The Environment As The Third Teacher
The Environment As The Third Teacher
The Environment As The Third Teacher
viewed the environment as the third teacher, and therefore as having equal importance as the
teacher. How is thinking about the environment as the third teacher beneficial? A well-
designed environment can support and enhance all areas of children’s development and
learning, just as a poorly planned environment can detract from overall development and
learning.
consideration of the work of Urie Bronfenbrenner can lend insight into how the
environment can teach. In his work examining the interaction between children and their
the child impacts the environment, and is in turn impacted by the environment. Based on
this, for every action there is a reaction, and it is the processing of this interplay that allows
development to occur.
framework for children’s learning can be employed. According to Katz (1987), the four
categories of learning that are relevant to the education of young children include the
following:
• Skills, which are small units of action that occur in a relatively short period of time
and are easy to observe and document. Skills might include such things as drawing,
Katz’s four goals can serve as a template for organizing the teaching aspects of the
environment. When looking at how the environment can support children’s learning,
supporting the unique needs and preferences of children, providing experiences that are
foundational principles of early childhood education is that the senses play a large role in
How can environments take into account each of the five senses? Within the field,
the areas of visual and tactile development often receive the most attention, with brightly
colored objects and carefully selected objects for little hands to explore adorning the
classroom. Certainly, the senses of sight and touch are important, but often uninformed
choices are made about what best supports children’s senses, and not only is support for
vision and touch misused, it often eclipses inclusion of sound, smell, and taste.
following, which are adapted from the Council on Rural Services Program website:
• Sight: Brain research informs that children respond to various colors in a variety of
ways. When thinking about the colors for a classroom, think about the amount of
time children might spend in the environment each day, and the program objectives.
Brightly colored walls are often a staple in early childhood environment, with the
idea that primary colors communicate “kid space.” Bright colors, however, serve to
support alertness, and for a child spending a long period of time within a brightly
colored classroom, this might serve to actually interfere with their ability to
concentrate within the environment. More subdued colors, on the other hand, can
have an overall calming effect, the therefore support children’s attention and
concentration.
• Touch: A sensory rich environment will give children a variety of tactile experiences,
accompanying these textures with rich language, can provide children with needed
information.
• Taste: Allowing children to explore a variety of different tastes can give them
information about likes and dislikes, as well as supports their developing vocabulary.
For young children, keep in mind that they learn important material about objects
from placing them in their mouth, and therefore are likely to taste anything within
reach! Because of this drive for mouth exploration, safety is paramount, and
anything infants and toddlers can access needs to be safe for this exploration to
occur. For older children, exposing them to a variety of different tastes can help
peppermint, orange and cinnamon make us more alert, while chamomile, lavender,
and rose have a claming effect. Be sure to include the sense of smell as an integral
part of the curriculum adding scents to play-dough and paints, and having potpourri
calm, soothing music for nap, and catchy tunes for movement, for example.
When considering how to include the sense within the early childhood environment,
it is important to balance the fact that overstimulation can interfere with children’s ability to
Environments should support play and the learning needs and preferences of
each child. How can environments support children’s play and unique ways of interacting
with materials as well as one another? The answer is as diverse as the multitude of different
needs children bring within the classroom, but is as simple as keeping one important factor
involved: well designed environments allow children to act. How children act upon the
environment, what ways they choose to experiment, how they process the material within
it—each of these factors are determined by the individual child, based on their own
individual needs. A good environment, based on this, will provide children with a variety of
options that support the varied explorations they might embark upon. This is supported by
the work of “playeducation” specialists Cosco and Moore (1999), who argue that the richer
and more diverse the possibilities offered to children within their worlds, the more children
will gain in terms of knowledge, understanding, and the meaning of place and space in their
own lives. Careful attention to material selection, activity center design, and area placement
will be covered later in the chapter, but each of these are critical to ensuring the environment
environments support children’s play and work, but environments also need to be content-
rich. Historically, many of the field shied away from stressing the importance of the
content-rich environment, thinking that this in some way might be construed as support for
an academic approach. Within the field of ECE, there is growing concern that the academic
approach--including the focus on literacy and numeracy skills—is often introduced before
children are ready, and includes activities that are not reflective of children’s developmental
needs.
