One of the main reasons to visit a beach or greenspace site is to have different experiences to those  at school or nursery. What has particularly interested me, has been the ways in which the environment itself has provided innate differences but also how the children have chosen to use those features in their own way. This has been nicely illustrated by the big steps leading down to the beach.

First time

These steps have provided opportunities that I never imagined. This is because I had never really fully considered their affordances. For a concise explanation of affordances and further links, a good starting point is Tim Gill’s blog post. However hopefully my illustration below shows how children benefit from open-ended structures and features which were not designed for learning or play. Yet because they choose to use the steps in a multitude of ways, they become a key part of  the beach experience.

In the photo above, the children are going to the beach for the first time. They treat the steps like I had presumed – they are a bit too big to step down, so the children jumped down them instead.

Falling steps

Occasionally children fall down, and have learned that it is up to them to pick themselves back up and keep going. Adults will not assist unless absolutely necessary or asked.

Struggling

The real challenge comes at the end of the session. The children are tired, there’s a lot of steps to climb and they are big – at least knee or thigh-high!

Big steps

The children have been quite amazing at this point. Firstly not one child has ever given up or moaned about the journey back up the steps. They get on with it.

Alternative route

Second, they have found ways to manage the steps. Not least, they have worked out that the path to the side is less work and effort on the way back up. So most end up on the informal side track.

Smooth track

There is no pressure to hurry back up the steps. The children take the time they need. So when a rest or alternative activity is needed, then it can happen. After all, it’s not every day that puddles form on the steps.

Puddles

And when a child cares enough to pick up a piece of litter, this sort of act should be acknowledged.

Litter picking

The children also find lots to keep themselves occupied. So before we know it, we’re back at the top of the steps again. In the photo above, the children went one step further to the right and deliberately chose to walk up through the long rough grass.

Having fun

How the children use the steps has changed my own perceptions. The possibilities of big wide steps are huge. Generally in outdoor spaces for little children we want child-sized steps not giant-sized ones. But the play value and level of challenge afforded by these big steps has become apparent. The children have appreciated the alternative choices of the side path. How often do we give children a side path or alternative form of travel?

The beauty of this, is that we can tuck away observations like these. When planning changes to outdoor spaces, we can then use such observations to inform the design and provide a more creative outdoor space.

We can also be more savvy about how we back link these experiences to the curriculum. Suddenly I’m regarding these steps as a key element of the children’s opportunities for physical development which I had not fully realised: jumping and hopping down the steps, crawling, stepping, crouching, bending, moving through rough grass, negotiating the range of different surfaces and uneven terrain. Suddenly  the PE experiences and outcomes have been brought to life by these children playing and exploring the steps in their own way. As a teacher, once again, my eyes and mind have been refreshed by what I have witnessed.

Translate »