Encouraging Outdoor Play can Greatly Benefit Your Child!

Encouraging Outdoor Play can Greatly Benefit Your Child!

Encouraging Outdoor Play can Greatly Benefit Your Child!

Is Your Child Getting Enough Outdoor Play Time?

Playing outside with your child offers them some developmental challenges that many kids are lacking today. It’s not simply a cliché to think that children benefit from playing outdoors.

There’s a growing body of scientific research that has found some incredible advantages for a child’s development if you engage them in outdoor activities.

As your child’s physical or occupational therapist will tell you, your child will learn more about the world around them and their body when you get them off the couch and outside for some play.

As stated by Dr. Claire McCarthy from Harvard Health,

“Here’s something really simple you can do to improve your child’s chance of future health and success: make sure he spends plenty of time playing outside.

There are many ways in which this generation’s childhood is different from that of the last generation, but one of the most abrupt contrasts is the degree to which it is being spent indoors. There are lots of reasons, including the marked increase in time spent interacting with electronic devices, the emphasis on scheduled activities and achievements, concerns about sun exposure — and, for many families, the lack of safe outdoor places to play. It’s not just children; adults are spending less time outdoors as well.”

If you need recommendations on some great outdoor activities you can do with your child, don’t hesitate to ask us!

In the meantime, here are three reasons why it’s important to play outside with your child – supported by research published in the Porto Biomedical Journal in 2017:

1. Outdoor play helps your children enjoy nature!

Playing outside in nature – whether it’s at a local park or in your own backyard – creates some unique possibilities for children to flex their imagination.

Just think of all the options available in nature that your child will never have available with a commercial toy (or worse, on a smartphone, tablet or TV screen).

Sticks, rocks, plants, leaves, soil and water can all be converted into something else when a child engages their imagination. Your child’s natural sense of discovery is engaged when they play outside, and that contributes to creativity, problem-solving and divergent thinking skills.

Believe it or not, researchers have also found that “getting dirty” by coming into contact with harmless microbes outside makes children more resistant to diseases and can alleviate the symptoms of conditions like asthma and eczema.

2. Understanding what is a “healthy risk”

We all want to keep our children safe, but researchers think modern society has evolved to the point where we are keeping our children “too safe.”

By sheltering children through exclusive indoor play, we keep them from becoming exposed to important growth and development opportunities that come with “risky play.”

That doesn’t mean dangerous play; it simply means playing outside in a safe location where they have the opportunity to experience a skinned knee or to fall down. Here’s a really simple way to look at it.

If your child attempts to climb a tree and gets a splinter, but fails to climb the tree, she will learn far more than if she never attempted to climb the tree at all.

Scientists believe the trial-and-error that kids experience through “risky play” outdoors contributes to skills like entrepreneurship, self-awareness, problem-solving, independence and persistence.

3. More opportunities to socialize

Researchers have also found that playing outside lets children show off aspects of their personality that they will never encounter in an indoor setting.

Maybe your child loves to sprint and feel the wind in his hair; how would you ever know if you don’t take him out to a wide-open, grassy space at the park?

Researchers also discovered that kids play together and socialize better outdoors than indoors. Young children especially tend to pair off as teachers and learners to interact with each other. Levels of stress and anxiety for children were also diminished by playing outdoors.

Plus, guess what? Parents experienced a drop in their stress levels as well when playing outdoors with their children – meaning there are benefits to getting outdoors for the whole family!

Looking for more tips and tricks? Contact us!

There is a lot of research that also indicates that outdoor play is extremely good for kids with special needs.

If you want to amplify the physical therapy and other assistance that your special child is being provided, start taking them outdoors for these added benefits. And if you’re thinking about starting a regimen of therapy for your child, call Blue Ridge Physical Therapy today and schedule an appointment!

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