Purpose of Outdoor Play
There are two fundamental reasons why outdoor play is critical for
young children in our early childhood programs and schools. First, many
of the developmental tasks that children must achieve—exploring,
risk-taking, fine and gross motor development and the absorption of vast
amounts of basic knowledge—can be most effectively learned through
outdoor play. Second, our culture is taking outdoor play away from young
children through excessive TV and computer use, unsafe neighborhoods,
busy and tired parents, educational accountability, elimination of
school recess, and academic standards that push more and more
developmentally inappropriate academics into our early childhood
programs, thus taking time away from play. The following sections (based
on Wardle, 1996-2003) describe the main reasons why outdoor play is
critical for the healthy development of young children.
Enjoyment of the Outdoors
Outdoor play is one of the things that characterize childhood. And as
Lord Nuffield once said, the best preparation for adulthood is to have a
full and enjoyable childhood. Thus childhood must include outdoor play.
Children need opportunities to explore, experiment, manipulate,
reconfigure, expand, influence, change, marvel, discover, practice, dam
up, push their limits, yell, sing, and create. Some of our favorite
childhood memories are outdoor activities. This is no accident.
Learning about the World
Outdoor play enables young children to learn lots and lots and lots
of things about the world. How does ice feel and sound? Can sticks stand
up in sand? How do plants grow? How does mud feel? Why do we slide down
instead of up? How do I make my tricycle go faster? How does the
overhang of the building create cool shade from the sun? What does a
tomato smell and taste like? What does a chrysalis change into? Do
butterflies have to learn to fly? Much of what a child learns outside
can be learned in a variety of other ways, but learning it outside is
particularly effective—and certainly more fun! In the outside playground
children can learn math, science, ecology, gardening, ornithology,
construction, farming, vocabulary, the seasons, the various times of the
day, and all about the local weather. Not only do children learn lots
of basic and fundamental information about how the world works in a very
effective manner, they are more likely to remember what they learned
because it was concrete and personally meaningful