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Open Air Learning: schools, education and the Whitworth Park Community, Archaeology and History Project

Details

Citation

Colton R, Giles M, Cobb H & Jones S (2013) Open Air Learning: schools, education and the Whitworth Park Community, Archaeology and History Project. Journal of Victorian Culture Online. http://jvc.oup.com/2013/03/26/open-air-learning-schools-education-and-the-whitworth-park-community-archaeology-and-history-project/

Abstract
First paragraph: Historic parks have always been sites of education for children: learning the names of plants and trees, games to play, how to behave well in the company of others. These were key motives for Victorian and Edwardian philanthropists, keen to improve the social, moral and physical wellbeing of urban communities. Arguably, many of these values are still important today, building on the educational principle that children learn best by doing, and that ‘open-air learning’ (espoused by Rousseau and his contemporaries) brought many benefits to all classes. The school component of the Whitworth Park project seeks to use the archaeological heritage of such spaces to re-engage children in the history of their local environment, hoping to rejuvenate Parks as contemporary ‘open air’ classrooms.

Keywords
Heritage Lottery; Parks; Open Spaces; Public Engagement; Community heritage

Journal
Journal of Victorian Culture Online

StatusPublished
Publication date26/03/2013
Publication date online26/03/2013
PublisherTaylor and Francis
Publisher URL
ISSNNo ISSN

People (1)

Professor Sian Jones

Professor Sian Jones

Professor of Heritage, History