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A Face for All Seasons
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The fall is a great time for children to explore the outdoors, learn about seasonal transitions
and develop a variety of cognitive skills. Nature-related experiences can foster a child's emerging
sense of wonder, and the earliest years of life are the best time to begin providing direct,
on-going interactions with the natural world. There's no need to venture to far-away national parks
to explore nature. In fact, young children learn best when they are in an environment that is
familiar and comfortable. Focus on the foliage, animals, and insects in your own backyard, the
playground, or local park before venturing into heavily wooded areas. Keeping safety concerns in
mind, adults should allow children to touch, feel, and smell while they explore the environment.
Following are some autumn activities for children to engage in with their family members or
child care providers that can promote positive attitudes and feelings toward the environment.
Allow older children to experience the beauty of fall by taking discovery walks. Collect leaves
that have fallen or make a big pile to jump into. Children can use leaves to learn about shape and
texture and create their own art by making leaf rubbings. Collect a few leaves that aren't too dried
out or crunchy and place them (veins up) onto a table top. Tape a piece of paper over the leaves and
rub crayons over the paper. Instantly a picture emerges that will delight and amaze young minds.
Children's sorting skills can be enhanced by categorizing leaves by color or size. Provide an
assortment of inexpensive containers (for example, empty oatmeal or pasta boxes), so they can place
the red leaves in one container, the gold leaves in another, and the orange leaves in the third. Help
to expand children's color vocabulary by talking with them about the vibrant colors.
Babies enjoy color, too! Take infants outdoors and talk to them about nature. Point to the clouds
or to the birds flying overhead as they migrate south for the winter months. Go on a scavenger hunt
together and collect pine cones, acorns, or twig branches. Toddlers and preschoolers might enjoy
counting the items they have found while sitting outside with you. Children can make bird feeders
with their pine cones by tying a string to the wide part of the pine cone; rolling the cone in
peanut butter; shaking it in a bag of bird seed; and hanging the cone onto a branch outside. Talk
with your children about the birds as they come to feed from the cone.
Sit outside and watch the busy squirrels as they collect food for the winter. Discuss what other
animals do to prepare for cold weather.
Plan a visit to a nearby farm to watch the harvesting or visit a pumpkin patch. Older children
can select a pumpkin, and with your help, roast the seeds in an oven. If there isn't a farm or
pumpkin patch nearby, pack a picnic lunch and eat it in the backyard or in the park. Take along a
couple of children's books about nature from the library.
Celebrate the season by making vegetable prints. Adults should cut potatoes, cauliflower or corn
cobs in half and pour a small amount of finger paint into a flat, plastic dish. Each child can dip
the vegetable pieces into the paint, then onto paper or cloth to create an original design.
Children in the primary grades can create an "autumn memory book" with pressed leaves,
pictures, and writings about fall activities and specific events they have enjoyed. Wrap the book in
paper and put it away until it's almost spring. When they open it again and look at the leaves and
read their writings, they will be able to remember autumn and can compare the differences in seasonal
colors.
Positive interactions with the natural environment is an important part of healthy child
development. These experiences can enhance learning and elicit a sense of wonder and joy from
young children, and play a critical role in shaping lifelong attitudes, values, and patterns of
behavior toward nature. Child care professionals and family members should foster this development
by providing opportunities for exploring the outdoors and sharing in the fun.
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Credits
National Association for the Education of Young Children
1509 16th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC 20036-1426
Phone: 202-232-8777 800-424-2460
FAX: 202-328-1846
Web: http://www.naeyc.org/default.htm
Copyright © 1997 by National Association for the Education of Young Children.
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