REPORT ON THE TOPIC: “ORGANIZATION OF OBSERVATIONS ON A WALK. AWARENESS WITH THE WORLD AROUND"


Organization of walks (from work experience)

What is a walk? And how to organize it? Many novice educators have difficulty planning a walk. How different should the activities of children be in the kindergarten area? These are active observation games and sports entertainment, labor, and independent activities for children.

The better the conditions on the site are thought out, the more clearly the regime is implemented, the denser and more interesting the children’s activities. Planning a walk helps a young teacher to evenly distribute program material, avoid frequently repeated topics, enriches preschoolers with knowledge, develops curiosity, encourages exploration, and influences the formation of positive relationships among peers. A teacher is an organizer of observations, a participant in games and fun, and a leader of children’s activities.

Organization of walks.

The process of raising children is continuous.

Great potential opportunities for the comprehensive harmonious development of a child’s personality are inherent in the process of educational work with children in a walking environment. The main goal of the teacher’s pedagogical work during a walk is to provide active, meaningful, varied and interesting activities for children: games, work, observation, during which a children’s team is formed, positive behavior skills are learned and developed, and children’s ideas about the surrounding nature and social life are accumulated.

A walk should provide relaxation to the child, relieve stress after classes and create a cheerful mood in him, which in turn provides the appropriate tone for the successful physical and mental development of the child in other conditions and types of activities.

An indispensable condition for the successful development and education of preschoolers during a walk is their simultaneous mastery of mental and practical actions. This can be successfully resolved through systematic observations planned in advance by the teacher. Daily observations on walks enrich children's ideas about the natural world, people (their work, relationships), and enrich children's aesthetic ideas.

Thus, observation is one of the main components of the walk.

Children should be involved in active mental activity, in completing tasks to improve their skills, ability to navigate the kindergarten area, etc.

During the walk, they plan to observe objects and phenomena of social life and nature, observe the work of adults, the life of the city, animals, as well as the work activities of the children themselves. In the calendar plan, the teacher specifically indicates what the children will observe, for what purpose, what type of work they will do, and how the responsibilities will be distributed among them.

Thus, the structure of the walk consists of the following components:

— Various observations (goal) (didactic tasks);

— Labor actions of the children themselves (goal);

— Outdoor games and play exercises;

— Individual work in physical education;

— Independent activity of children.

Each of the required components of the walk takes from 7 to 15 minutes and is carried out against the backdrop of children’s independent activity. the sequence and duration of different types of activities should vary taking into account specific conditions: time of year, weather, age of children and the nature of their previous activities. So, if before the walk there were activities that required mental stress from the children, then it is advisable to start it with the organization of outdoor games or sports entertainment, labor. And vice versa, if the walk was preceded by physical and musical activities, then it is better to start it with calm independent activity.

The main thing is that each of the components of the walk contributes something unique to the development and education, in the formation of the personal qualities of preschoolers.

Against the background of children playing independently, the teacher can tell and show something to them, communicate with one or two on a topic that interests them, organize individual games and entertainment, and observe with a subgroup of children some unusual phenomenon or event that they themselves noticed. The main thing is to make sure that you don’t get bored while walking.

Walk “Nature Has No Bad Weather”

Purpose of the walk

- to activate children’s knowledge about animals and plants, to introduce them to the concept of “weather”, to the influence of weather changes on plants, animals and people, to promote the formation of the ability to assess the condition of surrounding plants and animals, and to teach them to conduct phenological observations.

Before going on a walk, children should be taught about the factors that make up the weather. Make a sample nature diary, show how to record known natural phenomena in a diary using symbols. Tell us how to dress for a walk in different weather. Find out what birds and insects that live in the school area the children know. Consider illustrations depicting famous birds and insects.

With this walk you should begin your daily observation of the weather and seasonal natural phenomena. At the beginning and at the end of the walk, the teacher can ask the children what the weather is like, whether there have been any changes in the weather during the walk, and how the children determined this. Did they take into account the state of the sky (clear, presence of clouds), the presence of wind (quiet, windy), temperature (warm, cold, cool). What do the plants look like (cheerful, sad, drooping), birds (ruffled, joyful, anxious), do insects fly, how does the weather affect a person (chilly, hot, what is your mood). Then ask the children to note the signs of autumn.

