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Effect of nature on the mental health and well-being of children and adolescents: meta-review
Meta-review highlights the need for high-quality research to strengthen the evidence of nature’s impact on mental health and well-being
Lomax, T., Butler, J., Cirpriani, A., Singh, I., (2024). Effect of nature on the mental health and well-being of children and adolescents: meta-review. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 225,Wild pedagogies and young children through the mosaic approach
Wild pedagogies supported children’s agency and relationships with place
Beattie, E. A., Scott, S., Adler, D., (2025). Wild pedagogies and young children through the mosaic approach. Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 41,In search of eco-democracy: Education for mutually beneficial flourishing
Eco-democracy in environmental education could contribute to mutually beneficial flourishing
Blenkinsop, S., Wilhelmsson, L., (2025). In search of eco-democracy: Education for mutually beneficial flourishing. Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 41,Transforming pedagogical landscapes in the Anthropocene: perspectives on more-than-human agency and nature as a co-teacher in vernacular way
Educators’ respectful relationships with nature can center nature as a co-teacher and acknowledge the agency of the more-than-human world
Kondo, J., Baars, R. C., (2025). Transforming pedagogical landscapes in the Anthropocene: perspectives on more-than-human agency and nature as a co-teacher in vernacular way. Environmental Education Research, 31(8),Early childhood educators’ professional learning for sustainability through action research in Australian immersive nature play programmes
Early childhood educators' shifts towards relational pedagogies acknowledged nature's rights and agency
Hughes, F., (2023). Early childhood educators’ professional learning for sustainability through action research in Australian immersive nature play programmes. Educational Research for Social Change, 12(1),“When I’m playing with him, everything else in my life sort of falls away”: exploring grandparents’ and grandchildren’s learning through outdoor play
Grandparent-grandchild outdoor play enriches learning and appreciation of nature for both generations
Duflos, M., Hussaina, H., Brussoni, M., (2025). “When I’m playing with him, everything else in my life sort of falls away”: exploring grandparents’ and grandchildren’s learning through outdoor play. Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 25(2),The family-nature-school success pathway: Longitudinal mediation by nature contact and moderation by residential green space
Increased nature contact explains the relationship between family members’ positive attitudes toward nature and improved learning outcomes among urban children in China
Zhang, J., Yang, X., Qi, Y., Yu, X., Chen, Y., (2026). The family-nature-school success pathway: Longitudinal mediation by nature contact and moderation by residential green space. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 109Children’s perceptions of nature experiences from participating in a nature experience for nature connectedness intervention in Swedish school-age educare
After-school programs can foster children’s nature connectedness through frequent experiences in nearby nature
Wünsche, T. U., Beery, T., Fridberg, M, (2025). Children’s perceptions of nature experiences from participating in a nature experience for nature connectedness intervention in Swedish school-age educare. Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor LearningAn exploratory study of preschool children at forest schools and traditional nurseries in Portugal and the UK
Preschoolers who attend forest school may experience greater enjoyment of nature, fewer negative emotions, and better emotional regulation
Pina, M., Edmonds, C. J., (2025). An exploratory study of preschool children at forest schools and traditional nurseries in Portugal and the UK. International Journal of Early Years EducationJourneys through forest school: a model for understanding diverse educational experiences of children
Theoretical model suggests that forest school can meet the unique needs of each student
Harris, F., (2026). Journeys through forest school: a model for understanding diverse educational experiences of children. Environmental Education Research, 32(2),Unearthing forest pedagogies: Autoethnographic encounters within critical forest studies
Children’s and parents’ forest school encounters reveal a forest-led pedagogy
Chartrand, M., (2026). Unearthing forest pedagogies: Autoethnographic encounters within critical forest studies. Australian Journal of Environmental EducationMADE POSSIBLE WITH SUPPORT FROM:
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