Modeling Child-Nature Interaction in a Forest Preschool: A Behavioral Analysis Aligned with Landscape Affordances
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Weiss, Thea Marie
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Abstract
Interaction with nature has been positively linked to the psychological, physiological, and social development of children. In turn, nature preschools offer children the means for such interaction on a daily basis. However, little is known about child-nature interactions in such educational settings. In this observational study, I sought to model the child-nature interaction of 49 three-to-five year olds at Fiddleheads Forest Preschool located in the University of Washington Arboretum. Through a randomized time-sampling methodology, children’s interactions were video-recorded over a period of 35 weeks. Based on a second-by-second coding of the video data, a model was developed that is comprised of 26 child-nature interaction patterns, which refer to functional units of human interaction that are aligned with the affordances of the landscape. I also predicted that relatively more wild areas of the nature classroom would be positively associated with child-nature behaviors that were more relational – more in balance and in harmony with nature. Results confirmed this hypothesis. Discussion focuses on the ontogenetic and phylogenetic significance of the modeled child-nature interactions, and of the importance of more wild forms of nature for human development and flourishing.
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Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2019
