Preparing the indoor classroom

This post originally appeared in Dr. Rachel A. Larimore’s weekly Samara newsletter on August 8, 2023. If you’re interested in receiving these emails, scroll to the bottom of this page to subscribe.

As many are embarking on a new school year it seems a good time to revisit the three learning spaces in nature-based education–the indoor classroom, outdoor natural play area, and areas beyond the play area–and how we can prepare them for children’s play.

When educators are first embarking on their nature-based journey, the Inside classroom tends to be one of the first places for nature integration. In fact, it’s the first step in the Seed Journey inside The Grove.

Additionally, the start of the school year is typically when we tend to purchase the most consumable supplies, equipment, toys, and other materials. I want you to maximize your money by being intentional about the materials you choose so they encourage deep learning and hopefully learning with nature. 

In both Preschool Beyond Walls and the Nature-based Education Rating Scales, we presented principles for selecting materials in the Indoor classroom. As much as possible use these principles to select materials for a nature-based classroom:

  1. Choose natural over manufactured materials. For example, having pine needles, other leaves, and seeds in the art area has the potential for deeper conversation than plastic beads—and no one-time plastic use!

  2. Emphasize authentic instead of cartoon-like. Consider local bird books or even a poster of real, local birds instead of a caricature poster.

  3. Avoid stereotypes. When possible, bring materials into the classroom that disrupt some of the stereotypes that exist about nature. Wolves don’t have red eyes. Owls aren’t any wiser than other animals and they don’t wear glasses, read books, and wear graduation caps.

  4. Represent local nature. Does the space look like our place in the world or does it look like any other early childhood classroom? For example, add books to the library of local plants and animals rather than those far off.

  5. Reflect & represent a diversity of people having positive outdoor experiences. Consider adding photos of the children and their families enjoying the outdoors. Bring in storybooks that show people from diverse backgrounds enjoying the outdoors.

  6. Connect the indoors to the outdoors. A prime example is a bird feeder outside the classroom window and binoculars, bird books, and a counter indoors.

  7. Take advantage of science & math learning. For example, an indoor activity could be matching pattern shapes like a spiral to images of plants and animals found in your area (see #4!).

  8. Bonus principle: Virtually everything in the room should have meaning to the children. Rather than purchasing an alphabet line, have the children go outdoors and build the letters out of natural materials, then take their photos, and hang the photos on the wall. Now the letter line matters to the children! 

Beyond the physical environment, it’s important to consider how teacher-led activities indoors connect to children’s outdoor experiences. I’ll share more on this in a few weeks when we talk about connecting the Inside, Outside, and Beyond experiences and spaces.

I hope this gets your wheels turning as you begin preparing your Inside classroom.

Keep changing lives,

Rachel

Rachel A. Larimore, Ph.D., Chief Visionary of Samara Learning


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