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Nature deficit disorder

Nature-deficit disorder is the idea that human beings, especially children, are spending less time outdoors than they have in the past, and the belief that this change results in a wide range of behavioral problems.

Children playing in a stream

This disorder is not recognized in any of the medical manuals for mental disorders, such as the ICD-10[1] or the DSM-5.[2]

This term was coined by Richard Louv in 2005.[3] Louv does not intend the term "disorder" to represent an actual illness but instead intends the term to act as a metaphor describing the costs of alienation from nature.[4] Louv claims that causes for nature-deficit disorder include parental fears and restricted access to natural areas.[5]

Elizabeth Dickinson has criticized the term as a misdiagnosis that obscures the problems of dysfunctional cultural practices.[6]

Research edit

Nature-deficit disorder is unrecognized by most medical institutions. Some preliminary research shows that lack of time outdoors does have negative effects on children's mental well-being.[7][8]

Most research relating to nature-deficit disorder does not specifically mention it by name. Though studies on the impact of natural environments, particularly the concept of urban green space, on mental and physical wellbeing often show supporting claims.

  • A study on Italian undergraduate students showed how mental fatigue can be improved quicker in natural environments compared to urban ones.[9]
  • In Edinburgh, UK, a survey was professionally analyzed to show the effects exposure to greenspace has on primary school children. It found that more exposure helps increase self-esteem in young children.[10]
  • Increased urbanization in the Netherlands was studied in correlation to an increase in various mental and physical health issues. They found less disease clusters in areas with more greenspace.[11]

Causes edit

Researchers have not assessed the causes of nature-deficit disorder. However, Richard Louv has proposed some causes:

  • Parents are keeping children indoors in order to keep them safe from danger. Louv believes that growing parental fear of "stranger danger", heavily fueled by the media, may be the leading cause in nature-deficit disorder, as parents may be protecting children to such an extent that it disrupts the child's ability to connect to nature.[12]
    • Dr. Rhonda Clements surveyed 830 mothers, mostly born between 1960 and 1980, and asked about how much time they spent in nature as children; 76% of the mothers said they were outdoors every day Monday-Sunday, but when the same question was asked about their children only 26% said their children spent time outside every day. When asked why their children were not enjoying the outdoors as often, the parents said that safety, injury, and fear of crime were the reasons that restricted their children from more outdoor play.[13] This research did not, however, address causes of nature-deficit disorder per se, instead focusing solely on changes in outdoor play.
  • Loss of natural surroundings in a child's neighborhood and city. Many parks and nature preserves have restricted access and "do not walk off the trail" signs. Environmentalists and educators add to the restriction, telling children "look don't touch". While they are protecting the natural environment, Louv questions the cost of that protection on our children's relationship with nature,[12] which profoundly shapes their ecocultural identities.[14]

Redlining in the U.S. has led to more low-income and marginalized communities to have limited access to greenspace.[15] One review suggested that nature-deficit disorder may have an increased impact on these communities, although there has been inadequate research to determine any such effects conclusively.[16]

Effects edit

 
Bouldering site in urban park

Because nature-deficit disorder is not meant to be a medical diagnosis (and is not recognized as one), researchers have not assessed the effects of nature-deficit disorder.

Louv believes that the effects of nature-deficit disorder on our children will have "profound implications, not only for the health of future generations but for the health of the Earth itself".[17]

Organizations edit

The Children & Nature Network was created to encourage and support the people and organizations working to reconnect children with nature. Richard Louv is a co-founder of the Children & Nature Network.

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.[18]

In Colombia, OpEPA (Organización para la Educación y Protección Ambiental)[19] has been working to increase time spent outdoors since 1998. 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 into outdoor experiences. Developing and training educators in the use of inquiry based learning, learning by play and experiential education is a key component to empower educators to engage in nature education.

Critique edit

Elizabeth Dickinson, a business communication professor 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. Dickinson argues that it is what Louv's narrative is missing that prevents nature-deficit disorder from effecting meaningful change. 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.

