Abstract

This paper contributes to the growing body of research concerning use of outdoor spaces by educators, and the increased use of informal and outdoor learning spaces when teaching primary school children. The research takes the example of forest school, a form of regular and repeated outdoor learning increasingly common in primary schools. This research focuses on how the learning space at forest school shapes the experience of children and forest school leaders as they engage in learning outside the classroom. The learning space is considered as a physical space, and also in a more metaphorical way as a space where different behaviours are permitted, and a space set apart from the national curriculum. Through semi‐structured interviews with members of the community of practice of forest school leaders, the paper seeks to determine the significance of being outdoors on the forest school experience. How does this learning space differ from the classroom environment? What aspects of the forest school learning space support pupils’ experiences? How does the outdoor learning space affect teaching, and the dynamics of learning while at forest school? The research shows that the outdoor space provides new opportunities for children and teachers to interact and learn, and revealed how forest school leaders and children co‐create a learning environment in which the boundaries between classroom and outdoor learning, teacher and pupil, are renegotiated to stimulate teaching and learning. Forest school practitioners see forest school as a separate learning space that is removed from the physical constraints of the classroom and pedagogical constraints of the national curriculum to provide a more flexible and responsive learning environment.

Highlights

  • This paper engages with the growing area of research on geographies of education (Taylor 2009; Holloway et al 2010; Holloway and Jo€ns 2012), in particular the growing use of outdoor learning spaces in education in primary schools

  • Participant observation and subsequent analysis of notes regarding each cohort, and again when all cohorts had been completed, identified research themes to be explored in further detail: What were children learning at forest school? How did the outdoor learning space influence the sessions? How did children respond to the sessions? This paper focuses on the second question concerning the outdoor learning space

  • The move outdoors to a novel space, with sessions led by practitioners, was a move not just to a physical space outside, and a metaphorical space that was freer in terms of behavioural expectations, time pressures, demands of the national curriculum and assessment, and pressure for pupils and teachers to achieve

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Summary

Introduction

This paper engages with the growing area of research on geographies of education (Taylor 2009; Holloway et al 2010; Holloway and Jo€ns 2012), in particular the growing use of outdoor learning spaces in education in primary schools. This paper examines the role of outdoor spaces on learning, using forest school as an example. This research takes the case of forest school, a form of outdoor learning that is commonly practised in primary school settings in the UK. Forest school enables children to engage in regular and repeated opportunities to learn in an outdoor setting. This qualitative research was conducted with forest school practitioners: a community of experienced learning professionals who are able to reflect on leading many sessions of forest school

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