(1991), is one that supports children’s developing intellectual skills. The process for
supporting these skills includes the development of a child-directed environment that is both
rich in choice and content. From this child-directed environment, children learn habits of
mind that allow them to interpret experiences. It is this ability to interpret that Katz sees as
Environments should provide feedback. When you think about the environment
as the third teacher, it is useful to entertain just what the environment’s teaching role might
be. Environments, despite the fact that they are inanimate, can provide children with
feedback for their actions. Consider again the work of Urie Bronfenbrenner regarding bi-
directionality—the child impacts his or her environment, and it in turn impacted by the
environment.
Based on the concept of bi-directionality, children’s actions provide opportunities
about impact. An eight-month old who throws a rattle onto the floor from a high chair
hears a crash, and, after peering over the edge, sees that the rattle is now on the floor. A
Consider the three-year old who pours sand through a funnel, and watches the slow
stream as the sand makes its journey through the narrow end. The funnel, in this case,
serves as a conduit, not only for the sand, but for the child’s knowledge of the function of
Watch the first-grader study the butterfly garden he and his classmates have
developed. On one side of the black-eyed susans that form an enticing border, the children
have prepared a natural soap mixture to ward off June Beetles. On the other side, nature
was allowed to run its course, without the interference of their natural bug treatment. The
result? One side of the plants leaves are sturdy and intact, and on the other untreated side,
the leaves are a polka-dot pattern of holes, where the bugs have passionately pursued their
In each of the above cases, children learn from their actions, and the environment
serves as a vital teacher. For this learning to occur, environments need to be designed in
such a way that feedback is cultivated, and just as teacher need to observe the effects of the
environment on children, children need to be taught to pay careful attention to the feedback
The volume of skills children need to learn during early childhood is daunting—not only are
children developing fine motor skills for such tasks as writing and drawing, but they are
learning how to physically navigate the environment, how to get along with others, how to
communicate in ways that they are understood, different means of representation (including
the written word) and how to utilize these skills to communicate ideas, and basic academic
practice and acquire skills. Proper placement of tools and opportunities within the
environment can provide a rich foundation for exploring, developing, and practicing the
What kinds of tools can support skill development? Tools can be thought of as a
device that supports the accomplishment of a task, and when considering all the
developmental tasks of early childhood education, the tools that can support this
development are numerous. Tools that support fine motor development might
include having scissors, pencils, markers, crayons, paint brushes, beading, and legos,
to name a few. For gross motor development, objects like balls, climber, and swings
are important. Getting along with others and communicating to be understood can
opportunities for individual, small group, and large group activities with a teacher
environment rich with labels, pictures, and books can support the development of
their own ideas. Finally, basic skills such as letter identification can be supported
wholes and parts, and ordering can support basic numeracy skills.
The environment as a teacher: Providing support for dispositions
Dispositions refer to habits of mind. Katz argues that there are dispositions which
are most supportive of children’s overall learning in the classroom, and it is important that
dispositions that support children’s learning. Blaustein (2005) extends these dispositions
into the basics three i’s of education, including interactions, imagination, and integration.
Interactions meet children’s needs to socialize, and through these interactions, children gain
important information about knowledge, social skills, and language abilities as well as the
(Blaustein, 2005).
Imagination-play based activities allow children the opportunity to explore and test
creative ideas through engagement and to participate in open ended, meaningful curriculum.
Blaustein argues that participation in this kind of play allows children to explore their
imaginations, the power of wonder, and creative play activities, each of which create the
medium for rehearsing skills, refining language, and building social skills.
generate new ideas, wonder, explore possible options and different outcomes. The learning
that integrates each of the child’s sense supports their overall knowledge of, and passion for,
learning.
How can the physical environment provide opportunities for development in each of
these areas? Design provides a backdrop through which interactions can occur, and the care
and attention through which materials are placed in the environment can serve as a
springboard to children’s imaginations. Integration provides children with the opportunity
to experience the world through their senses, and as stated earlier, sensory stimuli can be
childhood advocate and guru of environmental design, children who enter full-time care at
six weeks of age may—by the time they have entered kindergarten—have spent up to twelve
thousand hours in child care, which is more time than s/he will spend in all of elementary
and high school (Greenman, 2005). Child care is an incredibly prevalent world for young
children, with statistics including that 30% of children under the age of three and 50% of
children under the age of five attend early childhood centers (Children’s Defense Fund,
1999). Based on these statistics, the early childhood environment is one that many American
question, there must be a shared perception of what “childhoods” are. Greenman argues
that childhood is a time when human beings should fall in love with the world, including all
of its untidy and occasionally scary complexity, delights, and mysteries. To support these
spaces for childhoods, he encourages all early childhood environments provide children
with: a place to live that supports competence, comfort; and children’s individuality; a place
through supporting security; a place that support cooperative and creative learning; a place
that encourages responsibility, compassion, and community; and a place connected to the
natural world, the larger community, and the world beyond. Through careful attention to
environmental design, support for the disposition of loving the world can be cultivated.
