin's Response to the U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon Schools Award


Book Description

This study investigated the U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon Schools (ED-GRS) award and the Green and Healthy Schools Wisconsin program, which both rely on loosely coordinated and lightly incentivized collaboration of parties at multiple levels of governance. Data were derived from: (1) Green and Healthy Schools Wisconsin and ED-GRS application guidelines, (2) ED-GRS nomination materials from twenty-three Wisconsin K-12 schools (those receiving the honor between the initiative's inception and April 2017), and (3) interviews with twenty-six participants, including individuals associated with five Wisconsin-based ED-GRS honorees. The study findings provide insight into a complex polycentric governance system, which although pre-dating ED-GRS, expanded and provided the structure through which a variety of stakeholders modified their practices in order to advance attributes they viewed as contributing to the green schools movement. This case study provides evidence that it is likely that neither Green and Healthy Schools Wisconsin nor ED-GRS would exist in their current configurations without the continuing support of non-governmental organizations. Importantly, non-governmental organizations often provided the expertise upon which the "best practices" described in the schools' nomination narratives were based. Additionally, in many cases, non-governmental organizations created the metrics upon which the schools documented their achievements. Furthermore, non-governmental organizations largely control the communication tools and networks utilized by ED-GRS and GHS Wisconsin. Thus, non-governmental organizations substantively shape the green schools movement in the United States. Because of their substantial influence, entities, for example policy makers, interested in what schools are doing in the realm of green schools, also should pay attention to what the non-governmental organizations are doing.







Education Connection


Book Description