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Research & Studies

Buffalo News – June 27, 2008

Decline in School Recess Continues

By Mark Sommer
Despite research showing that unstructured play is important to healthy childhood development, the amount of time that schools allow for recess continues to decline. One reason for the decline is the increased emphasis on standardized testing. Other factors include limited budgets for safe playground equipment, concerns about lawsuits from playground injuries, and fears of bullying. [+]

National

New York Times – May 12, 2008

Why Are Schools Designed Like Prisons?

Why Are Schools Designed Like Prisons?

By Allison Arieff
In an opinion piece for the New York Times website, writer and editor Allison Arieff laments the way that school design tends to inhibit outdoor activity as children get older. “What if we looked beyond the notion of schools as institutions,” she writes, “and thought about them more as laboratories for creativity, exploration, and innovation?” [+]

Commentary

Toronto Star – January 19, 2008

Island School Impresses Noted Wildlife Artist

By Robert Bateman
Renowned wildlife artist Robert Bateman writes in the Toronto Star of his visit to the Island School in the Bahamas, where American high-school students spend a semester without junk food, Internet access, or cell phones. Each day starts with a swim and a run, and students camp, kayak, and take part in marine research. [+]

Local | Access

KQED Radio – November 20, 2007

KQED Radio Features a Local Cure for Nature-Deficit Disorder

KQED Radio Features a Local Cure for Nature-Deficit Disorder

By Gabriella Quiros
A new program in San Francisco is introducing the city’s low-income youth to the pleasures of camping outdoors—without leaving the city itself. Developed by a collection of nonprofits, Camping at the Presidio aims to overcome the barriers that traditionally keep urban youth from visiting national parks: costs and a lack of exposure to camping. Eligible groups sleep overnight in a grove of eucalyptus trees, right within the city limits.

Quest is a TV, radio, Web, and education series by KQED that explores science, the environment, and nature in Northern California.

National | Legislation/Policy

The San Francisco Examiner – July 17, 2007

U.S. Rep. John Sarbanes proposes bill to integrate environmental education into NCLB

U.S. Rep. John Sarbanes proposes bill to integrate environmental education into NCLB

By Carolyn Peirce
Building Bridges to the Outdoors will be holding its second year of weeklong Environmental Leadership trainings this week in conjunction with the Sierra Student Coalition (SSC). The leadership training program introduces, inspires and educates youth, especially under-represented minorities, about the significant and contemporary environmental issues facing their local communities. [+]

Commentary | Review

The World Future Society ranks nature-deficit disorder #5

Children today are spending less time in direct contact with nature than did previous generations. The impacts are showing up not only in their lack of physical fitness, but also in the growing prevalence of hyperactivity and attention deficit.

Allies | Campaign/Initiative

The Learning Community – September 26, 2008

Student Letter Leads to $110,000 Grant from Lowe’s

image
A letter last year from a fourth-grader at a public charter school in Rhode Island inspired executives at Lowe’s to award the school a $110,000 grant to build a new playground. The student, Bernardo Garcia, wrote hoping the company would donate grass to turn a parking lot into a soccer field. Instead, his letter has resulted in a custom-designed playground that combines traditional climbing equipment and natural environments. [+]

National | Legislation/Policy

Sierra Club – September 18, 2008

House Approves No Child Left Inside Act

The US House of Representatives passed the No Child Left Inside Act of 2008 on September 18. If signed into law, the act would support local and statewide efforts to expand and improve environmental education for public schools. The Sierra Club, among others, hailed the vote, saying that the act “provides a solution for reversing the trends of childhood obesity and ‘nature-deficit disorder’ that are afflicting a generation.” [+]

State

(New Jersey) Daily Record – September 01, 2008

New Jersey Parks Commission Reaches Out to Infants

By Meghan Van Dyk
Proving that it’s never too early to start introducing children to nature, the Morris County Parks Commission hosts weekly Baby and Me hikes through different New Jersey parks. Other popular commission programs include the Nature’s Little Explorers series for children two to three years old and Woodland Adventures for children four to six. [+]

State | Built Environment

(Greensboro) News & Record – August 23, 2008

North Carolina Zoo to Build Outdoor Classroom

North Carolina Zoo to Build Outdoor Classroom

By Jeri Rowe
The North Carolina Zoo will soon begin raising $2.8 million to help create a four-acre classroom for kids, complete with caves, gardens, and a stream. And in another example of North Carolinian efforts to reconnect kids with nature, every family with a child attending Greensboro Montessori School is being given a copy of Last Child in the Woods. [+]

International

Ross-shire Journal – June 05, 2008

Free Play Gets a Boost in Scotland

Advocates for unstructured play are celebrating the opening of a new play area in the Scottish Highlands. Funded in part by the local government, the play area, which is part of a primary school, was designed to encourage children to use their imaginations. In addition to a set of extra-large dominoes, an obstacle course that children can build themselves, and a special area for water play, there is a quiet area where children can sit on oversized outdoor cushions surrounded by flower and vegetable tubs. [+]

State

Sacramento Bee – May 28, 2008

Virtual Field Trips Take Hold in California

Virtual Field Trips Take Hold in California

By Laurel Rosenhall
In California schools, the traditional field trip to a state park or other destination so that children can learn firsthand about the natural world is being replaced by the virtual field trip, which uses videoconferencing to beam nature lessons into the classroom. These virtual experiences, supporters say, are better than the alternative: no field trips at all. [+]

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Top Stories

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