Complete the game task “Natural absurdities” and play the game “Blind Man’s Bluff in Circles”.

"Natural absurdities"

While walking along a certain route, children are asked to find objects of non-natural origin that the teacher has previously placed on this site. After completing the route, the most vigilant traveler is determined by the number of absurdities seen. Then the teacher and the children walk along the route again, noting these absurdities with them.

"Blind Man's Bluff in Circles"

I blindfold the driver, chosen according to the counting rhyme. Within a radius of 3-5 steps around the driver, the players draw small circles and stand in them. One of the players circles the driver in place so that he loses the direction in which to look for circles.

The driver walks at random, and the players run from circle to circle until he comes close to one of the circles. At the command of the leader, everyone stops and does not move from their place. The driver stretches his arms forward, trying to touch the person standing in the circle, and he crouches, dodges, without leaving his place. Having finally found the person hiding, the driver feels him and calls his name. If the driver makes a mistake, he continues to drive. In case of three failures in a row, a new driver is chosen.

The player who moved from his place after the driver approached the circle must change him.

After the walk, children record their observations of the weather in a nature diary.

As a senior teacher, I systematically study the work of educators with children during walks, provide them with methodological assistance in planning its content, techniques and methods of guiding various children's activities. I also make sure that in the calendar plan teachers indicate what attributes and toys will be needed for children to play, i.e. take-away materials. Because, based on this, children have a desire to play one or another game (sailor caps, binoculars for “sailors”, steering wheel for a “driver”, etc.

The content of evening walks should be planned taking into account all the children’s previous activities. Observations of games, labor, physical exercises and outdoor games are planned. However, it is necessary to keep in mind that in the evening you should not play games of great mobility that excite the nervous system of children.

Literature:

1. T. G. Kobzeva. Organization of children's activities during a walk.

2. Kholodova I. A. Children about nature.

3. M. V. Lucic. Classes with children of senior preschool age on the topic: “Spring. Insects, migratory birds."

4. E. A. Babenkova, T. M. Paranicheva. Outdoor games while walking.

Walk structure

Zakharova Svetlana

Walk structure

Walk structure:

1. Observation.

2. Outdoor games: 2-3 games of high mobility, 2-3 games of low and medium mobility, games of children’s choice, didactic games.

3. Individual work with children on the development of movements and physical qualities.

4. Children's labor on the site.

5. Independent play activity.

The sequence of structural components of a walk may vary depending on the type of previous activity. If the children were in an activity that required increased cognitive activity and mental stress, then at the beginning of the walk it is advisable to conduct outdoor games, jogging, and then observations. If there was a physical education or music lesson before the walk, the walk begins with observation or quiet play. Each of the required components of the walk lasts from 7 to 15 minutes and is carried out against the background of independent activity.

Observation.

A large part of the walks is devoted to observations (pre-planned) of natural phenomena and social life. Observations can be carried out with a whole group of children, with subgroups, as well as with individual children.

At a younger age, observations should take no more than 7-10 minutes and be bright and interesting; at an older age, observations should last from 15 to 25 minutes. They should be carried out daily, but each time children should be offered different objects to consider.

Objects of observation can be:

• Wildlife: plants and animals;

• Inanimate nature: seasonal changes and various natural phenomena (rain, snow, flowing streams);

• Adult labor.

Observations of the work of adults (janitor, driver, builder, etc.) are organized 1-2 times a quarter.

Types of observation:

• Short-term observations are organized to formulate information about the properties and qualities of an object or phenomenon (children learn to distinguish shape, color, size, spatial arrangement of parts and the nature of the surface, and when familiarizing themselves with animals, characteristic movements, sounds made, etc.

• Long-term observations are organized to accumulate knowledge about the growth and development of plants and animals, and seasonal changes in nature. Children compare the observed state of the object with what was before.

