Nature connection in adulthood: The role of childhood nature experiences

Author:

Barrable Alexia12ORCID,Friedman Samantha34ORCID,Beloyianni Vassiliki56

Affiliation:

1. Division of Psychology, Sociology and Education Queen Margaret University Edinburgh UK

2. School of Humanities, Social Sciences and Law University of Dundee Dundee UK

3. Social Work, Education and Community Wellbeing Northumbria University Newcastle upon Tyne UK

4. Moray House School of Education and Sport University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

5. School of Environment, Geography and Applied Economics Harokopio University of Athens Athens Greece

6. School of Administrative, Economics and Social Sciences University of West Attica Athens Greece

Abstract

Abstract Nature connection describes our relationship with the rest of the natural world. Promoting nature connection in children and adults has been identified as a worthwhile focus for education and public health, given the positive associations between nature connection, well‐being and pro‐environmental behaviours. Prior research has looked at activities that promote an individual's connection to nature, reporting that a variety of interventions can be effective. Particular emphasis has been placed on positive childhood nature experiences due to their effects on adult nature connection. Research from varied places such as New Zealand, Australia, the USA and Brazil suggest that an individual's childhood nature experiences can play a positive role in their adult connection to nature. This paper is the first of its kind to explore the associations between childhood nature activities, both their type and frequency, and adult nature connection in a Greek sample (n = 401). We gathered the perspectives of Greek‐speaking adults using quantitative measures in an online survey. Our results suggest that, in line with previous research, childhood nature experiences were significantly and positively correlated with adult nature connectedness. However, contrary to previous research, analysis suggested that adult nature experiences did not mediate the relationship between childhood nature experience and adult nature connection. Age was positively correlated with less structured childhood nature experiences such that older adults were more likely to have participated in unstructured outdoor activities like flower picking and general alone time outside during childhood. Capturing retrospective self‐reports on the frequency and type of childhood nature experiences in this Greek sample helps us understand how these experiences may predict engagement and relationships with nature in adulthood. In turn, these findings inform context‐specific recommendations for encouraging nature contact in childhood. For instance, this may have implications for nature‐based learning in Greece as well as the provision of urban green and blue spaces. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference60 articles.

1. The Influence of Childhood

2. The case for nature connectedness as a distinct goal of early childhood education;Barrable A.;International Journal of Early Childhood Environmental Education,2019

3. Barrable A. Beloyianni V. Gamble C. &Touloumakos A. K.(2023).Translation and validation of nature connection index in Greek manuscript in preparation.

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