Media releases

  • Brock education course to use nature as classroom

    MEDIA RELEASE: 00176 – 23 August 2016
     

    This fall, a Brock University class is leaving their desks behind and heading outside to learn.

    Professors Debra Harwood, from the Faculty of Education and Mary Breunig from the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences, are offering a Masters of Education course — ECE-Learning/Teaching in the Woods — outdoors in the woods. The entire course will be taught outside.

    “I think as educators we all need to come to the realization that learning happens everywhere and anywhere; learning happens when students are connected and vested with the material and spaces in which they inhabit,” says Harwood. “Educating outdoors is exciting; full of risk and one has to be open to the type of lateral–flexible thinking that is required.”

    The idea to host the course entirely in the woods evolved from Harwood’s year-long research project with young children being educated outdoors. In this project, Harwood led a team of researchers in exploring the play, learning and developmental benefits of a forest school program for young children.

    In Year Two of the study, the team will investigate the ways in which teaching and learning are enacted in various nature-based programs.

    “Last year, the three to five year olds and their teachers had an amazing time exploring, investigating and experiencing all that nature had to offer,” says Harwood. “I wanted to offer this type of experience to graduate students in the Faculty of Education as well.”

    The course will explore topics such as risk, sustainability, nature-culture binaries, place-based learning and teaching by immersing the students fully in nature. In addition, Harwood hopes the class will foster better theory-practice connections (e.g. experiential learning), develop and apply an inquiry mindset, critically evaluate the literature on outdoor learning, and connect students’ body-mind-spirits in their own learning processes.

    The course will also feature a cross-collaboration with the undergraduate Outdoor and Environmental Education class led by Breunig.

    “It’s all pretty exciting and I look forward to seeing what unfolds in the woods,” says Harwood. “The woods, like the course, will be somewhat unpredictable and offer us all a few surprises along the way, but experiencing the woods first hand is key to fostering a climate where some of the dominant discourses that shape education can be critiqued.”

    The class will be heading outdoors Tuesday mornings throughout the fall.
    For more information contact dharwood@brocku.ca

    For assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock’s Autism Spectrum Disorder Camp celebrates 20 years

    MEDIA ADVISORY: R00175 – 22 August 2016

    For two decades, a summer camp at Brock University has been offering developmentally appropriate movement education to children and youth in the Niagara Region with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD).

    The camp’s education-based curriculum is specifically focused on the needs of the participants and is a community service learning opportunity that attracts 30-50 Brock University undergraduate students and an almost equal number of campers each year.

    The Summer Movement Camp operates two, week-long programs and has served children and youth from ages three and up. By the end of summer, the camps will have hosted more than 2,000 participants.

    Media are invited to attend the ASD Summer Movement Camp 20-year Anniversary celebration Friday, Aug. 26 at 11:30 a.m. Representatives from Brock and Niagara Recycling, which has supported the camp for nearly all of its 20-year history, will join ASD Summer Movement Camp participants, student leaders and camp volunteers for a cheque presentation and photo opportunity.

    Brock University Kinesiology professor and camp founder Maureen Connolly, along with Niagara Recycling Chief Executive Officer Norman Kraft and a camp participant will be available to media for comment.

    Niagara Recycling continues to demonstrate a long-term commitment to supporting individuals with disabilities in the Niagara Region and has been a dedicated funder to the ASD camp since 1997, committing $275,000 toward disability programming at Brock.

    What: ASD Summer Movement Camp 20th Anniversary Celebration
    When: Friday, August 26 at 11:30 a.m.
    Where: Brock University, Walker Complex, Gym 2

    For more information or to confirm attendance:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases