
Submission Type: Practice-Based
Final Rating: Promising Practice
Date Submitted: Spring 2022
Focus Area: Child Development
Focus Population: Children, TeachersÂ
Contact Information:
Mandi Coleman
St. Luke’s Children’s Center DirectorÂ
(405) 232-2391
St. Luke’s Children’s Center
222 NW 15th St., Oklahoma City, OK 73103
Goals and Outcomes:
The downtown St. Luke’s Children’s Center seeks to cultivate a fully functioning outdoor classroom for the organization’s three outdoor spaces; these areas would provide infants, toddlers, and children up to 10 years of age access to equipment that would be developmentally appropriate for all ages. Installed equipment would consist of an art area, dramatic play area, seating/gathering area, natural dirt exploration area, planting (rolling live garden), sensory exploration area, swings, gross motor climbing toys, storage areas and an added water source. These structures would provide outside education or environmental education extension that would enhance active play, loose parts play, encourage connection to nature and the environment, assist in the development of cause and effect thinking along with interpersonal activities, social emotional regulation, and support of holistic development for children and teachers.
The downtown St. Luke’s Children’s Center playgrounds were replaced in 2015; at that time, the leadership team was intentional about modernizing the equipment, upgrading safety, and creating a fun and engaging play space. However, while the playground provides safe equipment that promotes active play, the next step is to improve upon what is already in place by adding more outdoor education components that encourage curiosity, reasoning, peer engagement and the use of motor skills. For instance, the installation of a garden will give our teachers the opportunity to engage children in the plant to produce process, giving young minds access to cause and effect thinking regarding the growing and cultivation process. The outdoor classroom will provide gross and fine motor skills development opportunities and provide a variety of culturally diverse foods; enabling our instructors to expand their curriculum. The proposed equipment would be added along with a curriculum aid, from Kaplan, Rainbow Fleet Resource and Referral and community partnership with Oklahoma City University professors that would aid teachers in acquiring and utilizing a broader spectrum of resources for holistic and child driven experiences.
The goals for our outdoor environmental education classroom will be that children will engage in direct interaction with the outdoors after installation and construction. After installation and training, teachers will work to foster engagement in learning though difference environmental elements, promote active play and healthy lifestyle, stimulate gross and fine motor development during daily time spent in the proposed space. Teachers will utilize the garden within the first growing year, to expose children to new foods and produce process. Children will assist in leading group projects that use the outdoor environmental learning space. During these times teachers will introduce self-awareness and regulation strategies, along with selfconfidence boosting activities within the first year of use after installation. During the first three years, currently employed teachers will attend training both locally and online to support the use and development of these goals. Teachers that are newly hired will attend the training within 90 days of hire.
Brief Summary:
Outdoor play is critical to child development from birth. Connecting to the world outside is imperative to the development of motor skills, self-confidence and curiosity. Access to playground equipment to engages children helps spark creativity and increases dopamine in the brain through physical activity and imagination. An outdoor classroom will allow St. Luke's to offer more opportunities for children to explore the natural environment around them while learning key concepts about food sources through an outdoor rolling garden. Time spent outdoors and away from screens is key to early childhood development and sets young minds and bodies up for a healthier life from the beginning.
The outdoor classroom is targeted at children enrolled in the children's center ages 1-10. Training and materials for utilizing the outdoor classroom equipment will be provided for teachers. It is our hope that by installing this equipment, we can provide additional tools for teachers that will help children use their energy in a constructive and healthy manner while adding opportunities for learning!
St. Luke’s Children’s Center – St. Luke's
