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Outdoor preschool is gaining momentum nationwide

Maryland is among the states moving to expand and diversify the naturalist approach to early education

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May 19, 2023 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
Children play and explore nature at the Forest Preschool at Carrie Murray Nature Center in Baltimore on May 5. Outdoor preschools have exploded in popularity over the past few years. (Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post)
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BALTIMORE — On a chilly May morning in Leakin Park, preschoolers at the Carrie Murray Nature Center Forest Preschool fanned out across a small section of the woods. Bundled up in colorful rain suits, boots and mismatched gloves, some children used tin buckets to scoop water from a creek while others traipsed off with a teacher to examine a large log a few yards away. There, they discovered something huge, orange and “very sticky.”

“There’s a chicken of the woods up here if anyone would like to see it!” a teacher called out.

The rest of the preschoolers stopped what they were doing and clomped up a muddy path toward the discovery. They veered into the underbrush, warning one another to watch out for sticks and “deer scat.” The children already at the log wordlessly made room for their friends, and they all gazed in awe at two blossoming chicken of the woods mushrooms.

“I found a very old one once,” a child said.

“I see black stuff,” said another, crouching to peer at specks on the mushroom.

“You can eat chicken of the woods, but first you have to cook it,” offered a third, sternly.

This outdoor approach to teaching preschool is gaining momentum nationwide. Long common in such countries as Denmark, Sweden and Germany, nature preschools and kindergartens have exploded in popularity in America over the past few years, growing from 250 in 2017 to more than 800 in 2022, based on a forthcoming report from the nonprofit Natural Start Alliance. In the past five years, five states have introduced legislation or established pilot programs to support outdoor learning as an alternative to traditional preschool and child-care programs.

Experts and advocates say the naturalist approach can be especially beneficial to children after the pandemic. In these preschools, children spend most or all of their time outside. The natural settings are generally calm and quiet, lead to lower levels of stress and foster traits like resilience, leadership, problem solving and perseverance, research shows.

Finding child care is still impossible for many parents

Yet outdoor preschools are generally inaccessible to children of color. Only 7 percent of students in these preschools are of Hispanic, Latino or Spanish origin, and only 3 percent are Black, according to a 2017 report. Those numbers haven’t budged, even as programs have increased.

As it stands, most states make it difficult — if not impossible — for outdoor early learning programs that lack physical buildings and other amenities, such as handwashing stations, to get licensed. So, they are run as mostly private, half-day programs — drawing in children from higher-income families, most of whom are White. The Carrie Murray Nature Center’s outdoor preschool in Baltimore is licensed and uses a park building for the times when children are napping, eating or need to use the bathroom. Program officials have advertised in local neighborhoods to try to improve diversity, but recruiting a diverse population is a challenge.

Unlicensed outdoor preschools are ineligible to accept state subsidies for low-income families, said Monica Wiedel-Lubinski, executive director of the Eastern Region Association of Forest and Nature Schools. “It just perpetuates that barrier for the most vulnerable kids and most vulnerable communities.”

The handful of states that are embracing outdoor education by adjusting licensing requirements are doing so in part to expand access. In Maryland, legislation passed last month and sent to Gov. Wes Moore (D) would create state licensing standards. The bill would also establish a pilot program to test outdoor preschool standards and track efforts to expand the play-based outdoor model. If the pilot is successful, it will set the stage for an expansion of such preschools, which could chip away at persistent child-care shortages. Outdoor preschools, once licensed, will be able to participate in the state’s child-care-quality program and enroll families that pay with state subsidies.

While pandemic-related health concerns spurred the recent uptick of outdoor preschools, the hands-on approach of these programs is backed by a growing body of research on the importance of play for children’s learning and emotional well-being. Moreover, spending time in nature can benefit young children: Research shows it can boost academic performance, reduce symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, improve mental health, and promote physical activity and the development of motor skills, among other things.

It may seem as though children at the Forest Preschool at Carrie Murray Nature Center are simply playing for hours each day, but teachers say they are developing valuable skills. They are practicing leadership when they help less-experienced classmates navigate the terrain. They learn how to work together when they collaborate to build a waterfall or a miniature mudslide. And they develop empathy when they check on friends who have slipped in the mud.

“I see these kids thriving,” said Monica French, director of the Forest Preschool, which is run by Baltimore City Recreation and Parks. “When they are little, we let them play and respect the fact that they are learning through play.”