Environments should be aesthetically pleasing. What role does aesthetics play
in environmental design? Aesthetics must be included as a vital part of the early childhood
curricula, and environments that are aesthetically pleasing serve to reinforce the ideas that
Elliot Eisner, a passionate art educator and educational philosopher, an aesthetically pleasing
environment is one that recognizes, engages, and embraces the imagination as a source of
content (Eisner, 1997). Based on this, a child’s imagination plays as critical of a role in their
development as, for example, their language does. Therefore, cultivating the child’s
imagination should receive the same attention as support for language development.
need to reflect what children know in ways that are respectful and inviting. The works of art
of children in the classroom should adorn the walls, as opposed to cute store-bought cut
outs. Pictures of children and their families should visible throughout the classroom, in
contrast to cartoon renditions of children on the walls. In each of these examples, children’s
lives and work is valued, and their contribution to the overall classroom respected and
How can the environment support children’s feelings? The success in each of the
other area of learning—knowledge, skills, and dispositions—will impact how children feel
about their interactions with the environment, and in turn, how they feel about themselves.
security. Careful attention to the design of the early childhood environment can maximize
one of the most important environmental advantages: the capacity to give feedback. As
discussed earlier, the concept of bi-directionality provides knowledge that not only does the
child impact the environment, but the child is also impacted by the environment. With this
in mind, the competence that children gain from successful interaction with the environment
can be highlighted.
Consider Jack, a 10-month old who is putting together his first puzzle. Jack is
practicing his skill of eye-hand coordination through grasping the large knobs that are
attached to the puzzle pieces. These knobs, which can also be referred to as tools, allow his
developing grasp an easy target. Jack is gaining important spatial knowledge through his
puzzle making, and the fact that it is taking two to three attempts to get the correct piece in
the corresponding hole is supporting the disposition of persistence. And when the puzzle is
done? The feeling of competence! Jack worked to achieve something within his
environment, and because careful attention was paid to his developmental and learning
children and their worlds. Through community building, children are taught that they are an
essential person within the early childhood community. Concrete practices that support
community building include placing pictures of children and their families throughout the
room, as well as adorning the walls of the rooms with children’s creations. Through these
simple practices, you are giving children a sense of place, and communicating to them that
Within the environment, providing children with opportunities to form and maintain
relationships is vital. For infants and toddlers, creating environments that value physical
contact—as opposed to placement in swings and playpens—can help support developing
security. For older children, the need to have contact and develop a strong relationship with
the teacher is complemented by the need to develop relationships with peers. Providing
space to gather up for a private chat in the corner or snuggle up with a good book all
How can the environment be enlisted to teach, and support all these varied goals?
The process begins with careful observation looking at how the environment is presently
used, as well as how effectively it meets children’s needs. Next, brainstorm how your
environment can be adapted to meet each of the learning goals. Are there materials to be
added? Do you need to engage in room arrangement revisions? Are there materials
course—their learning you are working to support. Supporting children’s learning is one of
the mandates of early childhood education, and by enlisting all resources—including the
Blaustein, M. (2005). See, Hear, Touch! The Basics of Learning Readiness. Beyond the Journal.
Cosco, N. & Moore, R. (1999) Playing in Place: why the physical environment is
important in playwork. Paper presented at the 14th Play Education Annual Play
Children’s Defense Fund (1999). “Key Facts: Essential Information on Child Care, Early
Education, and School Age Care—Overview.” Retrieved September 19, 2006 from
http://www.childrensdefense.org/childcare/99.overview.pdf
Council on Rural Services Programs (2006). Brain Research and its Implications for Early
http://www.corsp.org/kids_family/Parent%20Activities/Brain%20Research%20an
d%20Its%20Implications%20for%20EC%20Programs.pdf#search=%22early%20ch
ildhood%20environments%20senses%22
Greenman, J. (2005). Places for Childhood in the 21st Century: A Conceptual Framework.
http://www.journal.naeyc.org/btj/200505/01Greenman.pdf
Katz, L.G. (1987). What should young children be learning? Champaign, IL: ERIC
The Care and Education of America’s Young Children: Obstacles and Opportunities. Ninetieth
Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education. Part I. Chicago: