Home Upload Photo Upload Videos Write a Blog Analytics Messaging Streaming Create Adverts Creators Program
Bebuzee Afghanistan Bebuzee Albania Bebuzee Algeria Bebuzee Andorra Bebuzee Angola Bebuzee Antigua and Barbuda Bebuzee Argentina Bebuzee Armenia Bebuzee Australia Bebuzee Austria Bebuzee Azerbaijan Bebuzee Bahamas Bebuzee Bahrain Bebuzee Bangladesh Bebuzee Barbados Bebuzee Belarus Bebuzee Belgium Bebuzee Belize Bebuzee Benin Bebuzee Bhutan Bebuzee Bolivia Bebuzee Bosnia and Herzegovina Bebuzee Botswana Bebuzee Brazil Bebuzee Brunei Bebuzee Bulgaria Bebuzee Burkina Faso Bebuzee Burundi Bebuzee Cabo Verde Bebuzee Cambodia Bebuzee Cameroon Bebuzee Canada Bebuzee Central African Republic Bebuzee Chad Bebuzee Chile Bebuzee China Bebuzee Colombia Bebuzee Comoros Bebuzee Costa Rica Bebuzee Côte d'Ivoire Bebuzee Croatia Bebuzee Cuba Bebuzee Cyprus Bebuzee Czech Republic Bebuzee Democratic Republic of the Congo Bebuzee Denmark Bebuzee Djibouti Bebuzee Dominica Bebuzee Dominican Republic Bebuzee Ecuador Bebuzee Egypt Bebuzee El Salvador Bebuzee Equatorial Guinea Bebuzee Eritrea Bebuzee Estonia Bebuzee Eswatini Bebuzee Ethiopia Bebuzee Fiji Bebuzee Finland Bebuzee France Bebuzee Gabon Bebuzee Gambia Bebuzee Georgia Bebuzee Germany Bebuzee Ghana Bebuzee Greece Bebuzee Grenada Bebuzee Guatemala Bebuzee Guinea Bebuzee Guinea-Bissau Bebuzee Guyana Bebuzee Haiti Bebuzee Honduras Bebuzee Hong Kong Bebuzee Hungary Bebuzee Iceland Bebuzee India Bebuzee Indonesia Bebuzee Iran Bebuzee Iraq Bebuzee Ireland Bebuzee Israel Bebuzee Italy Bebuzee Jamaica Bebuzee Japan Bebuzee Jordan Bebuzee Kazakhstan Bebuzee Kenya Bebuzee Kiribati Bebuzee Kuwait Bebuzee Kyrgyzstan Bebuzee Laos Bebuzee Latvia Bebuzee Lebanon Bebuzee Lesotho Bebuzee Liberia Bebuzee Libya Bebuzee Liechtenstein Bebuzee Lithuania Bebuzee Luxembourg Bebuzee Madagascar Bebuzee Malawi Bebuzee Malaysia Bebuzee Maldives Bebuzee Mali Bebuzee Malta Bebuzee Marshall Islands Bebuzee Mauritania Bebuzee Mauritius Bebuzee Mexico Bebuzee Micronesia Bebuzee Moldova Bebuzee Monaco Bebuzee Mongolia Bebuzee Montenegro Bebuzee Morocco Bebuzee Mozambique Bebuzee Myanmar Bebuzee Namibia Bebuzee Nauru Bebuzee Nepal Bebuzee Netherlands Bebuzee New Zealand Bebuzee Nicaragua Bebuzee Niger Bebuzee Nigeria Bebuzee North Korea Bebuzee North Macedonia Bebuzee Norway Bebuzee Oman Bebuzee Pakistan Bebuzee Palau Bebuzee Panama Bebuzee Papua New Guinea Bebuzee Paraguay Bebuzee Peru Bebuzee Philippines Bebuzee Poland Bebuzee Portugal Bebuzee Qatar Bebuzee Republic of the Congo Bebuzee Romania Bebuzee Russia Bebuzee Rwanda Bebuzee Saint Kitts and Nevis Bebuzee Saint Lucia Bebuzee Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Bebuzee Samoa Bebuzee San Marino Bebuzee São Tomé and Príncipe Bebuzee Saudi Arabia Bebuzee Senegal Bebuzee Serbia Bebuzee Seychelles Bebuzee Sierra Leone Bebuzee Singapore Bebuzee Slovakia Bebuzee Slovenia Bebuzee Solomon Islands Bebuzee Somalia Bebuzee South Africa Bebuzee South Korea Bebuzee South Sudan Bebuzee Spain Bebuzee Sri Lanka Bebuzee Sudan Bebuzee Suriname Bebuzee Sweden Bebuzee Switzerland Bebuzee Syria Bebuzee Taiwan Bebuzee Tajikistan Bebuzee Tanzania Bebuzee Thailand Bebuzee Timor-Leste Bebuzee Togo Bebuzee Tonga Bebuzee Trinidad and Tobago Bebuzee Tunisia Bebuzee Turkey Bebuzee Turkmenistan Bebuzee Tuvalu Bebuzee Uganda Bebuzee Ukraine Bebuzee United Arab Emirates Bebuzee United Kingdom Bebuzee United States Bebuzee Uruguay Bebuzee Uzbekistan Bebuzee Vanuatu Bebuzee Venezuela Bebuzee Vietnam Bebuzee World Wide Bebuzee Yemen Bebuzee Zambia Bebuzee Zimbabwe
Blog Image

