“The land is where our roots are. The children must be taught to feel and live in harmony with the Earth.”
Over the years we have enjoyed other animal husbandry projects that involved goats, sheep, and even a miniature horse. Our city council recently decided to change our local animal ordinance, so we no longer enjoy those larger animals.
This young boy spent many hours in the chicken run conducting a study which he devised himself. He was deciding which breeds dig the most.
He also produced sketches of each hen.
The italicized quotes that follow are from the following book written a number of years ago and published in the UK. Others have followed with these ideas, but I believe that Roger Hart says it concisely and frankly.
“I believe that an important aspect of pre-adolescent children’s relationship to the natural world is that they are innately curious about it and struggle to understand their relationship to it as part of their desire to understand the meaning of life. It is this existential kind of urge which I think is at the root of children’s deep interest in animals. We need to find ways of building upon the empathy that children often feel with animals, and extending it to a larger interest in, and concern for, the total environment; to cultivate what Rachel Carson called the ‘sense of wonder’."
Directly behind our school is a little creek, where I basically lived as a child. I played in and explored the creek from morning until dark when my mother insisted I come in. I'm delighted that in addition to our new outdoor classroom, we will be monitoring the water quality of the creek in conjunction with Prairie Rivers Network.
"We cannot rely entirely upon an environmental education that
reduces the complexity of ecosystems in an analytic way and presents it in
texts or films (or even in single field trips), and then expect children
mentally to reconstruct this beautiful complexity."
As I've considered all of this I have thought about schools in urban areas who may not have the access to spaces to convert into outdoor classrooms for their children. But, I believe, there are a number of ways to introduce the natural world to children - anywhere, anytime. In fact Dr. Montessori made this clear to her own trainees when they complained that there was "nothing to do" outdoors. If you have read Dr. Montessori's notes you might remember that she gathered a group of children, marched outside and took a seat on the ground with the delighted little ones, keeping them entertained for over an hour just examining the natural world within a few feet that surrounded them.
"We should feed children’s natural desire to contact nature’s
diversity with free access to an area of limited size over an extended period
of time, for it is only by intimately knowing the wonder of nature’s complexity
in a particular place that one can fully appreciate the immense beauty of the
planet as a whole. It is ironic that the electronic media are enabling children
to have greater understanding of the earth and of global environmental issues
at a time when the geographic mobility of many children in the North and in
urban areas of the South is becoming more constricted due to parents’ fears,
and they have little everyday, spontaneous contact with the natural world."
“Anyone who has seen children stoning crabs on a beach or
burning cigarettes into frogs know that contact with nature alone is not
sufficient for a child to develop understanding of, and a caring relationship
for, the natural world.”
This is an example of a picture speaking a thousand words. We met this gentleman on one of our walks in our neighborhood. We greeted him and he shook each child's hand and asked each name. He has been gone for years now, but I will always remember how meaningful his exchange was with this group of young children.
"The role of adults is also crucial. Opportunity for a rich
diversity of direct experiences with the natural world alongside adults who are
informed and caring about the natural world is ideal. Without this, children
will be left to construct meaning from a confusing and contradictory array of
secondary sources. We need to find ways for children to observe, imitate, talk
with , and walk alongside adults who actively demonstrate knowledge of, and
caring for, the environment."
Collecting mussel species with our naturalist friend
Designate a table or some inexpensive shelving for nature finds. Help the child to identify and label the finds. Read this book to children and they will want to read it again and again.
Then start collecting. Let them find most of the things--just a few at a time so that they will care about these special objects. But beware, if you want to help too much, and buy them a collection of their favorite objects such as rocks, fossils, etc., you will take away the wonder and joy that they feel when they find the things for themselves.
Provide young children with the real experiences of immersing themselves in the natural world. Then read non-fiction, beautifully illustrated or photographed books.
A few examples that my children have collected over the years. To verify that you need not go to the country to find amazing pieces of nature, take a child and sit down in a spot landscaped with river rock. (Most fast food places, banks, grocery stores, etc.) A five-year old boy handed me a rock once that he noticed pulled apart, and fit back together. The rock revealed a perfect trilobite specimen, both positive and negative aspects preserved. I took that fossil to a geologist who told me that scientists look a lifetime for specimens like that. Children are exemplary observers and hunters.
In classrooms educators can set up a complete and sequential natural history area for children of all ages. My own Montessori environment is set up this way, and I promise that this does not have to be expensive. Free aquariums are easy to find and make great habitats for a variety of creatures. Here is how I have arranged a natural history shelf for my students...
LIVING/NON-LIVING
Living and non-living are introduced with both objects and photo cards that I have made. Even children as old as six are not always sure about what living things are.
I have then arranged all objects from left to right in the order they appeared on the planet. A living representation of classes is featured on the top, with corresponding materials below.
ALGAE, LICHEN, FUNGI
INVERTEBRATES
Some examples include slugs, snails, earthworms, Darkling beetle larvae, mealworms, an array of insects, crickets, (love mantids!) and spiders in jars and small tanks. Most of these little creatures survive with a piece of apple or potato, or a handful of wheatgerm. These also serve as "food animals" for our predatory animals.
INSECTS
VERTEBRATES BEGAN WITH FISH
AMPHIBIANS
REPTILES
These baby snappers hatched on our playground. Too late to hibernate and survive so they are overwintering with us. We will release in May. We saved five.
Under turtle tank children find numerous reptile activities. They love the snake skin in the jar.
BIRDS
Our finch, Soybean, is very well-loved. We have enjoyed him for many, many years.
Very young children can begin to develop empathy when responsible for the care and feeding of an animal. This young boy noticed that the bird's water was dirty and told me so. I just watched as he managed the process of rinsing, re-filling, and placing the waterer in place. Spills? Of course. More practice with task-completion and all of the movements he needs to perform to develop optimally.
MAMMALS
I looked up from taking notes and noticed a 4 year-old observing quietly. Soon a young child joined and followed suit.
“The things he sees are not just remembered;
they form a part of his soul.”
~Dr. Maria Montessori
"I would therefore initiate teachers into
the observation of the most simple forms of living things, which all those aids
which science gives; I would make them microscopists; I would give them a
knowledge of the cultivation of plants and train them to observe their
physiology; I would direct their observation to insects, and would make them
study the general laws of biology. And I would not have them concerned with
theory alone, but would encourage them to work independently in laboratories
and in the bosom of free Nature."
- from The Advanced Montessori Method
- from The Advanced Montessori Method
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