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Re-Connecting Children with
Nature:
Are Children in the Flathead in Danger of Being
“Disconnected” from Nature?
CLICK HERE FOR LIST OF OUTDOOR
CLASSROOM LOCATIONS
Even
in the Flathead- hard to believe isn’t it? A
national trend shows that children are becoming more
and more disconnected from the natural world.
Competing interests with computer games, social
networks, and structured outdoor activities are
displacing time spent outdoors in unstructured play
– just running, making forts, wandering through the
woods & meadows. Could children in our own
community, an area surrounded with natural areas, be
part of this trend?
Parent and educator workshops at Glacier National
Park indicate they are. Park rangers conducted two
workshops for adults who work outdoors with children
– scout leaders, summer camp staff, teachers, youth
group instructors - in April and May this year and
the resounding consensus from the 70 different
participants was that Flathead Valley children are
succumbing to the same factors that keep children
indoors nation-wide. Participants noted things like:
the lack of safe places to ride bicycles; the fear
parents have of letting their children “wander” as
their generation did when they were young; the
increased time that
children
spend with computer games and television; and the
lack of knowledge or time for parents to take their
children to go play in the woods. Additionally, it’s
not just children who are not getting outdoors in
nature to play. A report in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences found that “all major
lines of evidence point to a general and fundamental
shift away from people’s participation in
nature-based recreation.”
http://www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.0709893105
So what?
Richard
Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods, Saving
Our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder, has
documented a compelling connection between the
nationwide decline in children’s health – increases
in childhood obesity, the rise in incidences of
childhood diabetes, the number of children diagnosed
with attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) – and the lack
of unstructured time spent in nature. He also cites
research showing the many benefits for children of
getting out in nature. These include reductions in
stress, more creative play, reduced symptoms of ADD,
and improved motor coordination, not to mention how
positive childhood nature experiences provide a
foundation for stewardship of nature. Louv says “We
can now assume that just as children need good
nutrition and adequate sleep, they may very well
need contact with nature.” Not a formal medical
diagnosis, “Nature deficit disorder” is the term he
coins to describe this increasing alienation from
the natural world. Fortunately, nature-deficit
disorder can be recognized and reversed,
individually and culturally. The cure is nature
play.
And
here in the Flathead, we have numerous family and
youth group leaders who provide opportunities for
children to get outdoors in nature and play. Many of
the organizations and individuals in the CORE
resources list have events and programs that
introduce youth and adults to the wonders of the
natural areas and resources in our valley. As Louv
notes, unstructured nature play for children today
does not just happen like it did 20 or 30 years ago.
It is not “going to happen naturally, we have to
take them (children) there.”
What better excuse to get ourselves and our children
out in nature this summer to enjoy the Flathead?
Places
to go in the Flathead Handout
www.childrenandnature.org – The Children and
Nature Network
www.forumonchildrenandnature.org – National
Forum on Children and Nature
www.getoutdoorsusa.org
www.nclicoalition.org – No Childe Left Inside
www.takeachildoutside.org/activities
www.richardlouv.com – Richard Louv website
www.earthcache.org
www.geocaching.com
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