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As part of our commitment to promoting better climate and nature education for young people across the UK, the University is developing its own Nature Park aligned with the scheme.

The ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ Nature Park aims to break down barriers to environmental and outdoor education by offering local schools the chance to engage with nature-based learning experiences across the University estate. 

Harris Garden on Whiteknights Campus, ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ

Our goals are to:

  •  Provide unique access for pupils to new habitats and areas of high biodiversity on our campus, which is home to over 2,000 different species of plants, animals and fungi.
  •  Offer bespoke educational resources and activities linked to the National Curriculum, created by climate, education and environmental experts.
  •  Enable students to explore and investigate biodiversity, sustainability and climate, encouraging them to apply their findings to enhance their own school environments.
  •  Showcase ideas for how schools can enhance biodiversity on their own campuses.
  •  Provide access to specialist educational facilities such as the and to enhance learning opportunities.

Benefits of learning in nature

School children planting in a greenhouse on Whiteknights Campus, ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ

We are developing the ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ Nature Park to help young people gain a deeper appreciation of our changing natural world.

The Nature Park will help pupils build a connection to nature through discovery and learning, while developing green skills such as data collection, species identification, and habitat management – skills they can take back to their school or college.

Activities can contribute to real scientific research into nature recovery, and boost biodiversity locally and across the country.  They will help children learn more about the future of the world locally, nationally and globally.

By participating in the Nature Park, we can collectively improve both the physical and mental wellbeing of young people through spending time outdoors.  We will also empower children and students to voice their concerns about the environment and gain the vital skills needed to take action for their future.

Together, we will create an opportunity for green skills development in areas including:

  • identification and ecology

  • recording and interpreting data

  • creative thinking and decision making

  • communication

  • environmental stewardship

  • horticulture.

History of outdoor education

Eliza Chattaway with schoolchildren, learning outdoors

Image credit: Royal Berkshire Archives

Pioneering educational change

The University of ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ has been pioneering outdoor education for over 100 years, led by Eliza Chattaway who taught primary education at the University College of ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ – the precursor to the ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ – alongside her work as headteacher in local schools.  Wanting to break away from the classroom and rote textbook learning, Chattaway was inspired by the cycle of nature, as well as the agricultural education at the University College.

 

Educational benefits of nature

Recognising the educational benefits of time spent outdoors, Eliza Chattaway would take her pupils on nature walks, including visits to what is now our Whiteknights campus.  In 1912, Chattaway published School Nature Rambles, the story of a year at Redlands Primary School, documenting the nature walks and offering advice on nature lesson planning.

Chattaway’s work laid the foundation for teaching and research at ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ. In our 2026 centenary year, we’ll celebrate our legacy as a leading climate, environment and outdoor education institution by developing an outdoor education offering for both students and local school children.

 

Transforming outdoor learning

As part of our centenary, we’re transforming the Walled Garden into a new hub for outdoor learning. It will showcase university research and our history of outdoor education, linking to National Curriculum themes, including:

  • biodiversity
  • climate change
  • changing hydrology
  • food production and security.

 We will also have an 'Action Zone' that will let pupils take part in hands-on tasks and experiments.

Through showcasing ideas for enhancing biodiversity on school campuses, we hope to inspire young people to apply their findings to enhance their own school environments, create new or improved green spaces in education settings for nature to thrive and to support Climate Action Plans. 

For more information, to keep up to date with the project, or to set up an introductory meeting please contact the Nature Park team. 

Wildflowers in the lakeside meadow on Whiteknights Campus, ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ

The National Education Nature Park

°Õ³ó±ð , which launched in October 2023, aims to bring together all the land from across education settings in England into a vast virtual nature park. It enables children and young people to get involved in taking practical action to improve the biodiversity of their setting and to track how the virtual park grows and changes over time.

 

Children learning about a bug hotel at the ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ

Working with partners

Over the next 18 months, we will carry out pilot activities with local schools, building on our established locations and creating exciting new elements for the ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ Nature Park.

We will consult with partners such as the  and the  to understand the evolving national scheme.

The lake on Whiteknights Campus, ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ

Living laboratory

By 2026, our centenary year, we hope to create a living laboratory that will benefit our students and local school children. This living laboratory will bring together locations such as Langley Mead, the Harris Garden and the lakeside meadow, as well as the University’s Atmospheric Observatory and Cole Museum of Zoology,