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.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "ICD 10 Codes For Psychiatry: F00-F09". Priory.com.
  2. ^ "DSM-5". DSM-5. Retrieved 2019-11-13.
  3. ^ Louv, Richard (2005). Last Child in the Woods (1st ed.). Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.
  4. ^ Suttie, Jill (September 15, 2016). "How to Protect Kids from Nature-Deficit Disorder". Greater Good Magazine. Retrieved April 2, 2023.
  5. ^ Stiffler, Lisa (January 6, 2007). "Parents worry about 'nature-deficit disorder' in kids". Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
  6. ^ a b Dickinson, Elizabeth (1 September 2013). "The Misdiagnosis: Rethinking 'Nature-deficit Disorder'". Environmental Communication. 7 (3): 315–335. doi:10.1080/17524032.2013.802704. S2CID 143904628.
  7. ^ Putra, I Gusti Ngurah Edi; Astell-Burt, Thomas; Cliff, Dylan P.; Vella, Stewart A.; John, Eme Eseme; Feng, Xiaoqi (2020). "The Relationship Between Green Space and Prosocial Behaviour Among Children and Adolescents: A Systematic Review". Frontiers in Psychology. 11: 859. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00859. PMC 7203527. PMID 32425867.
  8. ^ Dwyre, Vanessa (8 May 2015). Nature Deficit Disorder and the Need for Environmental Education (Thesis).
  9. ^ Berto, Rita (September 2005). "Exposure to restorative environments helps restore attentional capacity". Journal of Environmental Psychology. 25 (3): 249–259. doi:10.1016/j.jenvp.2005.07.001 – via Elsevier Science Direct.
  10. ^ McCraken, Deborah S.; Allen, Deonie A.; Gow, Allen J. (June 2016). "Associations between urban greenspace and health-related quality of life in children". Preventative Medicine Reports. 3: 211–221. doi:10.1016/j.pmedr.2016.01.013. PMC 4929180. PMID 27419017.
  11. ^ Mass, J.; Verheij, R. A.; de Vries, S.; Spreeuwenberg, P.; Schellevis, F. G.; Groenewegen, P. P. (October 2009). "Morbidity is related to a green living environment". Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. 63 (12): 967–973. doi:10.1136/jech.2008.079038. PMID 19833605. S2CID 14724097 – via PubMed National Library of Medicine.
  12. ^ a b Outside Agitators 2011-06-14 at the Wayback Machine by Bill O'Driscoll, Pittsburgh City Paper
  13. ^ Clements, Rhonda (March 2004). "An Investigation of the Status of Outdoor Play". Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood. 5 (1): 938–942. doi:10.2304/ciec.2004.5.1.10. S2CID 144879568.
  14. ^ Milstein, T. & Castro-Sotomayor, J. (2020). Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity. London, UK: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351068840
  15. ^ Locke, Dexter H.; Hall, Billy; Grove, J. Morgan; Pickett, Stewart T. A.; Ogden, Laura A.; Aoki, Carissa; Boone, Christopher G.; O'Neil-Dunne, Jarlath P. M. (25 March 2021). "Residential housing segregation and urban tree canopy in 37 US Cities". npj Urban Sustainability. 1 (1): 15. Bibcode:2021npjUS...1...15L. doi:10.1038/s42949-021-00022-0. S2CID 226719053.
  16. ^ Alvarez, Evelyn N.; Garcia, Alexys; Le, Pauline (September 2022). "A review of Nature Deficit Disorder (NDD) and its disproportionate impacts on Latinx populations". Environmental Development. 43: 100732. doi:10.1016/j.envdev.2022.100732. S2CID 249827870 – via Elsevier Science Direct.
  17. ^ Last Child In The Woods Interview 2009-01-26 at the Wayback Machine by Claus von Zastrow, Public School Insights
  18. ^ Nature Deficit Disorder, No Child Left Inside January 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-08-10. Retrieved 2020-04-15.

Further reading edit

  • Louv, Richard. (2011) The Nature Principle: Human Restoration and the End of Nature-Deficit Disorder. Algonquin Books. 303pp.
  • Louv, Richard. (2005) Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder (Paperback edition). Algonquin Books. 335pp.
  • Louv, Richard, Web of Life: Weaving the Values That Sustain Us.

