Journal for Research in Arts and Sports Education (Jan 2022)

Knowing-with-snow in an outdoor kindergarten

  • Pernille Bartnæs,
  • Anne Myrstad

DOI
https://doi.org/10.23865/jased.v6.3012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 76 – 91

Abstract

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This article highlights how reciprocal relationships between children and the environment can contribute to exploring understanding of children’s learning in the outdoor environment. We draw on data from a kindergarten in the northern part of Norway, where we have carried out fieldwork three hours a week from October to mid-May. During this period, the outdoor area was covered with snow of varying qualities. Snow and weather conditions are included as elements in a relational understanding, in which the environment is understood as open and dynamic – an interaction between past and present, between geography, materiality, people and the ‘more-than-human’. The learner and the environment are understood as an indivisible process, where different elements exercise a reciprocal influence on each other. Using Ingold’s concept of correspondence, we explore how children learn by being within and with the world. The article is a contribution to creating a nuanced understanding of children’s learning and the educator’s role within an outdoor environment in kindergarten practice.

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