| Literature DB >> 31998184 |
Janke E van Dijk-Wesselius1,2, Agnes E van den Berg3, Jolanda Maas4, Dieuwke Hovinga1.
Abstract
With a growing number of primary schools around the globe greening their schoolyards, opportunities arise to realize outdoor learning in natural areas on the school's premises. Despite their promising potential, green schoolyards as outdoor learning environments remain mostly unintegrated in teachers' educational practices. In the current study, teachers of five primary schools in Netherlands were followed for two consecutive years during a participatory action research project. Based on their experiences in this project, teachers identified barriers when integrating the green schoolyard as a learning environment and found practice-based solutions to overcome these barriers. Across schools, a total of 20 meetings were organized, with 75 teachers participating in the project. Results revealed four broad themes encompassing barriers and solutions. Teachers feel hindered by outdoor learning having no formal status in their current educational practice, experience barriers related to a lack of confidence in their own outdoor teaching expertise, find it difficult to get started, and experience barriers related to physical constraints. Teachers, professionals, and researchers together found solutions to overcome each specific barrier. These solutions can be translated to general recommendations: just do it, get educated and inspired, engage in real-life experiences, get an outdoor pedagogical mindset, and follow a tailored process. The findings can be used by primary schools and other institutions to develop interventions that support teachers to further integrate the green schoolyard as a learning environment.Entities:
Keywords: collaborative action research; experiential learning; outdoor learning; reflective experiences schoolyard greening; teacher training
Year: 2020 PMID: 31998184 PMCID: PMC6970433 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.02919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Collabrative action research design.
Total number of meetings and total number of teachers participating across meetings separate for each school and representation in the total sample in percentages.
| School 1∗ | 2 | 19(10.4%) | 14(18.7%) |
| School 2∗ | 3 | 18(9.9%) | 15(20.0%) |
| School 3 | 3 | 22(12.1%) | 9(12.0%) |
| School 4 | 8 | 65(35.7%) | 16(21.3%) |
| School 5 | 6 | 58(31.9%) | 21(28.0%) |
| Total | 20 | 182(100%) | 75(100%) |
FIGURE 2Impressions of the green schoolyards of each participating school.
Barriers and solutions experienced by teachers in number of times mentioned and percentages of total.
| | |||||||
| Unfamiliarity and lack of inspiration | 30(16.9%) | Fear of losing control | 31(14.7%) | Difficult to get started | 15(8.5%) | Lack of design and maintenance | 13(7.3%) |
| Lack of time | 28(15.8%) | Managing children’s behavior | 26(17.5%) | Weather conditions | 10(5.6%) | ||
| Lack of communal structure | 24(13.6%) | ||||||
| Total | 82(46.3%) | Total | 57(32.2%) | Total | 15(8.5%) | Total | 23(12.9%) |
| Inspiration moments to familiarize with outdoor learning | 88(25.2%) | Teaching attitude | 22(6.3%) | Decisive mind | 26(7.5%) | Prevent child erosion | 8(2.3%) |
| Inspiration by observing how children react to outdoor learning | 34(9.7%) | Organization and rules | 15(4.3%) | Step by step | 17(4.9%) | Sunny weather | 8(2.3%) |
| Inspiration through teamwork | 33(9.5%) | ||||||
| Conscious choice to devote time | 25(7.2%) | Familiarize with outdoor learning | 5(1.4%) | Pioneers | 14(4.0%) | ||
| Develop communal framework | 23(6.6%) | Inspiration | 8(2.3%) | ||||
| Teamwork | 14(4.0%) | ||||||
| Incorporate outdoor learning in the curriculum | 9(2.6%) | ||||||
| Total | 226(64.8%) | Total | 42(12.0%) | Total | 65(18.7%) | Total | 16(4.6%) |