External links edit

  • Richard Louv's website
  • Children & Nature Network
  • An interview with Richard Louv about the need to get kids out into nature, by David Roberts, The Grist: Environmental News and Commentary, 30 Mar 2006.
  • Saving kids from nature-deficit disorder – May 25, 2005, NPR
  • Public School Insights' Interview with Richard Louv – April 22, 2008
  • Planet Ark's Research Report on Children & Nature in Australia
  • Nature Play: Nurturing Children and Strengthening Conservation through Connections to the Land

nature, deficit, disorder, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, examples, perspective, this, article, represent, worldwide, view, subject, improve, this, art. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Nature deficit disorder is the idea that human beings especially children are spending less time outdoors than they have in the past and the belief that this change results in a wide range of behavioral problems Children playing in a streamThis disorder is not recognized in any of the medical manuals for mental disorders such as the ICD 10 1 or the DSM 5 2 This term was coined by Richard Louv in 2005 3 Louv does not intend the term disorder to represent an actual illness but instead intends the term to act as a metaphor describing the costs of alienation from nature 4 Louv claims that causes for nature deficit disorder include parental fears and restricted access to natural areas 5 Elizabeth Dickinson has criticized the term as a misdiagnosis that obscures the problems of dysfunctional cultural practices 6 Contents 1 Research 2 Causes 3 Effects 4 Organizations 5 Critique 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksResearch editNature deficit disorder is unrecognized by most medical institutions Some preliminary research shows that lack of time outdoors does have negative effects on children s mental well being 7 8 Most research relating to nature deficit disorder does not specifically mention it by name Though studies on the impact of natural environments particularly the concept of urban green space on mental and physical wellbeing often show supporting claims A study on Italian undergraduate students showed how mental fatigue can be improved quicker in natural environments compared to urban ones 9 In Edinburgh UK a survey was professionally analyzed to show the effects exposure to greenspace has on primary school children It found that more exposure helps increase self esteem in young children 10 Increased urbanization in the Netherlands was studied in correlation to an increase in various mental and physical health issues They found less disease clusters in areas with more greenspace 11 Causes editResearchers have not assessed the causes of nature deficit disorder However Richard Louv has proposed some causes Parents are keeping children indoors in order to keep them safe from danger Louv believes that growing parental fear of stranger danger heavily fueled by the media may be the leading cause in nature deficit disorder as parents may be protecting children to such an extent that it disrupts the child s ability to connect to nature 12 Dr Rhonda Clements surveyed 830 mothers mostly born between 1960 and 1980 and asked about how much time they spent in nature as children 76 of the mothers said they were outdoors every day Monday Sunday but when the same question was asked about their children only 26 said their children spent time outside every day When asked why their children were not enjoying the outdoors as often the parents said that safety injury and fear of crime were the reasons that restricted their children from more outdoor play 13 This research did not however address causes of nature deficit disorder per se instead focusing solely on changes in outdoor play Loss of natural surroundings in a child s neighborhood and city Many parks and nature preserves have restricted access and do not walk off the trail signs Environmentalists and educators add to the restriction telling children look don t touch While they are protecting the natural environment Louv questions the cost of that protection on our children s relationship with nature 12 which profoundly shapes their ecocultural identities 14 Redlining in the U S has led to more low income and marginalized communities to have limited access to greenspace 15 One review suggested that nature deficit disorder may have an increased impact on these communities although there has been inadequate research to determine any such effects conclusively 16 Effects edit nbsp Bouldering site in urban parkBecause nature deficit disorder is not meant to be a medical diagnosis and is not recognized as one researchers have not assessed the effects of nature deficit disorder Louv believes that the effects of nature deficit disorder on our children will have profound implications not only for the health of future generations but for the health of the Earth itself 17 Organizations editThis section needs to be updated The reason given is It is unclear if these organizations all still describe their activities as addressing nature deficit disorder Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2021 The Children amp Nature Network was created to encourage and support the people and organizations