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PACEs in Early Childhood

The Perks of a Play-in-the-Mud Educational Philosophy [theatlantic.com]

 

Most American kids don’t spend large chunks of their day catching salamanders and poking sticks into piles of fox poop. In a nation moving toward greater standardization of its public-education system, programs centered around getting kids outside to explore aren’t normal.

But that’s precisely what students do at the Nature Preschool at Irvine Nature Center in Owings Mills, Maryland. There, every day, dozens of children ages 3 to 5 come to have adventures on Irvine’s more than 200 acres of woodlands, wetlands, and meadows. These muddy explorers stand out at a moment when many American pre-K programs have become more and more similar to K–12 education: row after row of tiny kids, sitting at desks, drilling letter identification and counting.

Mention how anomalous this seems, though, and the teachers at the Nature Preschool can only express their wish that that weren’t the case: Why is it odd for 4-year-olds to spend the bulk of their time outside? When did America decide that preschool should be boring routines performed within classroom walls?

[For more on this story by CONOR WILLIAMS, go to https://www.theatlantic.com/ed...or-education/558959/]

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Thank you for introducing this article. I wonder how this program is doing now. I would love to send my child to a place like this because it's not only about education, it's about growth in general, and it would definitely bring more benefits than sitting at a desk. My eldest is now in college, and I am entirely dissatisfied with the level and methods of the current education. In addition to various extracurricular activities, he has to do a lot of homework. It's good that there are services like Edusson, where we get to order custom essays because they are the most difficult. Before that, he spent hours in the library collecting the necessary information, often ignoring the rest of the items. I am silent about the fact that in addition to studying, college is obliged to prepare young people for adulthood and develop their social skills. So I want the youngest son to take a different path.

Last edited by Felicity Miller
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