Showing posts with label forest schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forest schools. Show all posts

Monday, November 9, 2020

Risk and Play


The Kickapoo Valley Forest School Leadership Team and Governance Council members recently attended a professional development training on risk and play in early childhood with Ross Thompson, M.Ed., an early childhood educator and teaching specialist. Ross shared some important perspectives and considerations for our team as we build the culture of forest schooling in our region. We have a few highlights that we'd like to share with our outdoor learning community.

When it comes to defining risk and play, everyone has their own internal risk calculator. As Ross pointed out, "Risky play depends on who is playing and how they feel." One person may think climbing a tree feels risky, while another person may think speaking out loud in front of a group feels like a big risk. For those of us who work and care for children, considering risk from the standpoint of how we personally view risk is an important first step. 

How did you play as a child? What experiences did you have that involved risk for you? Were they physical, social, emotional? 

As we consider how our own experiences inform how we work with children, it's important to understand that our concern for the risks of a particular situation may be tied more directly to our own experiences than to the reality of our children's experiences. 


Creating an environment where children can safely explore is essential to building strong bodies and critical thinkers. When the environment is controlled to eliminate any or all risks, children may lose some of their ability to weigh, ponder, and consider their actions and decisions. 

This doesn't mean that anything goes! In fact, it requires the adults in a caregiving environment to be vigilant and engaged in assessing risk but to do so in collaboration with children. Forest schooling is an amazing opportunity to provide children with natural risk-taking opportunities through lots of opportunities to watch, try, practice, and master many things that might be considered too risky in other learning environments. 

For example, many children love to climb and experience height. Rather than telling them it isn't safe to climb a tree or to rely on the common refrain of, "Be careful!" how might we help them consider the finer points of climbing? We could try asking questions like, 

"How can you check that the branches will hold you?" 

"What's your plan for climbing down?"

Another important point Ross shared is that while risky play often challenges our comfort zones, it should never be dangerous, terrifying, anxiety-provoking, or forced. Children thrive in environments that allow them to take their time and approach a challenge on their own terms. For some children, this might mean watching other children for an extended amount of time before feeling ready to try. Ross shared a great example of a variety of stumps placed in a learning space. Some children feel ready to jump off the tallest stump, and others need lots and lots of practice on the lower stumps. The benefits of having multi-age groups exploring and learning together reinforces the need for some children to play with more risk, and others to watch and observe on their own time. 

During our training session, we learned more about how play that involves risk helps develop motor skills, social and emotional frameworks, creativity, and cognitive capacity in young children. We look forward to sharing more about how risk, play, and forest schooling intersect at an upcoming KVFS Virtual Roundtable event on November 17, 2020. Visit our website at kickapoovalleyforestschool.org for the link

For more information about Ross Thompson's work, check out his podcast, Teaching with the Body in Mind, and visit the associated Facebook page


Monday, September 14, 2020

What's NEW at the Forest School?


The Kickapoo Valley Forest School team has been working to bring some great informational events to the community this fall. There will be monthly opportunities to learn more about forest schooling online via Zoom and in-person at the KVR.

Join us on the following dates:

Tuesday, September 22, 7:30 pm. Email kvfs@lafarge.k12.wi.us to register and you will be sent a link to the virtual roundtable discussion with the KVFS leadership team on the topic, What is a Forest School? There will be a Q & A to follow a brief presentation.

Saturday, September 26, 10 am - 1 pm at the Kickapoo Valley Reserve. Visit the KVR for a fun self-guided/self-paced tour and opportunity to meet Julia Buckingham, our lead teacher, at a point along the trail. She will be available from 10 am - 1 pm, but you are welcome to complete the tour at any time. Email kvfs@lafarge.k12.wi.us to register and you'll be sent a map and directions. This event is free if you attend during the 10 am - 1 pm time and park at the Visitor Center parking lot (S3661 State Highway 131, La Farge, WI 54639). If you and your family decide to visit another time, there is a self-registration station in the building by the Visitor Center. 

In other news, KVFS has a website in-progress and social media spaces for you to follow. Visit us on Facebook and Instagram @KickapooValleyForestSchool and on Twitter @KVForestSchool We appreciate all the follows, likes, and shares as we work to get the news out about KVFS. We encourage you to send us your email for upcoming newsletters about KVFS and forest schooling.

Finally, we will reveal our new logo this week, and we'd love for you to guess which forest animal we chose! Visit our Facebook page for daily hints and the big reveal later this week. Stay tuned! 






Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Kickapoo Valley Forest School Update


In June we announced that the Kickapoo Valley Forest School (KVFS) has been funded by a federal charter school grant. KVFS is a new public charter school created through a collaboration between the Kickapoo Valley Reserve and the LaFarge School District. It is set to open for its first class of 4K/5K children in August of 2021. An additional grade will be added each year through the 2nd grade. The school will be open to all children as a free and public charter.

Innovation in education is very alive in Vernon County, Wisconsin, and as we step into beginning a new school within the long history of educational institutions in this area, we are optimistic that creating a school to maximize students' and teachers' time outdoors is a valuable contribution to this education landscape. For more information about forest schools, check out our earlier post and resources here. 

What's New?

Since the announcement of the grant, our leadership team has begun our planning year with weekly meetings. Additionally, the leadership team has been working to recruit and train members for the KVFS Governance Council (KVFS GC). This public board will oversee the mission and vision of the project. The KVFS GC formed on August 13, 2020. Currently the board has 6 members.

Another exciting development was the hiring of our lead teacher, Julia Buckingham, who comes to us with a background in early childhood Montessori education and charter school development. Many in our community may know her for leading camps here at the KVR. Julia and her family call the Kickapoo Valley home.

Additionally, we've hired Ximena Puig as our curriculum coordinator. Ximena has had a foundational role as our Forest Fridays pilot program teacher. She brings a background in Waldorf and early childhood education to our school. Ximena has grown up in the area and is raising her family here, too.

Our website and social media presence will be coming soon, and we look forward to sharing monthly updates here on this blog as well. If you have any questions, please contact Jonel Kiesau, KVR Education Program Director and KVFS Planning & Leadership Team Coordinator, at jonel.kiesau@wisconsin.gov.

August is a season that traditionally involves a focus on returning to school, and this year brings so many more concerns and challenges for many families, teachers, and school staff. The creation of a new school for our region's youngest learners is an exciting prospect despite the struggle of doing so in the midst of a global pandemic. We are grateful for your support and interest in this endeavor. We look forward to sharing more with you soon. 

For more information about forest schools, check out these links:

Preschool Without Walls: A New York Times article about the forest school movement in the United States. 

Are Forest Schools the Way of the Future? An REI-produced video that includes an interview with Richard Louv, data about the increases in number of forest schools around the U.S., and information about barriers and challenges.