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A Natural Curriculum from India
April 16, 2015
Those who are not looking for happiness are the most likely to find it, because those who are searching forget that the surest way to be happy is to seek happiness for others.
-Martin Luther King, Jr.

For our last trip down memory lane, I would like to share one of my favorite stories of the 3,390 issues of ExchangeEveryDay - the January 18, 2013 issue:

"When I was in Singapore last year to attend the Global Leaders meeting, I had the great pleasure of visiting the exciting classrooms of Bonnie's friend, Vashima Goyal. During the visit she told me about the exciting ideas of Jinan, a radical educator working with village communities in India on nature-based programs aimed at recovering authenticity, originality in terms of aesthetic sensibility, and cognitive process.

Vashima recently forwarded the video, Children Being in the World, which gives you a window into her thinking. Be sure to watch the 'outtake' after the credits."





Natural Playscapes

Natural Playscapes: Creating Outdoor Play Environments for the Soul
by Rusty Keeler,
is an inspiring, yet practical resource on bringing outdoor playspaces to life. It describes how children relate to the natural world, gives many examples from around the world of how early childhood professionals and parents have planned and constructed natural playscapes. Included are blueprints, step-by-step instructions, and tip sheets such as "20 Ways to Create Natural Playscapes," and "15 Free or Low-Cost Things to Enrich Your Playscapes."

View and Purchase

 

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Comments (3)

Displaying All 3 Comments
Peter Luke Gebhardt · April 16, 2015
Aor International
Dallas, TX, United States


My kindergarten classroom, back in the '80's, was set up as a lab of inquiry, and we had one hour of worktime, where children made a verbal plan in a small group, and then went off to execute their plan, or change their plan, with their fellow students and the adults were there to support the children's activities. Then the children returned to their small groups to review & recall what happened. This is the core component of the Hig/Scope curriculum called plan-do-review. The brainchild of David Weikart, the High/Scope curriculum, when implemented appropriately, being child-centered, adult-supported, can be a very effective and balanced way to allow children to unfold naturally. Children, parents and staff are all included and respected. America would be well to adopt it as a national curriculum.

Laura Friedman · April 16, 2015
Creativity in Learning
Cumberland, Maine, United States


I'm so interested in the way our "educational" culture in the U.S. fears risk in learning--physical and emotional--we seem to do this to avoid potential litigation (http://www.educationworld.com/a_admin/admin/admin371.shtml). In the process, we remove, over and over again, opportunities for children to engage in active inquiry, learning and "knowing"--which often leaves them to sit in front of TV or computer screens.

I watched this film some time ago, and was so struck then as I am watching it again this morning, by the risk allowed in this film. We see the children on one side of the lens; we rarely see the adults. I want to know from the adults why (and how) their culture values risk as a learning tool. And I want to know more about the tipping point--that period of time in the U.S.--that moved us to a culture of fear. What happened?

McNamara Buck · April 16, 2015
United States


wow....thanks for this one.



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