German Tots Learn to Answer call of Nature
author: Mike Esterl
date: April 14, 2008
German Tots Learn to Answer Call of Nature
By MIKE ESTERL
April 14, 2008; Page A1
IDSTEIN, Germany -- Each weekday, come rain or shine,
a group of children, ages 3 to 6, walk into a forest outside Frankfurt
to sing songs, build fires and roll in the mud. To relax, they kick
back in a giant "sofa" made of tree stumps and twigs.
The birthplace of kindergarten is returning to its
roots. While schools and parents elsewhere push young children to read,
write and surf the Internet earlier in order to prepare for an
increasingly cutthroat global economy, some little Germans are taking a
less traveled path -- deep into the woods.
Germany has about 700 Waldkindergärten, or
"forest kindergartens," in which children spend their days outdoors
year-round. Blackboards surrender to the Black Forest. Erasers give way
to pine cones. Hall passes aren't required, but bug repellent is a good
idea.
![[Go to slideshow.]](http://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-BG901_it_wal_20080411124208.jpg) |
| Mike Esterl
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| Two students in Idstein's Waldkindergarten. |
Trees are a temptation -- and sometimes worse.
Recently, "I had to rescue a girl" who had climbed too high, says
Margit Kluge, a teacher at Idstein's forest kindergarten. Last year, a
big tree "fell right before our noses."
The schools are a throwback to Friedrich Fröbel, the
German educator who opened the world's first kindergarten, or
"children's garden," more than 150 years ago. Mr. Fröbel counseled that
young children should play in nature, cordoned off from too many
numbers and letters.
They are also a modern-day snapshot of environmentally
conscious and consumption-wary Germany, where the Green Party polls
more than 10% and stores are closed on Sundays.
Only a fraction of German children attend
Waldkindergärten, but their numbers have been rising since local parent
groups began setting up these programs in the mid-1990s, following the
lead of a Danish community. Similar schools exist in smaller numbers in
Scandinavia, Switzerland and Austria. The concept is sparking interest
far afield -- even in the U.S., whose first Waldkindergarten opened in
Portland, Ore., last fall.
"The computer arrives early enough," adds Norbert
Huppertz, a specialist in child development at the Freiburg University
of Education and a Waldkindergärten booster in Germany.
Academic studies of such schools are in their infancy.
Some European researchers believe Waldkindergärten kids exercise their
imaginations more than their brick-and-mortar peers do and are better
at concentrating and communicating. Despite dangers, from insects
particularly, the children appear to get sick less often in these
fresh-air settings. Studies also suggest their writing skills are less
developed, though, and that they are less adept than other children at
distinguishing colors, forms and sizes.
In the rolling countryside of Idstein on a recent
rainy morning, parents dropped off their children at a muddy parking
lot a bit after 8 as the temperature hovered around 40 degrees
Fahrenheit.
Inspecting a Worm
Some of the children, wrapped in thick winter
clothing, stooped over to inspect a worm. Then the five girls and four
boys trudged into the neighboring woods with their two teachers before
pausing to hold hands in a circle. "Good morning, sun, even though we
can't see you today," said the 51-year-old Ms. Kluge, as the children
joined in song and then acted out a play involving rabbits.
They hiked a few hundred feet into the forest before
settling down to jump in puddles, examine a hibernating lizard and
paint Easter eggs. A girl named Maxi went off to whittle a branch with
a hunting knife. Another made "chocolate-vanilla-strawberry-herbal
pudding" by stirring mud with a twig.
![[Margit Kluge]](http://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/HC-GL839_Kluge_20080411161650.gif)
At snack time, the children sat on logs and munched on
carrots and nuts while Ms. Kluge told them about the life cycle of
toads. A boy named Ben wanted to know whether a North American visitor
accompanying them was "a cowboy or an Indian." A bit before 1 p.m.,
after jumping in more puddles, playing around a makeshift tepee and
singing another song involving the Easter bunny, the children emerged
from the woods grinning and caked in mud to be picked up by their
waiting parents.
"It's peaceful here, not like inside a room," said Ms.
Kluge, who has headed the Waldkindergarten since it opened five years
ago.
The children rarely venture into a trailer in the
forest that's used as a shelter in extreme weather. Ms. Kluge says no
child has ever asked for a toy. The children improvise instead with
what the woods have to offer. And there haven't been any bad accidents
beyond the occasional scrapes and bruises.
Not everyone has a feel-good experience. Frankfurt
resident Donna Parssinen sent her son to a Waldkindergarten last year
but says he got Lyme disease from ticks. It resulted in meningitis that
temporarily paralyzed half his face. "I still like the idea" of
Waldkindergärten, says Ms. Parssinen, "but once is enough." Her son now
attends a four-walled kindergarten.
Still, many German indoor kindergartens take children
to nearby forests once a week to tramp around. A spokesman for
Germany's Ministry for Family Affairs said it welcomes the arrival of
Waldkindergärten, which typically receive local government subsidies
similar to those of state-run kindergartens.
Iwao Uehara, a professor at Tokyo University of
Agriculture, says he has been trying to set up such a school in Japan,
but the project is struggling. Until there's evidence that
Waldkindergärten graduates end up attending "famous universities," it's
going to be a tough sell, he says.
In Portland, though, Marsha Johnson launched Mother
Earth kindergarten last fall to combat what she calls "early academic
fatigue syndrome....We have 5-year-olds who are tired of going to
school." The 14 children spend four hours a day at the privately run
school playing in a state park forest.
How to Handle a Saw
Among the nature-based activities, children learn how
to handle a real saw. "A plastic saw is no good," says Ms. Johnson.
"You might as well give them a plastic life." The worst that has
happened thus far to the children is the occasional bee sting, she says.
Mimi Howard, a director at the Education Commission of
the States, which advises states on policy from Denver, says some U.S.
teachers feel pressure "to push academics earlier and earlier." The
federal No Child Left Behind law introduced standardized testing for
reading and writing by third grade, but some studies recommend more
"open-ended learning experiences" for young children. "We're in the
debate phase," she says.
In Fife, Scotland, Cathy Bache recently took matters
into her own hands and founded a private nursery school. About 20
children explore the local forests, "saw logs, make fires when cold and
look at fungi," she explains. Ms. Bache admits the children fall out of
trees "quite often" -- but that she doesn't let them climb higher than
6 feet, the cutoff point for her insurance policy.
Write to Mike Esterl at mike.esterl@dowjones.com