Nature’s Icebox – 4 Tips for Play in a Cold Weather Outdoor Classroom
by Heather Fox, Dimensions Educational Research Foundation
When children explore Nature Explore Classrooms every day they develop a personal understanding of the seasons. Here are four tips that encourage exploration and discovery in the outdoor classroom should your seasons include a winter wonderland.
1. Saunter like a Snowflake
Have you ever wondered how a snowflake might feel as it dances through the air? Take advantage of the winter weather, step outside and experience it. Mimic their movements and joyfully participate. Use questions to help guide children to use their whole bodies to communicate what they know and feel.
-What might you look like if you were a snowflake?
-How would you move?
Winter landscapes hold less color than Spring or Fall. Create some color and experience the effect of melting with this activity. Combine salt and tempera paint to create a colorful melting mixture. Allow the children to paint snow or ice and explore the properties. Encourage the children to use many words to describe what they are seeing.
3. Tool Tutorial
Get out your child-sized tools and help children use them. Snow and ice create a different medium and a new challenge for children. This type of heavy work can help ground and focus. The movement also keeps them warm and healthy.
4. Illuminating Ice
Freeze natural items like seedpods or berries in containers of clear water. Pop out and string nature’s beauty form the trees in your outdoor classroom. Ask children to observe the ways in which the birds and animals react to your creations. Have them notice how the sun shines through and sketch what they see.
Let us hear form you. What types of activities work in your cold weather outdoor classroom?