Nature deficit disorder
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature_deficit_disorder
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nature deficit disorder refers to a hypothesis by Richard Louv in his 2005 book Last Child in the Woods [1] that human beings, especially children, are spending less time outdoors [2] resulting in a wide range of behavioral problems.[3][4] This disorder is not recognized in any of the medical manuals for mental disorders, such as the ICD-10[5] or the DSM-5.[6] Evidence was compiled and reviewed in 2009.[7]
Louv claims that causes for the phenomenon include parental fears, restricted access to natural areas, and the lure of the screen.[8] Recent research has drawn a further contrast between the declining number of National Park visits in the United States and increasing consumption of electronic media by children.[9]
Richard Louv spent ten years traveling around the USA reporting and speaking to parents and children, in both rural and urban areas, about their experiences in nature. He argues that sensationalist media coverage and paranoid parents have literally “scared children straight out of the woods and fields”, while promoting a litigiousculture of fear that favors “safe” regimented sports over imaginative play.
In recognising these trends, some people[10] argue that humans have an instinctive liking for nature—the biophilia hypothesis—and take steps to spend more time outdoors, for example in outdoor education, or by sending young children to forest kindergartens or forest schools. It is perhaps a coincidence that slow parenting advocates send children into natural environments rather than keeping them indoors, as part of a hands-off approach.[11]
Nature is not only to be found in National Parks.[12] The chapter “Eden in a Vacant Lot” by Robert M. Pyle (page 305) emphasises the opportunity for exploration and fascination in small untended wildernesses, and rejoices in the 30,000 vacant lots in Detroit, arising due to downtown decay.
The diagnosis has been criticized as a misdiagnosis that obscures and mistreats the problem of how and why children do not spend enough time outdoors and in nature.[13]
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The No Child Left Inside Coalition works to get children outside and actively learning. They hope to address the problem of nature deficit disorder. They are now working on the No Child Left Inside Act, which would increase environmental education in schools. The coalition claims the problem of nature deficit disorder could be helped by “igniting student’s interest in the outdoors” and encouraging them to explore the natural world in their own lives.[21]
In Colombia, OpEPA (Organización para la Educación y Protección Ambiental)[22] has been addressing the issue for over 10 years. OpEPA’s mission is to reconnect children and youth to the Earth so they can act with environmental responsibility. OpEPA works by linking three levels of education: intellectual, experiencial and emotional/spiritual.
Dr. Elizabeth Dickinson, a faculty member at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, studied nature deficit disorder through a case study at the North Carolina Educational State Forest system (NCESF), a forest conservation education program. She attributes the problems described by nature deficit disorder as coming not from a lack of children outside or in nature, but from adults’ own “psyche and dysfunctional cultural practices”. According to Dickinson, “in the absence of deeper cultural examination and alternative practices, [nature deficit disorder] is a misdiagnosis—a problematic contemporary environmental discourse that can obscure and mistreat the problem.”
Dickinson analyzed the language and discourses used at the NCESF (educators’ messages, education and curriculum materials, forest service messages and literature, and the forests themselves) and compared them to Louv’s discussion of nature deficit disorder in his writings. She concluded that both Louv and the NCESF (both who loosely support each other) perpetuate the problematic idea that humans are outside of nature, and they use techniques that appear to get children more connected to nature but that may not. Dickinson called Louv’s book “an important call to fix damaged human-nature relationships,” and agrees that allowing students to connect directly with nature is therapeutic; however, she argues that it is what Louv’s narrative is missing that prevents nature deficit disorder from effecting meaningful change.
She suggests making it clear that modern culture’s disassociation with nature has occurred gradually over time, rather than very recently. Dickinson thinks that many people idealize their own childhoods without seeing the dysfunction that has existed for multiple generations. She warns against viewing the cure to nature deficit disorder as an outward entity: “nature”. Instead, Dickinson states that a path of inward self-assessment “with nature” (rather than “in nature”) and alongside meaningful time spent in nature is the key to solving the social and environmental problems of which nature deficit disorder is a symptom. In addition, she advocates allowing nature education to take on an emotional pedagogy rather than a mainly scientific one, as well as experiencing nature as it is before ascribing names to everything.[13]