School-based outdoor education supports teachers’ subjective well-being
This Canadian study tested the hypothesis that school-based outdoor education and teachers’ subjective well-being are positively linked. Those who taught outdoors reported better scores for total subjective well-being, life evaluation, sense of fulfillment and purpose, affect, school connectedness, enjoyment, anger, anxiety, workload, organizational well-being and teacher-student interactions than teachers who only taught indoors. However, the frequency of their outdoor lessons was not significantly related to most subjective well-being measures.
Deschamps, Scrutton & Ayotte-Beaudet, 2022. School-based outdoor education and teacher subjective well-being: An exploratory study.
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Outdoor education may contribute to educators’ mental health, professional development and self-care
In this Canadian article, experts in mental wellness, applied teaching and outdoor education built a case that outdoor education might (1) improve educators’ mental wellness, (2) build teachers’ knowledge, skills, attitudes and behaviors, and (3) serve as a site of self-care. These claims were mostly conceptual and anecdotal, so the authors called for empirical studies that document the spectrum of benefits teachers experience when taking students outside.
Barker, Chisholm & Foran, 2024. Discussing mental health benefits for teachers participating in outdoor education in Canada: a conceptual analysis and future research directions.
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Both elementary students and teachers benefit from outdoor science lessons
Both students and teachers learned through nature-based science teaching in this U.S. study. Teachers who participated in outdoor education expeditions learned about science, active and situated learning, and strategies for both indoor and outdoor science instruction. These findings suggest that outdoor education can support student and teacher learning, compensate for elementary teachers’ limited science knowledge and generalist teaching backgrounds, and support teachers’ professional development.
Carrier et al., 2023. Teachers as learners: Outdoor elementary science.
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Outdoor learning can broaden and transform curriculum and pedagogy in place-oriented ways
Set in an Australian primary school, this study used teacher vignettes to illustrate how school ground ecologies and place-based pedagogies can shift teachers’ roles and increase student learning and engagement. Taking classes outdoors helped teachers address a common struggle — fostering children’s engagement — as they learned science and math in more embodied, applied and self-directed ways. These vignettes could help teachers envision how to enact locally-based curriculum and pedagogy on school grounds.
Green & Rayner, 2020. School ground pedagogies for enriching children’s outdoor learning.
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