Are your students unable to concentrate on their lessons in the classroom? Take them for outdoor learning sessions.
According to a study, a lesson in the lap of nature can significantly increase children's attention level and boost their learning.
The study showed that post an outdoor lesson, students were significantly more attentive and engaged with their schoolwork and were not overexcited or inattentive.
Taking students outside help them concentrate more. Wikimedia Commons
Moreover, the number of times the teacher had to redirect a student's attention to their work was roughly halved immediately after an outdoor lesson.
"Our teachers were able to teach uninterrupted for almost twice as long at a time after the outdoor lesson and we saw the nature effect with our sceptical teacher as well," said Ming Kuo, a scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the US.
For the study, published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology, researchers tested their hypothesis in third graders (9-10 years old) in a school.
A few minutes outside help students concentrate better. VOA
Over a 10-week period, an experienced teacher held one lesson a week outdoors and a similar lesson in her regular classroom and another, more sceptical teacher did the same. Their outdoor "classroom" was a grassy spot just outside the school, in view of a wooded area.
A previous research suggested that 15 minutes of self-paced exercise can also significantly improve a child's mood, attention and memory. IANS