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Last Child in the Woods

Posted on Aug 29th, 2006 by T : Eyes in the Pine T
Kumeyaaykids7__2_

Do today's kids have "nature-deficit disorder"?

A new book argues that children desperately need to be able to play in the woods -- and that our culture's sterile rejection of nature is harming them in body and soul.  In the not-so-distant past, kids ruled the country's woods and valleys -- running in packs, building secret forts and treehouses, hunting frogs and fish, playing hide-and-seek behind tall grasses. But in the last 30 years, says journalist Richard Louv, children of the digital age have become increasingly alienated from the natural world, with disastrous implications, not only for their physical fitness, but also for their long-term mental and spiritual heath.

In his new book, "Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder," Louv argues that sensationalist media coverage and paranoid parents have literally "scared children straight out of the woods and fields," while promoting a litigious culture of fear that favors "safe" regimented sports over imaginative play. Well-meaning elementary school curricula may teach students everything there is to know about the Amazon rain forest's endangered species, but do little to encourage kids' personal relationship with the world outside their own doors. And advances in technology, while opening up a wealth of "virtual" experiences to the young, have made it easier and easier for children to spend less time outside.

Louv spent 10 years traveling around the country reporting and speaking to parents and children, in both rural and urban areas, about their experiences in nature. In "Last Child in the Woods," he pairs their anecdotes with a growing body of scientific research that suggests children who are given early and ongoing positive exposure to nature thrive in intellectual, spiritual and physical ways that their "shut-in" peers do not. By reducing stress, sharpening concentration, and promoting creative problem solving, "nature-play" is also emerging as a promising therapy for attention-deficit disorder and other childhood maladies. Indeed Louv, in both the book's title and content, suggests that while increased exposure to nature may prove a salve for many of the childhood disorders that now run rampant, the very ubiquity of those disorders is evidence that two generations of alienation from nature may have already resulted in considerable harm to our kids....(from Salon magazine).......

http://dir.salon.com/story/mwt/feature/2005/06/02/Louv/index.html

Access_public Access: Public 4 Comments Print views (619)  
Tagged with: nature, kids, psychopathology
Peacemaker Institute : Peacemaker Institute
9 minutes later
Peacemaker Institute said

another reason kids aren't in the woods. From an article in the Huffington Post:

“Back in the day — warning: here comes the Old Fart Rant — kids had real experiences and made real mistakes, played real games and got real injuries. MySpace takes kids who need fresh air and real friends and addicts them to their computer screens. Pump them up with snacks and soft drinks, and they're just like their parents — only “interactive.” Whatever that means.”

modernpeasant : Value Enigma
2 days later
modernpeasant said

call it what you will, the man is on to something. i was a military brat so to speak and lived all over. but it didn’t much matter back then because there were woods, praries, mountains, or something (last word meant to be italicized, don’t know if it will come thru that way) outside, a place to go, hang out, green, kudzoo was a kick because you could crawl inside of it for days. i remember a cable we found attached to a very high limb. at rest the dangling end was too high to touch, but with a long stick to snag it you could scramble up a vertical face and end up holding the end of the cable on a very high ledge.

then you jumped off.

jaBuddha : Buddha Bear
11 days later
jaBuddha said

Too special!  We have had this “Is Your Family Suffering From NDD?” flyer in our kitchen for several weeks now.  Didn't realize this was a national-level thing.  'Comcast Family Saturdays' has a program at a local Nature Center in Jacksonville, FL (Tree Hill).  Very cool!

antenna : Peace Monger
2 months later
antenna said

I heard him speak in Boston last spring - he's good, clear, taking no crap from nobody.  We need to see the change he advocates.  It makes a difference now, and it will make a huge difference in thirty years or so. 

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