Some research shows that students in outdoor programs are just as academically ready for elementary school as their peers from more traditional schools. Kids who learn outside may derive additional benefits. A report on Washington state’s outdoor preschool pilot found children in one program experienced fewer incidents of challenging behavior when they attended preschool outdoors, and the prevalence of childhood obesity was reduced for children in another program.

French said she sees these benefits daily at the Forest Preschool. On a recent drizzly morning, she perched above a creek as several preschoolers stood in a chocolate-brown puddle.

“It’s 9 inches deep!” announced Bash, a 4-year-old with curly blond hair who was wearing a red-and-gray rain suit, or a “muddy buddy,” as it’s called in the outdoor preschool world.

As the rest of the group wandered off, Bash dropped her ruler in the water and gasped when it stayed afloat. A friend descended the muddy hill to the creek and splashed into the water.

“Can I try?” he asked.

Bash nodded and handed him a plastic ruler. He dropped it in the water, then fished it out and examined it.

“These ones are inches, and those ones are centimeters,” Bash said, pointing to the sides of the ruler.

The two crouched and called out measurements as they inched their way through the water.

French said her biggest fear when children leave her preschool for kindergarten “isn’t that they won’t have their writing skills but that they’re going to go sit behind a desk all day long.”

While Maryland’s legislation provides a significant boost for outdoor programs, considerable challenges remain. The bill gives priority for participation in the pilot to programs that are licensed as summer camps, child-care programs or registered family child-care homes enrolled in the state’s quality rating system. But it doesn’t offer extra funding to help new preschools get off the ground.

In northeast Baltimore, officials with Backyard Basecamp, which focuses on expanding access to nature among communities of color, hope their organization will be among the pilot programs testing out the new regulations. While the nonprofit runs a nature-based summer camp, past efforts to launch an outdoor preschool at the organization’s 10-acre green space have been stymied, mostly by funding and staffing shortages. The program is working on training naturalists of color who can become teachers to “reflect the people we are serving,” said Tatiana Mason, program director at Backyard Basecamp.

Mason added that outdoor preschools are expensive to run. “There’s a lot of gear, land is really expensive, and to have a place that is accessible and nature-based is very few and far between,” she said. While the pilot program could greenlight an outdoor preschool at Backyard Basecamp, there are other challenges, including stereotypes and fears around nature-based learning. “People think nature’s not for them, it’s not safe. That’s why it’s important to me to get people, especially children, a connection with nature starting early,” Mason said.

As Maryland works to formalize outdoor preschools, the state’s two dozen existing nature-based early learning programs are watching to see how officials handle licensing. “The whole licensing system is really built upon a framework where learning happens indoors and the outdoors is a break area,” said Christy Merrick, director of the Natural Start Alliance, which supports nature and outdoor learning programs.

The state will have to consider a slew of things, including rules for diaper changing, staff-to-child ratios and proper clothing for children. Maryland’s officials could look to Washington state, where licensing standards for outdoor preschools require a staff-to-child ratio and group size smaller than that of center-based early learning programs to ensure there is “appropriate” supervision of children while outdoors. Providers must also devise a risk management plan for such nature-based activities as encountering wildlife. Teachers need not only the standard credentials but also experience or training in environmental or outdoor education. Children must wear proper clothing and have a safe building available for emergencies.

Children could reap the benefits of an increase in the number of licensed nature schools, supporters say. Ilina Chaudhuri, the parent of a preschooler at the Forest Preschool, was originally skeptical that preschool could work outdoors, especially in a large public park like Leakin. But after seeing the impact on her son, she has become a believer. Before enrolling, she said, “I wondered, ‘Is my child going to be one of these hippy-dippy, tree-hugging kids and doesn’t have any of those academic skills?’”

Now, Chaudhuri said her 4-year-old, Ravi, has developed early academic skills, including letter recognition, writing his name and counting. He has also become better at regulating his behavior and emotions. He’s more patient and able to resolve conflict, which she attributes to the peaceful environment in which he spends his days.

Recently, when their family’s dog died, Ravi was remarkably calm. “He was already familiar with this idea [of death] from what he’s observed every day” in nature, Chaudhuri said, incredulous. “He knew there’s a life cycle. He used the word, ‘decomposition.’”

This article about outdoor preschool access was produced by the Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.