Alistair and Ellen delve into the benefits of creating open-ended outdoor spaces that allow and encourage children to explore the risks they feel most comfortable with. Ellen shares how children from a very young age are aware of the environment surrounding them and that, when given the flexibility to do so, they can find solutions to manage their own risk-taking. As adults, we can facilitate, scaffold, and nurture children’s learning through risk-taking opportunities and activities.
Why is learning through risk important?
Risk–taking is a valuable part of children’s play. While a child’s safety is also a major priority, learning through risk also needs to be recognised as an important part of children’s lives and, most importantly, their learning and development.
It has many benefits, such as engaging reluctant learners, building creative thinking skills, and developing essential skills such as negotiation, turn-taking, and teamwork.
Find out all this and more in Episode 5 of the TTS Talking Early Years podcast!
Watch on YouTube:
(The views expressed throughout this podcast are the speakers’ own, and TTS does not take responsibility for the views and guidance highlighted as part of this recording).
(Please note: When referencing the speaker’s views, theory and work for the development of your own materials, please ensure the academic reference of the speaker is cited).
Listened and loved it?
Sign-up here for exclusive follow-up content and be the first to hear about new episodes.