Waldorf Education and the Nature Connection

The Children and Nature Network, a grassroots organization promoting time in nature for children, has over 300 research reports in their synthesized collection touting the benefits of giving children ample time outdoors. Benefits include better physical and mental health, better cognition and even better test scores.

In Waldorf Education, the nature connection is also about showing children the natural rhythms of life and revealing our kinship with all living things. It is about careful observation to see what the natural world has to teach. And finally, it is about stewardship and understanding our place as humans collectively, and as individuals, who care take the natural realm.

What does it look like to cultivate a nature connection in Waldorf curriculum? There are the obvious hallmarks - school gardens, multiple outdoor recess times and science classes outdoors -- but each age group of students connects in a special way with nature according to their developmental needs and their curriculum.

Early Childhood

Young children are the center of their own universe, and this universe is one and the same with their sense of self. As such, they can be seen as selfish by some, but they are truly connected to all things, people, animals and nature in a deep and unique way. Waldorf educators do not try to prematurely bring a child out of this magical world and into greater awareness, but instead work with this consciousness to nurture a reverence and interest for nature.This is done by having children play within nature and also with natural materials while indoors. Both the indoor and outdoor play experiences are designed intentionally to be rich with natural beauty and wonder. In this way, direct experiences of nature are constant in Waldorf early childhood.Children play outside, in natural vs. playground settings, in all weather and all seasons. Outside the classroom, children are encouraged to climb trees, play in gardens and creeks, and manipulate items like logs and mud. Inside the classroom, all natural materials are used for furnishings and toys, including wood, stone, pottery, cotton and silks. A nature table is on display at all times in all classrooms, representing the seasons inside with collections of nature’s offering for that particular season.

Elementary School

Around age nine, after children have experienced a shift into Piaget’s concrete operational mode of being, students develop a sense of self that is separate from the world around them. Once students sense their own separation from the world, they can begin to study the things around them, including nature, in an imaginative and observational way.As students begin engaging with their surroundings and cultivating a new interest in the practical, material and natural world, Waldorf Education works to balance this observation of the outside world with an interest in the great outdoors.While elementary students still play outdoors regularly, they shift now to also learning in and from nature with lessons about farming, gardening, animal studies, and earth science. At this age, open minded observation is key, as it paves the way for the next developmental shift when observation leads to inquiry.

Middle School

Older children have a sharpened perception of the world as they learn about their place within it, both socially and geographically. Middle school children are also entering a newly rational phase and their potential for meaningful inquiry must be cultivated. There are few better ways to engage rational and open-minded inquiry than the study of nature, natural law and science.And so, an experimental approach to science is introduced, beginning with observation and exploration of simple concepts such as the properties and laws of sound, light and gravity and then moving toward more advanced concepts in chemistry, physics and biology.With these new studies, ecology is also explored in depth, and its study comes with lessons of theoretical and practical nature stewardship. And all the sciences are approached with that deep connection, established back in Early Childhood, forefront in mind. Inquiry is approached with the perspective that nature is a meaningful whole from which human beings are not separate. This means students studying nature and science are encouraged to observe carefully, not jump to conclusions, and instead engage in thorough inquiry to reveal what natural laws are at work. The idea being that approaching nature with open-mindedness and flexibility will then lead to more exact and truthful learning about natural phenomena.And so, in these developmentally appropriate ways, Waldorf encourages first a deep connection with nature; then careful observation and manipulation of the outdoor world; and finally thorough inquiry, understanding, and stewardship, so that our next generation can contribute and care take our deeply connected world.

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