CURIOSITY,
WONDER,
ATTENTION
Activities and tools to engage children in outdoor learning, curated by John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren.
Activities and tools to engage children in outdoor learning, curated by John Muir Laws and Emilie Lygren.
builds creativity, curiosity, and observation and critical thinking skills
nurtures a connection to nature and the outdoors
invites children and adults alike slow down, pay attention, and experience awe and wonder.
Journaling sparks deep observation, builds critical thinking and visual literacy skills, nurtures a connection to the outdoors, and supports creative expression.
Nature journal entries include observations, questions, and connections, and can focus on documenting any part of the outdoors– from flowers in a garden to birds out the window, from mud puddles at a local park to spiderwebs on the schoolyard, from house plants to beans from the pantry. Journal entries can also include personal reflections and inquiry into ideas and concepts.
We intentionally write, draw, and use numbers in our nature journal entries. Writing strengthens our thinking because it invites us to organize our thoughts as we put them on the page. Drawing leads to close, careful observation and improved memory. Using numbers reveals significant patterns and a whole new set of observations.
Offering structure in the form of activities is a way to support meaningful, successful journaling experiences. Simply handing students some paper and saying “Go journal!” without any further guidance can lead to overwhelm. Too much structure is also not effective, as worksheets and “fill in the blank” exercises don’t make room for students’ observations and ideas– the heart of authentic journaling and learning.
Our activities use three types of scaffolding:
a part of nature to study– for example, leaves, stream currents, cracks in the mud, a flock of birds, a spider. A defined focus supports students to spend their time making observations, not figuring out what to observe.
a focus or goal for observation and thinking– for example, making comparisons, mapping location, focused study of a species, timed observations.
and some strategies for recording information– for example, options for page layout (such as dividing the page in half); suggestions for including labels with a drawing; types of drawings or views to show; ways to integrate words, pictures, and numbers on the page.