Nature Play and Social-Emotional Learning in Early Childhood
Nature play helps young children build more than science skills and strong bodies. It also supports some of the most important social-emotional abilities children need in the early years: confidence, self-regulation, empathy, cooperation, flexibility, and a sense of calm connection to the world around them.
When children play outdoors, they do not just “get energy out.” They negotiate over materials, solve problems together, manage frustration, try again after something falls apart, and learn how to notice both their own feelings and the needs of the people around them. In many cases, nature creates a gentler and more open-ended setting for those lessons than indoor spaces do.
Image by Vanessa Murray, created with Canva. Garden exploration gives children opportunities to cooperate, notice, regulate, and learn together.
Why nature play and social-emotional learning fit so well together
Social-emotional learning in early childhood is about how children learn to understand feelings, manage emotions, build relationships, show empathy, and make responsible choices. Those skills grow best through real experiences, not just adult reminders. Children need chances to practice them.
Nature play creates those chances naturally. A child waiting for a turn with the watering can is practicing patience. Two children working together to move a log or fill a garden bed are practicing cooperation. A child who gets frustrated when a mud structure collapses and tries again is practicing persistence and emotional flexibility.
This is one reason researchers and educators have become increasingly interested in outdoor learning. The environment itself often invites interaction, curiosity, and calm engagement in ways that support emotional growth.
Nature can support self-regulation
Self-regulation is one of the most important early childhood skills. It includes the ability to manage behavior, cope with frustration, shift attention, and recover from challenges. Research from the mixed-methods systematic review in your uploaded files found positive associations between nature-based early childhood education and children’s self-regulation, social and emotional development, social skills, and play interaction. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
That does not mean every outdoor moment automatically creates perfect behavior. But it does suggest that nature-rich environments can create conditions that make self-regulation easier to practice. Children have room to move. They are often more absorbed in meaningful tasks. The sensory experience can be rich without feeling as overstimulating as some indoor spaces.
Open-ended natural play also encourages children to set their own goals, test ideas, and manage uncertainty. That matters because regulation is not just about stopping unwanted behavior. It is also about learning how to stay engaged, adapt, and keep going.
Outdoor play supports empathy, cooperation, and communication
Children learn social skills by using them. Outdoor play gives them more opportunities to do exactly that. In the outdoor learning review from your research files, natural environments were described as supporting teamwork, responsibility, competence, self-confidence, independence, communication, and decision-making. Teachers also noted richer interaction and more in-depth questioning outdoors. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Why might that happen? Natural materials are more open-ended than many indoor toys. A stick can become a fishing pole, flag, wand, or bridge support. A handful of stones can become “treasure,” ingredients, counters, or building materials. Because the materials do not come with one fixed purpose, children often have to negotiate together.
That negotiation is valuable. It encourages:
- sharing ideas
- listening to other perspectives
- taking turns
- solving conflicts
- working toward a common goal
Those are social-emotional skills in action.
Confidence grows when children see themselves as capable
One of the strongest themes in nature-based learning research is that children often begin to see themselves as capable learners. Natural environments offer many chances to try, fail, adjust, and succeed. A child who learns how to climb a small slope, balance on a log, carry a watering can, or help plant a seed experiences competence directly.
That matters for emotional development because confidence is closely connected to resilience. Children who believe they can solve problems and recover from setbacks are more likely to stay engaged, try again, and approach challenges with curiosity rather than fear.
Outdoor play supports that kind of confidence because it gives children authentic work to do. Their efforts matter in visible ways.
Nature play can feel calming and grounding
Many children appear calmer outdoors, and for good reason. Nature often provides a different sensory rhythm from indoor environments. There may be birdsong, wind, light movement, soil, leaves, water, and open space rather than constant noise, crowding, and artificial stimulation.
That calmer rhythm can help children who are still learning how to regulate strong feelings. It can also support children who seek movement or tactile input. Digging, watering, sorting, carrying, collecting, and observing all offer sensory experiences that feel purposeful and grounding.
This is one reason nature play and sensory play overlap so strongly. Outdoor environments often support both emotional regulation and sensory integration at the same time.
Nature play also supports imaginative and dramatic play
Social-emotional growth is closely tied to imagination. When children create pretend worlds together, they practice perspective-taking, flexible thinking, language, negotiation, and emotional expression. Natural settings often inspire sociodramatic and symbolic play because the materials are versatile and the environment feels open-ended.
A garden can become a farmers market. A patch of dirt can become a bakery. Sticks can become tools. Pinecones can become babies, ingredients, or treasure. Through imaginative play, children act out relationships and experiment with social roles in ways that help them understand themselves and others.
The systematic review in your files specifically described how nature-based early childhood settings can encourage diverse types of play, including sociodramatic and symbolic play, which may help explain some of the positive associations found in social and emotional development. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
What this can look like at home or in the classroom
Families and teachers do not need a formal forest school to use nature play in socially and emotionally supportive ways. Some simple ideas include:
- watering plants together and taking turns
- doing a “calm walk” after a hard transition
- offering loose parts outdoors for building and dramatic play
- encouraging children to notice how different outdoor spaces feel
- asking reflective questions like “What helped you keep trying?” or “How did you and your friend solve that?”
- using garden care routines to build responsibility and cooperation
These small experiences add up. Over time, they help children connect feelings, relationships, and learning in meaningful ways.
Related guides and learning hubs
See how outdoor play supports movement, confidence, attention, and whole-child development.
A research-backed article on nature play, brain development, and early learning.
A Resilient Roots companion article exploring sensory play and calm outdoor regulation.
Families and educators can explore more nature-based activities and sign up for STEM lesson plans.
Frequently asked questions
How does nature play support social-emotional learning?
Nature play gives children real opportunities to practice self-regulation, cooperation, empathy, confidence, communication, and problem-solving through open-ended outdoor experiences.
Can outdoor play help with emotional regulation?
Yes. Many children feel calmer and more organized outdoors because nature offers movement, sensory input, and open space in ways that can feel grounding and less overwhelming.
Does nature play help children build social skills?
Yes. Outdoor play often encourages teamwork, turn-taking, negotiation, shared problem-solving, and communication because natural materials are open-ended and invite collaborative play.
What are easy nature play ideas for social-emotional growth?
Gardening, loose-parts play, calm walks, watering routines, mud play, collecting natural materials, and outdoor dramatic play are all strong options.
This article is independently created and informed by evidence-based research. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by any outside institution or author.
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Created by Ms. Vanessa, CDA-certified Early Childhood Educator. This blog provides simple, joyful, evidence-informed learning activities for families and caregivers.
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