Abstract

While psychological connection to nature is known to be associated with both pro‐environmental behaviours and well‐being, there is an urgent need to extend this research to consider impacts from the COVID‐19 lockdown period. Examining whether children's connection to nature changed during this period, identifying the drivers of these changes and determining the links between connection to nature and child well‐being can each serve to guide post‐lockdown initiatives to promote children's connection to nature.Three findings emerged from this UK sample of 376 families with young children. First, nearly two thirds of parents reported a change (most typically, an increase) in their child's connection to nature. Explanations for this increase included having more time, increased enjoyment of nature and increased awareness or interest in nature. Second, a third of children whose connection to nature decreased during the pandemic displayed increased problems of well‐being—manifest as either ‘acting out’ (externalising problems) or sadness/anxiety (internalising problems). Third, an increase in connection to nature during the pandemic was more evident for children from affluent families than for their less affluent peers.While connecting to nature may be an effective means of addressing child problems of well‐being, the divergent findings for children from different family backgrounds indicate that efforts to enhance connection to nature should focus on the barriers experienced by children from less affluent families. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

Highlights

  • Alongside its devastating health effects, the COVID-­19 pandemic has led to global disruptions to family life, with young children at especially elevated risk of long-­term negative consequences (Benner & Mistry, 2020; Bignardi et al, 2020; National Health Service, 2020)

  • While connecting to nature may be an effective means of addressing child problems of well-b­ eing, the divergent findings for children from different family backgrounds indicate that efforts to enhance connection to nature should focus on the barriers experienced by children from less affluent families

  • Children experiencing an increase in connection to nature were likely to have lower levels of behavioural and emotional problems compared with children whose connection to nature remained the same or decreased during lockdown, even when accounting for SES

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Summary

Introduction

Alongside its devastating health effects, the COVID-­19 pandemic has led to global disruptions to family life, with young children at especially elevated risk of long-­term negative consequences (Benner & Mistry, 2020; Bignardi et al, 2020; National Health Service, 2020). Prior studies of early risk and resilience demonstrate that protective factors straddle many different levels—­from individual child characteristics Prime et al, 2020; Taraban & Shaw, 2018) and important, but often overlooked, wider contextual factors, including children's cultural and physical environments Connection to nature is defined as, ‘the extent to which an individual includes nature within his/her cognitive representation of self’ It builds upon access to nature, or having green space in reasonable proximity to the family's residence or the child's educational setting, and engagement with nature, or time spent physically in that green space (White et al, 2019). While very stressful for many families, the early stages of the pandemic gave some children in the United Kingdom new opportunities to connect with nature. Empty roads, improved air quality and the sudden drop in noise and light pollution enabled birds, plants and animals to thrive in previously inhospitable environments, while providing new opportunities for children to listen to birdsong or notice wildlife (European Environmental Agency, 2020; Khan et al, 2020; National Centre for Atmospheric Science, 2020; Oliver, 2021; Rume & Didar-­Ul Islam, 2020; Zambrano-­Monserrate et al, 2020)

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