When organizing observations, the teacher must always follow this sequence:

1. facts are established;

2. connections are formed between parts of the object;

3. children’s ideas are accumulating;

4. comparisons are made;

5. conclusions are drawn and connections are made between the observation being carried out now and those carried out earlier.

The surrounding life and nature provide an opportunity to organize interesting and varied observations.

Outdoor games.

The leading place during the walk is given to games, mainly active ones. They develop basic movements, relieve mental stress from classes, and develop moral qualities.

The choice of game depends on the time of year, weather, air temperature. On cold days, it is advisable to start your walk with games of greater mobility associated with running, throwing, and jumping. Fun and exciting games help children cope better with cold weather. In damp, rainy weather (especially in spring and autumn), sedentary games that do not require a lot of space should be organized.

Games with jumping, running, throwing, and balance exercises should also be carried out on warm spring, summer days and early autumn.

During walks, plotless folk games with objects, such as grandmothers, ring throws, skittles, can be widely used, and in older groups - elements of sports games: volleyball, basketball, gorodki, badminton, table tennis, football, hockey. In hot weather, water games are held.

Time for outdoor games and physical exercises during a morning walk: in junior groups - 6 - 10 minutes, in middle groups - 10-15 minutes, in senior and preparatory groups - 20-25 minutes. On an evening walk: in junior and middle groups - 10-15 minutes, in senior and preparatory groups - 12-15 minutes.

Every month, learn 2-3 exercises (repeat within a month and consolidate 3-4 times a year)

At a younger age, games with text (imitation of the actions of the teacher) are recommended.

In the middle group, the teacher distributes roles among the children (the role of the driver is performed by a child who can cope with this task).

In the senior and preparatory groups, relay races, sports games, and games with elements of competition are held.

Outdoor games end with walking or low-mobility play, which gradually reduces physical activity.

Children are not allowed to walk for long periods of time without moving. Children with reduced mobility and low initiative require special attention and should be involved in outdoor games.

During walks, the teacher conducts individual work with children: for some, he organizes a game with a ball, throwing at a target, for others - a balance exercise, for others - jumping from tree stumps, stepping over trees, running down hills.

Games with a high level of movement intensity should not be played at the end of the morning walk before leaving the site, as children in this case become overexcited, which negatively affects the nature of daytime sleep, increases the duration of falling asleep, and may cause a decrease in appetite.

In addition to outdoor games and individual exercises in basic movements, sports activities (exercises) are also organized during the walk. In the summer it’s cycling, hopscotch, in the winter it’s sledding, ice skating, sliding on ice paths, and skiing.

About half an hour before the end of the walk, the teacher organizes quiet games. Then the children collect toys and equipment. Before entering the room, they wipe their feet. Children undress quietly, without noise, carefully fold and put things in lockers. They change their shoes, put their suit and hair in order and go to the group.

Features of the organization of physical activity in winter:

- during the cold season, the teacher needs to ensure that children breathe through their noses. Nasal breathing corresponds to the development in children of the ability to breathe correctly and prevents nasopharyngeal disease;

- at low air temperatures, it is not advisable to organize games of high mobility, since they lead to forced breathing when children begin to breathe through their mouths. In these conditions, you should also not play games that require children to pronounce quatrains, refrains, or any text in a full voice.

Didactic games and exercises.

They are one of the structural components of the walk. They are short-lived, taking 3-4 minutes at a younger age, and 5-6 minutes at an older age.

Each didactic game consists of: a didactic task, content, rules, game situations.

When using d/games, the teacher must follow the pedagogical principles:

• rely on the knowledge children already have;

• the task must be sufficiently difficult, but at the same time accessible to children;

• gradually complicate the didactic task and game actions;

• explain the rules specifically and clearly;

Types of didactic games:

• Playing with objects (toys or natural materials,

• Word games.

Various didactic exercises are a way to stimulate children's activity. They are carried out several times during one walk. A didactic exercise can be offered to children at the beginning, at the end, or can be woven into the course of observation, for example, “Bring a yellow leaf,” “Find a tree by leaf,” “Find a tree or shrub by description,” etc. They are carried out with with the whole group or with part of it.

