“Strive to make everyday the best day of your life, because there is no good reason not to.” Hal Elrod
As you know from our Rewildong Wanderlust Child Nature Study Programmewe love supporting children's play through nature and the outdoors. Here are 10 nature play ideas for celebrating Valentine’s Day.
Head outside and look for heart shaped leaves. Find other nature to decorate these with and then take a photo. This can then be turned into a card.
Set up a natural maths provocation around the story of Clara Button and the Wedding Day Surprise.
Create a natural batch of Playdough by leaving out the food colouring. Pop on a board along with some flower petals, cake tins and cutters.
Set up an invitation to explore loose parts
Use magnetic tiles and nature to create hearts
Create a Valentines Day Shelfie like @_little.thinkers_
Make some Forest love potions
Make the words Love and decorate them with nature
Make a heart shaped nature wand
Make Woodland Love Tea
Set up a flower shop and practice the gentle art of flower arranging
Set up a senso...
I have created a list of over 50 wonderful nature based children's books to support our Rewilding your Wanderlust Child Nature Study.
Do let me know your favourite nature books.
Watch six breathtaking landscapes transform in front of your eyes in this beautifully illustrated book.
Explore the beauty of the changing seasons in this timeless peek-through book with gorgeous artwork.
The latest research from the University of British Columbia (UBC) shows that children living in areas with access to increased greenspaces can set them up for greater success in life and help them meet their early years developmental milestones.
Researchers at the UBC faculty of forestry and faculty of medicine analyzed the developmental scores of 27,372 children in Metro Vancouver who attended kindergarten between 2005 and 2011.They looked at the amount of greenspace around each child's home from ages birth to five and also assessed traffic levels, community noise and air pollution.
“Most of the children were doing well in their development, in terms of language skills, cognitive capacity, socialization and other outcomes,” says study author Ingrid JarvisI, a PhD candidate in the department of forest and conservation sciences at UBC. “But what’s interesting is that those children living in a residential location with more vegetation and richer natural environments showed better o...
How could you use natural numbers in learning and play?
1. Add your natural Aster numbers to your woodland kitchen (available here)
2. Make a number line and add them to a washing line. Take a number away and ask the children which number is missing how they know that's the missing number? Can they put the numbers in order 1-10?
3. Can children correctly match numeral to quantity? Set this up as an invitation to explore with loose parts in a wooden tray.
4. Give each child a natural number card and see if they can collect that number of natural treasures.
5. Can they use the cards to make natural number statements to show their understanding of the number bonds to 10?
For more ideas for teaching early maths see my short course available here.
The Guardian reports that, "nearly half of Britain’s biodiversity has gone since industrial revolution." with a new study carried out by The National History Museum that shows the UK has lost more biodiversity than any G7 country, and is in the worst global 10%.
This shocking report makes us aware that the UK is one of the worst countries in the word at protecting and retaining the natural ecosystems of animals and plants. The Study points it's cause to the fact that the agricultural and industrial revolutions started in the UK. This caused woods and grasslands to be destroyed by machinery to create fields to grow single crops. As well as land being used for housing to increase the size of cities and towns.
This has left many species that were once nation wide now close to extinction. They include the Scottish wildcat, pine martens, natterjack toad, turtle doves and many insects like the cicada. Many other species like the hedgehog are also under threat with dwindling populati...
When it comes to planning for the first few weeks of the Autumn term with your new children I would focus on prioritising the following:
If you take a re-watch of my video from my Hygge Summer School you can see that I share the ways I would plan and organise the daily routine at the start of the year in Reception or nursery.
When the time feels right for you and your children you can then start to spark new curiosities and interests by introducing these to the children. As much as I believe lots of what we teach from should come from the children I also understand that there needs to be a balance of us as educators offering the opportunity to broaden the children's knowledge through the exposure to different and new experiences. These might be linked to seasonal changes, festivals or celebrations. ...
Many of you have now signed up to our monthly collection of Wanderlust resources delivered direct to your letter box (Begin your subscription here). With an aim to support and inspire Wanderlust learning in the home and setting each month.
For those of you have bought our May collection (available here as a one off) I wanted to provide you with a few other simple ideas that you could do around the themes in the collection.
1. Be a dreamer
The patch for this month is to 'Be a dreamer' which has to be one of my favourites. Isn't this what we want for all our children? Have you ever sat down and asked them what they want? Why not talk about what a dream actually is and share some of yours. Then create your very own vision board to show the things they hope for. This could be a collection of images symbolising their dreams stuck onto a piece of paper. Then place it somewhere that you will see often as this increases the chance of it happening.
You could also have a chat about where ...
I have had a fascination with rocks from a young age. I was always the child with my pockets full of natural treasures and would spend hours looking at what I had collected, sorting them into egg boxes or making patterns with my natural finds.
I remember as a child taking a visit with my Grandparents to the North Yorkshire sea-side town of Whitby and a shop keeper handing my a tiny piece of the gemstone Jet to admire. I loved the A school trip a few weeks later was a visit to Stump Cross Cavens, a series of underground caves in North Yorkshire which left me curious wanting to know more.
For my 7th Birthday that year I had asked for a subscription to a magazine called Treasures of the Earth. With each monthly magazine came a different rock or gemstone to admire and learn about. When I received the Pyrite (Fools Gold) I remember being in awe of it's sparkles.
Another fond memory I have is of my Grandad bringing home a bag of beach pebbles from the garden centre. I spent hours pickin...
The days are starting to get longer and brighter and new shoots are poking through the soil. It feels so good that Spring is on it's way!
Now feels like a good time to share some of my favourite spring resources and books (as i get asked this question a lot!) to support your nature based play. All of the resources I share on here are my personal recommendations and are not advertisements. It is also worth noting that it has taken a few years to collect the bought resources I show in the photos and nature based play can be done so effectively without any of these too! Just get outside and use the nature around you like we did when creating our Very Hungry Caterpillars out of twigs and leaves.
I often get asked on my training around nature based play if this is something that can be done if you're in an urban area and the answer is yes! We can do nature study by opening up the curtains and watching the birds from our window, setting up a provocation on the northern lights inside...
A little space on a shelf will be just perfect, a collection in a shoe box or even a display in the middle of your dining table. It's a wonderful way to bring the connection with the great outdoors into your home and to celebrate the season.
You could include some seasonal spotter sheets, natural number cards and ways you've recorded your sightings.
It can be something very simple found on a walk like a pinecone, a rock, flowers from the garden or a feather.
We like to add our drawings and paintings of the natural find too or a question on some card we've been curious about.
If you have the space you can maybe add some beautiful decorations you find of nature or a postcard that lights you up.
Here is a list of where you can find all the resources used in our winter bird nature table
Wanderlust Child Nature Journal