| Literature DB >> 35701784 |
Eun-Young Lee1, Louise de Lannoy2, Lucy Li1, Maria Isabel Amando de Barros3, Peter Bentsen4, Mariana Brussoni5, Tove Anita Fiskum6, Michelle Guerrero7, Bjørg Oddrun Hallås8, Susanna Ho9, Catherine Jordan10, Mark Leather11, Greg Mannion12, Sarah A Moore13, Ellen Beate Hansen Sandseter14, Nancy L I Spencer15, Susan Waite16, Po-Yu Wang17, Mark S Tremblay18,19.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A recent dialogue in the field of play, learn, and teach outdoors (referred to as "PLaTO" hereafter) demonstrated the need for developing harmonized and consensus-based terminology, taxonomy, and ontology for PLaTO. This is important as the field evolves and diversifies in its approaches, contents, and contexts over time and in different countries, cultures, and settings. Within this paper, we report the systematic and iterative processes undertaken to achieve this objective, which has built on the creation of the global PLaTO-Network (PLaTO-Net).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35701784 PMCID: PMC9199154 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-022-01294-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 8.915
Fig. 1Play, Learn, and Teach Outdoors Network (PLaTO-Net) Terminology, Taxonomy, and Ontology Consensus Project steps and timeline
Fig. 2Summary of evidence identification and study selection. Note: The full list of 447 references can be found in Additional File 2
Fig. 3Play, Learn, and Teach Outdoors Network (PLaTO-Net) ontology model. Note: At the bottom of the model, surrounding the tree roots in the earth, are the terms economic, cultural, social, ecological, geographical, and political which denote some of the main influences on/consequences of outdoor activities. Along the roots are examples of outdoor settings, starting at the top of the roots with ‘environment,’ branching out to the terms natural and built, leading to green space and loose parts, and school ground and playground, respectively. The roots overlap with each other to indicate inter-relationships between all terms in the earth and roots. Along the bark of the tree trunk are examples of purposes/outcomes that can be achieved while engaging in different activities in the outdoors (e.g., living, connecting, growing, be[long]ing, healing, [re]creating, and socializing), where the bark again overlaps with the different terms to indicate the connectivity of and fluidity between these terms. The trunk supports the leafy canopy where we suggest there are five overlapping main types of activities that can be performed outdoors. These activities span across a range of colors that blend into and overlap with each other, with leisure in orange, leading into play in red, learn in green, teach in purple, and work in yellow (e.g., some leisure activities involve play, a lot of play can be informal learning, working outdoors can involve play, or teaching and so on). Some leaves have fallen back down to the soil to indicate the cyclical and interconnected relationship between all elements. There is also a box to the right of the tree with a cross-section indicating the rings of the tree, with the labels early years, children, youth, adults, and elders in concentric rings moving from the outermost ring to the center, just as the youngest tree rings are at the edge and the oldest at the center, to highlight the applicability of the model to all humans across the lifespan
Fig. 4Play, Learn, and Teach Outdoors-Network (PLaTO-Net) logo. Note: The logo still has all elements from the PLaTO ontology model; however, the words on the logo only highlight the focus of PLaTO-Net
Survey results for agreement with the Play, Learn, and Teach Outdoors (PLaTO) terminology, taxonomy, and ontology
v: New terms suggested for further consideration by survey participants; vv (also in yellow): terms suggested for inclusion by the members of the Steering Committee despite achieving < 75% likability; x (also in red in Round 1 and Round 3): terms removed as they were suggested for exclusion by survey participants (< 75% likability/agreement); xx (also in green): terms removed despite achieving ≥ 75% of likability as they were later identified as co-hyponyms
a Outdoor early childhood programs included outdoor kindergarten, outdoor preschool
Terminology and taxonomy of the Play, Learn, and Teach Outdoors—Network (PLaTO-Net)
| Root termsa | PlaTO-terms | Sub-terms | Proposed definition | Synonym/co-hyponym |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outdoors | Any open-air, wild, natural, or human-made space | |||
| Built environment | Human-constructed physical surroundings (e.g., structures, features, facilities) in which people live, learn, work, travel, and play | |||
| Green space | Any vegetated land, an area of grass or trees that may also contain bodies of water (e.g., pond, creek), in an urban environment | |||
| Loose parts | Natural or manufactured materials with no specific set of directions that can be used alone or combined with other materials, moved, carried, combined, redesigned, lined up, and taken apart and put back together in multiple ways and used for play | |||
| Playground | A piece of land usually equipped with facilities and/or equipment that is used for outdoor play and recreation | |||
| School ground | Proprietary outdoor area on the land of educational institution buildings | Synonym: School yard | ||
| Natural environment | Non-built surroundings and conditions in nature in which living and non-living things co-exist | Synonym: Nature | ||
| Garden | Planted, developed, or cultivated land used to grow vegetables, fruit, herbs, flowers, and other living plants and organisms | |||
| Outdoor play space | Any outdoor area where people can play | |||
| Play | Voluntary engagement in activity that is fun and/or rewarding and usually driven by intrinsic motivation | |||
| Outdoor play | A form of playa that takes place outdoorsa | Co-hyponym: Outdoor recreation | ||
| Active play | A form of playa that involves physical activity of any intensity | |||
| Free play | A form of playa that is unstructured and self-directed | Synonym: Unstructured play | ||
| Nature play | A form of playa that takes place in a natural environment and/or involves interaction with natural elements and features (e.g., water, mud, rocks, hills, forests, and natural loose parts, such as sticks, pinecones, leaves, and grass) | Co-hyponym: Nature-based recreation | ||
| Risky play | A form of playa that is thrilling and exciting, which involves uncertainty, unpredictability, and varying degrees of risk-taking | |||
| Social play | A form of play that involves interacting with others | |||
| Learning | The development of knowledge, skills, values, morals, beliefs, and habits | |||
| Outdoor learning | Learninga that takes place outdoorsa | |||
| Teaching | The process of facilitation of learning | |||
| Outdoor teaching | Teachinga that takes place outdoorsa | |||
| Education | The process of learninga and teachinga | |||
| Outdoor education | Educationa that takes place outdoorsa | |||
| Environmental education | A form of educationa aimed at increasing knowledge, awareness, and appreciation of the environment | |||
| Forest schools | An educationala approach that includes regular and repeated access to natural space and participant-directed, emergent, and place-based learning | Co-hyponym: Forest kindergartens, forest preschools, forest programs | ||
| Outdoor classroom | A shared space of learninga and teachinga in the school context that is entirely outdoors | |||
| Place-based learning | Learninga that considers the importance of connecting learners with their community by anchoring pedagogy within the context of the locally natural, cultural, and social ecosystems | Co-hyponym: Place-based education | ||
| Land-based education | An approach to educationa that recognizes a deep connection and relationship of reciprocity between people and the land | Co-hyponym: Land-based learning | ||
| Nature-based education | A form of teachinga and learninga situated in the context of outdoor natural settings | Co-hyponym: Nature-based learning, nature-based preschool | ||
| Learning for sustainability | A cross-curricular approach to life and learninga which enables learners, educators, schools, and their wider communities to build a socially just, ecologically sustainable, and equitable society | |||
| Outdoor activity | Leisure, recreational, educational, occupational, and/or health-enhancing activity engaged in the outdoors | |||
| Outdoor time | Time spent outdoors | |||
aRefer to the definition of corresponding root term