Improving children's access to nature starts with addressing inequality

Finding a balance between screen time and playing outside is ‘the parenting challenge of our time’. Photograph: Alamy

With children now better at identifying Pokémon characters than common species of British plants and wildlife, there are concerns that we are increasingly losing touch with nature. In January, the UK government announced it would set £10m aside for outdoor learning – part of a 25-year environment plan that includes a pledge to “encourage children to be close to nature, in and out of school, with particular focus on disadvantaged areas”.

Worries about children becoming disconnected from nature are not new. A 2016 study by Natural England found that more than one in nine children had not set foot in a park, forest or other natural environment over the previous year. Children from low income and black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) families were particularly affected. Just 56% of under-16s from BAME households visited the natural environment at least once a week, compared to 74% from white households.

Technology plays a part in this “complex and systemic” issue, according to not-for-profit The Wild Network. Mark Seers, chief wild officer of the organisation, notes that other factors include parental fear, reduction of play time in schools and lack of green space. While initiatives such as those encouraging street play can help – particularly for children from disadvantaged backgrounds who face declining opportunities for outdoor play [pdf] – overcoming the barriers is not necessarily an easy task.

“We’ll never be able to find the budget to attract the children’s attention like Facebook or Apple can,” explains Seers. “How do we find relationship and balance between screen time and wild time? Truly I think [that’s] the parenting challenge of our times.”

Conversations about the best way to tackle the issue are beginning to happen across many levels of education. In 2016, 15-year-old bird watcher Mya-Rose Craig organised a Race Equality in Nature conference in Bristol to bring together experts from nature conservation, universities and schools and discuss overcoming barriers that leave BAME children without equal access to nature. The idea came after she saw the impact her summer nature camps, which she has run since 2013, had on BAME children from inner-city Bristol.

“Last year, most [of the attendees] were aged 10 or 11 years old, and all lived in one of the most deprived wards in the city,” she says. “The camp was a real eye-opener in that the children all engaged with their natural surroundings. One child described how in the city there was nothing but the smell of pollution, but in the countryside ... it was a good smell, the smell of fresh air. None of the children had seen cows before or even stroked dogs.”

There’s an increasing interest from schools looking to improve all children’s access to nature through programmes like forest schools, which promote outdoor play. The Forest School Association, a professional body, says its membership has increased from 200 level three forest schoolpractitioners five years ago to 2,000 this year.

Jon Steele, a forest school leader in north Wales, says that he’s seen how outdoor education can be particularly helpful for children with challenging behaviour, some of whom come from deprived backgrounds. “There are no walls so [they] don’t feel penned in,” he says. “Teachers will come up to me and say ‘wow, I’ve never seen him so calm, he usually kicks off’.”

In Devon, Christina Turley, an English teacher at South Dartmoor Community College, takes groups of secondary school children struggling with literacy away on weekends run by Embercombe, a sustainable living education centre. The programme, called Tribe, focuses on shelter building, nature identification, crafts and tool work, and helps children develop mindfulness and an appreciation for the natural environment. Turley says it makes a real difference to pupils’ self esteem, literacy and empathy, even after they return to school. Forty per cent of the children on the Tribe project are from disadvantaged backgrounds.

“Our young people report that Tribe makes them feel calm and relaxed,” says Turley. “It helps them to see themselves as skilled and talented people, makes them realise they are equal to everyone else, and helps them to understand other people’s emotions. They feel more connected to nature, learn about creatures and birds, and look forward to coming to school.”

Encouraging children to get outside – whatever background they’re from – doesn’t have to be as difficult as changing the founding principles of a school, spending money hiring a coach and driving an hour out of the city, or organising an away weekend. Seers says increasing access to nature starts by challenging age-old assumptions about where it actually is.

“If we could start to re-imagine our canal banks, little patches of green space and the edges of our cities, and see them for their wild value we might start to overcome these barriers,” he says.

After working on this issue for five years, Seers believes this isn’t just about children. Their disengagement with the natural world is an indicator of a broader problem, a disconnection with nature, that needs to be addressed. “It’s about all of us,” he adds. “This [is] not just how we educate children, but other issues like how we design our cities, the role of advertising and children, how we bring technology appropriately into our lives. All of these things are contributing factors to the wildness of our children.”

Previous Post

‘We batter them with kindness': schools that reject super-strict values

Next Post

UK universities stronger in arts than sciences, rankings suggest

Comments