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How Nature Nurtures. Kacee Weaver Analysis of Contemporary Issues in Education and Montessori Submitted To: Sandra Wyner Andrew The Center for Contemporary Montessori Programs St. Catherine University July 28, 2013. 13 to 20 percent of children in the US suffer from Mental Disorders.
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How Nature Nurtures Kacee Weaver Analysis of Contemporary Issues in Education and Montessori Submitted To: Sandra Wyner Andrew The Center for Contemporary Montessori Programs St. Catherine University July 28, 2013
13 to 20 percent of children in the US suffer from Mental Disorders • With the most prevalent being Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
An Estimated $247 BILLION dollars is spent each year on childhood mental disorders • One Swedish study showed; Coming from a family on welfare benefits increased the risk of ADHD medication by 135% when compared with households not claiming benefits. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/06/100601072634.htm
On average, children in the US spend as little as 30 minutes outside each day involved in unstructured play • And, as many as 7 hours in front of an electronic screen • Two-Thirds of children can’t pass a basic physical and 40% show early signs of heart circulation problems
Contact with nature is essential to healthy child development
Adult Memories of Childhood • “Going to Yellowstone National Park with my grandparents”~ Shantell Gillman • “Finding my first horse when I was out walking my puppy when I was 10” ~Hillary Meader • “Going camping at the beach with my family”`AliciaBlackard • “Riding 3-wheelers in a huge field for my birthday”~Tony Weaver • “Bottle feeding baby goats on my grandparents farm”~Amanda Mullins • “Building tree houses and playing in the river”~Me
Last Child in the Woods’Richard Louv says; “Immersion in a natural environment was shown to improve concentration, mood, and perceptions of health in children. Another study found that outdoor space fosters more creative mental activity, improves child/adult interaction, and can relieve the symptoms of attention-deficit disorders.”
Isn’t it Dangerous outside? • The greatest danger lies in raising a generation of couch-potatoes with no sense of community, autonomyor self-confidence; not in the fear of a skinned knee, broken bone or unproven kidnapping statistics.
If You LOVE your children, make them go outside! • “Children with generous exposure to nature, those who learn to see the world directly, may be more likely to develop the psychological survival skills that will help them detect real danger, and they are therefore less likely to seek out phony danger later in life. Play in nature may instill instinctual confidence.”
References • Candra, D. T. (2009). LAST CHILD IN THE WOODS: Saving our children from nature-deficit disorder. Childhood Education, 85(5), 329. Retrieved fromhttp://search.proquest.com/docview/210393857?accountid=26879 • Tucker, P. (2006). Curing "nature deficit disorder". The Futurist, 40(3), 13. Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/218596005?accountid=26879 • http://www.cdc.gov/features/childrensmentalhealth/ • http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/06/100601072634.htm • http://richardlouv.com