Forest Schools
"Forest School is an inspirational process that offers ALL learners regular opportunities to achieve and develop confidence and self-esteem, through hands on learning experiences in a local woodland or natural environment with trees. Forest School is a specialised approach that sits within and complements the wider context of outdoor and woodland learning." (Forest School Association - FSA)
"Forest School is an inspirational process that offers ALL learners regular opportunities to achieve and develop confidence and self-esteem, through hands on learning experiences in a local woodland or natural environment with trees. Forest School is a specialised approach that sits within and complements the wider context of outdoor and woodland learning." (Forest School Association - FSA)
The concept of forest schools was
developed and adapted in England from the original idea implemented
in the 50's in Sweden and other Scandinavian countries.
Forest schools is an innovative
education approach, a symbiosis between playing and learning. The
philosophy of this concept is to encourage and to inspire everyone
trough positive experiences outdoors.
Forest schools have been demonstrating
a special success with children of all ages that visit the same
forest regularly and that, trough games/playing have the opportunity
to learn about the natural environment that surround them, to handle
the risks whose such activities have and, above all, to use their own
initiative to solve problems and to cooperate with the others.
There is a general believe that it is
impossible to dissociate social interaction from environmental
interaction. Therefore, it is important to create behaviors to the
transmission of a good ethical posture. There are several strategies
and objectives which can be applied in forest schools:
- To proportionate a solid experience
and observation of nature to the child, allied to the search of
beauty, creativity, and art, in order to construct freely its
personality. This process helps the child to develop aptitudes, and
to have tools and knowledge to, in the future, being able to take
well informed decisions, exercising civic responsibilities and rights
whilst a community member.
- To create several activities of
personal and social growth in order to help the autonomy and the
development of the child.
- To take the maximum advantage of the
exterior space. The forest, the garden and the vegetable garden, are
the places where children can experience the natural elements, during
all the seasons of the year, allowing thus to deeply know the flora
and fauna, and at the same time to develop a sensitivity to
biodiversity.
- To encourage the consume fruit and
vegetables ( some integrated in the vegetable garden, grown, kept and
collected by the children) in order to learn to give value and to
respect the rhythms of nature.
- To establish learning framed by story
telling, tales and songs, that describe the natural cycles and that
develop throughout the year.
- To perform daily activities, with the
use of miscellaneous natural materials, in order to the child being
able to perceive its potential. Some examples of the materials:
crayons, sculpture wax, clay, water colors, wood, bread flour, wool
and other natural fibers.
- To integrate children in the
separation of garbage, making them to experience in an effective way
the concept of recycling, based on the idea that “garbage” can
also bear fruit.
- To understand that the connection
children have with nature does not take them apart from the
observation of urban spaces, and thus to encourage the respect for
public spaces.
References
O' Brien, L. 2009. Learning outdoors:the Forest School approach. Education Three to Thirteen, [e-journal] 37(1). Available trough: Swetswise database [Accessed 3 Febuary 2014].
Institute for Outdoor Learning. Forest School Association, 2012 [online]. Available at: http://www.outdoor-learning.org/Default.aspx?tabid=336 [Accessed 3 Febuary 2014].
