The Artdog Image of Interest
There's a special magic that happens when kids play outdoors in an unstructured way. Last week's Image of Interest discussed NPAs, or Natural Play Areas in parks, and their value. But lower-case natural play areas don't just have to be in parks.
Lucky are the children with access to a farm or a big back yard that consists of something other than manicured grass and a plastic swing set--although kids tend to make do with whatever they've got. More varied terrain does tend to help get the creative imagination going.
Creative adults, especially those who grew up with access to interesting natural play areas, almost invariably get a smile on their faces when they think about kids playing outdoors--but in fact that's getting harder for children to do as years pass.
There's a record number of kids in developed nations--kids who seemingly have all possible advantages going for them--who suffer from depression and anxiety disorders. As Peter Gray has written in Psychology Today, "Rates of anxiety and depression among children and adolescents were far lower during the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War, and the turbulent 1960s and early ‘70s than they are today."
Gray and many others point to the decreasing amount of play time children are allowed, these days--especially unstructured play time--as a source of the trouble. Running wind sprints or practicing your pitching skills on a flat field--while possibly enjoyable and valuable--are WAY different from unstructured play in a natural play area.
But all too often we see parents or other caregivers worry more over the potential dangers of outdoor play--from overexposure to the sun to air pollution--than about the ill effects of too little outdoor play. "Supervise your child carefully," parents are warned. Supervise, certainly--and not all areas are equally safe for all ages. A little common sense, especially where toddlers are concerned, is well-advised.
But when they grow out of the toddler stage, don't forget that appropriate developmental needs change. And, believe it or not, there actually are physical and psychological benefits to doing things such as sledding, walking barefoot in the woods, or rolling down a hill. Even simply getting dirty can be good for the immune system. Of course, kids have known this for eons.
We adults should relax a bit, and let them do it.
IMAGE: Many thanks to CafeMom for this image. It's taken from the excellent article by Jacqueline Burt Cote, 6 Reasons Your Kid Should Play Outside, According to Science.
There's a special magic that happens when kids play outdoors in an unstructured way. Last week's Image of Interest discussed NPAs, or Natural Play Areas in parks, and their value. But lower-case natural play areas don't just have to be in parks.
Lucky are the children with access to a farm or a big back yard that consists of something other than manicured grass and a plastic swing set--although kids tend to make do with whatever they've got. More varied terrain does tend to help get the creative imagination going.
Creative adults, especially those who grew up with access to interesting natural play areas, almost invariably get a smile on their faces when they think about kids playing outdoors--but in fact that's getting harder for children to do as years pass.
There's a record number of kids in developed nations--kids who seemingly have all possible advantages going for them--who suffer from depression and anxiety disorders. As Peter Gray has written in Psychology Today, "Rates of anxiety and depression among children and adolescents were far lower during the Great Depression, World War II, the Cold War, and the turbulent 1960s and early ‘70s than they are today."
Gray and many others point to the decreasing amount of play time children are allowed, these days--especially unstructured play time--as a source of the trouble. Running wind sprints or practicing your pitching skills on a flat field--while possibly enjoyable and valuable--are WAY different from unstructured play in a natural play area.
But all too often we see parents or other caregivers worry more over the potential dangers of outdoor play--from overexposure to the sun to air pollution--than about the ill effects of too little outdoor play. "Supervise your child carefully," parents are warned. Supervise, certainly--and not all areas are equally safe for all ages. A little common sense, especially where toddlers are concerned, is well-advised.
But when they grow out of the toddler stage, don't forget that appropriate developmental needs change. And, believe it or not, there actually are physical and psychological benefits to doing things such as sledding, walking barefoot in the woods, or rolling down a hill. Even simply getting dirty can be good for the immune system. Of course, kids have known this for eons.
We adults should relax a bit, and let them do it.
IMAGE: Many thanks to CafeMom for this image. It's taken from the excellent article by Jacqueline Burt Cote, 6 Reasons Your Kid Should Play Outside, According to Science.
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