working to reconnect children with nature Richard Louv is a co founder of the Children amp Nature Network 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 18 In Colombia OpEPA Organizacion para la Educacion y Proteccion Ambiental 19 has been working to increase time spent outdoors since 1998 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 into outdoor experiences Developing and training educators in the use of inquiry based learning learning by play and experiential education is a key component to empower educators to engage in nature education Critique editElizabeth Dickinson a business communication professor 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 Dickinson argues that it is what Louv s narrative is missing that prevents nature deficit disorder from effecting meaningful change 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 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 6 See also editBiophilia hypothesis Ecopsychology Environmental psychology Plant blindness Wilderness therapyReferences edit ICD 10 Codes For Psychiatry F00 F09 Priory com DSM 5 DSM 5 Retrieved 2019 11 13 Louv Richard 2005 Last Child in the Woods 1st ed Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill Suttie Jill September 15 2016 How to Protect Kids from Nature Deficit Disorder Greater Good Magazine Retrieved April 2 2023 Stiffler Lisa January 6 2007 Parents worry about nature deficit disorder in kids Seattle Post Intelligencer a b Dickinson Elizabeth 1 September 2013 The Misdiagnosis Rethinking Nature deficit Disorder Environmental Communication 7 3 315 335 doi 10 1080 17524032 2013 802704 S2CID 143904628 Putra I Gusti Ngurah Edi Astell Burt Thomas Cliff Dylan P Vella Stewart A John Eme Eseme Feng Xiaoqi 2020 The Relationship Between Green Space and Prosocial Behaviour Among Children and Adolescents A Systematic Review Frontiers in Psychology 11 859 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2020 00859 PMC 7203527 PMID 32425867 Dwyre Vanessa 8 May 2015 Nature Deficit Disorder and the Need for Environmental Education Thesis Berto Rita September 2005 Exposure to restorative environments helps restore attentional capacity Journal of Environmental Psychology 25 3 249 259 doi 10 1016 j jenvp 2005 07 001 via Elsevier Science Direct McCraken Deborah S Allen Deonie A Gow Allen J June 2016 Associations between urban greenspace and health related quality of life in children Preventative Medicine Reports 3 211 221 doi 10 1016 j pmedr 2016 01 013 PMC 4929180 PMID 27419017 Mass J Verheij R A de Vries S Spreeuwenberg P Schellevis F G Groenewegen P P October 2009 Morbidity is related to a green living environment Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 63 12 967 973 doi 10 1136 jech 2008 079038 PMID 19833605 S2CID 14724097 via PubMed National Library of Medicine a b Outside Agitators Archived 2011 06 14 at the Wayback Machine by Bill O Driscoll Pittsburgh City Paper Clements Rhonda March 2004 An Investigation of the Status of Outdoor Play Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood 5 1 938 942 doi 10 2304 ciec 2004 5 1 10 S2CID 144879568 Milstein T amp Castro Sotomayor J 2020 Routledge Handbook of Ecocultural Identity London UK Routledge https doi org 10 4324 9781351068840 Locke Dexter H Hall Billy Grove J Morgan Pickett Stewart T A Ogden Laura A Aoki Carissa Boone Christopher G O Neil Dunne Jarlath P M 25 March 2021 Residential housing segregation and urban tree canopy in 37 US Cities npj Urban Sustainability 1 1 15 Bibcode 2021npjUS 1 15L doi 10 1038 s42949 021 00022 0 S2CID 226719053 Alvarez Evelyn N Garcia Alexys Le Pauline September 2022 A review of Nature Deficit Disorder NDD and its disproportionate impacts on Latinx populations Environmental Development 43 100732 doi 10 1016 j envdev 2022 100732 S2CID 249827870 via Elsevier Science Direct Last Child In The Woods Interview Archived 2009 01 26 at the Wayback Machine by Claus von Zastrow Public School Insights Nature Deficit Disorder No Child Left Inside Archived January 15 2009 at the Wayback Machine OpEPA Organizacion para la Educacion y Proteccion Ambiental Inicio Archived from the original on 2016 08 10 Retrieved 2020 04 15 Further reading editLouv Richard 2011 The Nature Principle Human Restoration and the End of Nature Deficit Disorder Algonquin Books 303pp Louv Richard 2005 Last Child in the Woods Saving Our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder Paperback edition Algonquin Books 335pp Louv Richard Web of Life Weaving the Values That Sustain Us External links editRichard Louv s website Children amp Nature Network An interview with Richard Louv about the need to get kids out into nature by David Roberts The Grist Environmental News and Commentary 30 Mar 2006 Saving kids from nature deficit disorder May 25 2005 NPR Public School Insights Interview with Richard Louv April 22 2008 Chicago Wilderness Leave No Child Inside Initiative Planet Ark s Research Report on Children amp Nature in Australia Nature Play Nurturing Children and Strengthening Conservation through Connections to the Land Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nature deficit disorder amp oldid 1214301661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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