Designing Supportive Learning Environments
Introduction
Children come into the world focused on their own sensations. At first, there is no awareness of there being an external world that is not part of them. This normal egocentric focus gradually changes through their constant interaction with the world around them. Our ultimate goals that we have identified for guiding children are developed through our creation of environments that invite children to develop healthy, pro-social ways of interacting and relating to their environments.
This chapter will help you understand how children are influenced by environments and how we can consciously and purposefully create environments that help children thrive and grow, developing the ultimate goals for all of our work that we have identified. By doing so, we proactively, preventively address potential management issues.
Learning Objectives
After reading this chapter, you will be able to:
- Define the concept of “environment” in early childhood education as encompassing physical, social, and instructional elements.
- Explain Bronfenbrenner’s ecological systems theory and its relevance to understanding the multiple environmental influences on children’s development and behavior.
- Analyze how the design of indoor and outdoor physical environments supports developmentally appropriate activities and positive behavior.
- Identify strategies for arranging classroom spaces to balance active and quiet areas, encourage cooperation, and minimize disruptive behavior.
- Discuss the role of schedules and routines in creating predictability, supporting self-regulation, and reducing behavioral challenges.
- Evaluate how curriculum and pedagogy shape children’s engagement, motivation, and behavior, with emphasis on developmentally appropriate practice (DAP).
- Explain the importance of directly teaching social-emotional competencies within supportive environments.
- Assess how teacher warmth, responsiveness, and intentional interactions establish a nurturing social climate that promotes empathy, cooperation, and altruism.