Learning about the past: exploring the opportunities and challenges of using an outdoor learning approach |
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Authors: | Richard Harris Helen Bilton |
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Institution: | Institute of Education, University of Reading, UK |
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Abstract: | This paper examines the potential of outdoor learning for supporting children’s understanding of and attitude towards history. A class of primary school children participated in an intensive experiential, residential history programme. A range of data was collected before, during and after the residential programme, and the findings suggest that the experience had a positive impact on the children’s attitude towards history and enabled many of the children to be able to easily recall highly specific factual knowledge. However, the children’s understanding of history as a provisional construct was not developed, as it was not a strong feature of the programme. Nor was the experiential nature of the experience fully exploited. Overall the study suggests that such a programme has the potential to support children’s learning of the past, but a deeper understanding of history, drawing on the benefits of outdoor learning pedagogy, needs to be planned for more explicitly. |
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Keywords: | History education outdoor learning experiential learning primary education |
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