Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and Wales

This comparative study between Wales and England was undertaken to better understand what influences or drives the professed aims for outdoor provision of early years teachers; specifically the extent to which professed aims reflect the research-based literature common to both countries, and/or stat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Helen Bilton, Jane Waters
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-12-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/1/1
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spelling doaj-761cbc576304456181804bbc827f8c4e2020-11-25T00:22:44ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602016-12-0161110.3390/socsci6010001socsci6010001Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and WalesHelen Bilton0Jane Waters1Institute of Education, University of Reading, London Road Campus, 4 Redlands Road, Reading RG1 5EX, UKFaculty of Education and Communities, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Swansea, Townhill Road, Swansea SA2 0UT, UKThis comparative study between Wales and England was undertaken to better understand what influences or drives the professed aims for outdoor provision of early years teachers; specifically the extent to which professed aims reflect the research-based literature common to both countries, and/or statutory curricular, which differs in each country. The research gathered quantitative and qualitative data through an online survey. Participants were teachers of children aged four to five years working in the respective country’s University partnership schools. Partnership schools are those who work with the University to train teachers. The findings suggest Welsh teachers aim and plan to use their outdoor spaces explicitly for curriculum-related learning more so than their English counterparts who appear not to identify such specific curriculum-related learning outcomes but to emphasise personal/social/dispositional aspects of development for young children when outside. This research indicates how the divergence of education-related policy and curriculum appears to have impacted upon the way practitioners express their aims for outdoor learning in England and Wales. The values underpinning the relative curricular documentation appear to emerge in the intended practice of early years teachers in both countries. The values underpinning the academic discourse related to provision for outdoor activity is much less prominent in the responses to the surveys from English and Welsh teachers.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/1/1outdoor learningcurriculum aimsFoundation Phase, WalesFoundation Stage, Englandoutcomes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helen Bilton
Jane Waters
spellingShingle Helen Bilton
Jane Waters
Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and Wales
Social Sciences
outdoor learning
curriculum aims
Foundation Phase, Wales
Foundation Stage, England
outcomes
author_facet Helen Bilton
Jane Waters
author_sort Helen Bilton
title Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and Wales
title_short Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and Wales
title_full Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and Wales
title_fullStr Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and Wales
title_full_unstemmed Why Take Young Children Outside? A Critical Consideration of the Professed Aims for Outdoor Learning in the Early Years by Teachers from England and Wales
title_sort why take young children outside? a critical consideration of the professed aims for outdoor learning in the early years by teachers from england and wales
publisher MDPI AG
series Social Sciences
issn 2076-0760
publishDate 2016-12-01
description This comparative study between Wales and England was undertaken to better understand what influences or drives the professed aims for outdoor provision of early years teachers; specifically the extent to which professed aims reflect the research-based literature common to both countries, and/or statutory curricular, which differs in each country. The research gathered quantitative and qualitative data through an online survey. Participants were teachers of children aged four to five years working in the respective country’s University partnership schools. Partnership schools are those who work with the University to train teachers. The findings suggest Welsh teachers aim and plan to use their outdoor spaces explicitly for curriculum-related learning more so than their English counterparts who appear not to identify such specific curriculum-related learning outcomes but to emphasise personal/social/dispositional aspects of development for young children when outside. This research indicates how the divergence of education-related policy and curriculum appears to have impacted upon the way practitioners express their aims for outdoor learning in England and Wales. The values underpinning the relative curricular documentation appear to emerge in the intended practice of early years teachers in both countries. The values underpinning the academic discourse related to provision for outdoor activity is much less prominent in the responses to the surveys from English and Welsh teachers.
topic outdoor learning
curriculum aims
Foundation Phase, Wales
Foundation Stage, England
outcomes
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/6/1/1
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AT janewaters whytakeyoungchildrenoutsideacriticalconsiderationoftheprofessedaimsforoutdoorlearningintheearlyyearsbyteachersfromenglandandwales
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