During walks, work is also done to develop the child’s speech: learning a nursery rhyme or a short poem, reinforcing a difficult sound to pronounce, etc. The teacher can recall with the children the words and melody of a song that they learned in a music lesson.

During independent play activities, children reflect the impressions received in the process of educational activities, excursions, everyday life, and acquire knowledge about the work of adults. This happens in the process of role-playing games.

The teacher encourages games with a family, astronauts, a steamship, a hospital, etc. He helps develop the plot of the game, select or create the necessary material for it. Interest in such (creative games) games develops in children from 3-4 years old. The heyday of role-playing games begins at the age of 4 and reaches its highest development in the middle of preschool age (5-6 years), and then is gradually replaced by games with rules that arise after seven years.

During the walk, the teacher makes sure that all the children are busy, not bored, and that no one gets cold or overheated. It attracts those children who run a lot to participate in quieter games.

Labor activity of children at the site.

Work activity while walking is of great educational importance. It is important that for each child the tasks are feasible, interesting and varied, and that their duration does not exceed 5-19 minutes at a younger age and 15-20 minutes at an older age.

The forms of organizing children's labor are:

• Individual work assignments;

• Work in groups;

• Teamwork.

Individual work assignments are used in all age groups of kindergarten.

Collective work makes it possible to develop work skills and abilities simultaneously in all children in the group. During collective work, the ability to accept a common goal of work, coordinate one’s actions, and plan work together is formed.

In the younger group, children receive individual assignments consisting of one or two labor operations, for example, taking bird food and putting it in a feeder. The teacher takes turns involving all the children in feeding the birds. Or, for example, collecting pebbles for crafts. Work is organized as “work nearby”, while children do not experience any dependence on each other

In the middle group, two subgroups can work simultaneously and perform different work assignments; The teacher's constant attention to the quality of work is required;

showing and explaining the entire task are sequential steps.

In older children, it is necessary to develop the ability to accept a work task, present the result of its implementation, determine the sequence of operations, select the necessary tools, and independently engage in work activities (with a little help from the teacher).

State institution "Minsk City Center for Hygiene and Epidemiology"

On the territory of a preschool education institution, the standard design solution provides for separate group playgrounds, a general physical education area, as well as other functional areas.

The layout of the territory should provide opportunities for pupils to ride bicycles and ski.

Physical education, sports and play equipment on the territory of preschool educational institutions, sports equipment in design, size, and materials used must correspond to the age and psychophysical characteristics of the pupils.

The design solution on the territory of the institution provides for the installation of canopies, verandas or terraces. The canopies are fenced on three sides on the windward side. The floors of canopies and terraces should be predominantly wooden or sand and gravel.

Cleaning of the area should be carried out daily in the morning (before the students arrive) and as it gets dirty during the day. In dry and hot weather, at least twice a day before cleaning the territory, it is necessary to ensure watering of the land of the preschool institution. In winter, playgrounds and paths must be cleared of snow and sprinkled with sand.

Sand for filling the sandboxes of preschool education institutions is imported from places specially established for this purpose with supporting documents confirming the content of natural radionuclides and heavy metal salts (lead, cadmium). Every year in the spring, as well as for epidemic reasons and in case of visible pollution, the sand in the sandboxes is changed.

Before the game, the sand is slightly moistened and shoveled.

The stay of pupils in the open air is planned at least twice a day for a total duration of at least 3 hours 20 minutes - 4 hours, depending on the operating hours of the preschool institution and in accordance with the curriculum of preschool education, approved in the manner established by the legislation of the Republic of Belarus.

During the walk, pupils should be provided with physical activity and reasonable clothing depending on weather conditions, including in winter.

The head of a preschool education institution may decide to reduce the duration (or prohibit) walks for pupils in the open air in unfavorable weather conditions (rain, hurricane, other man-made emergencies), as well as in conditions of air movement speed of more than 3 m/sec. and ambient air temperature - 15 °C and below - for pupils under the age of 3 years, at atmospheric air temperature - 18 °C and lower - for pupils aged 3 to 7 years.

If necessary, the text of sanitary norms and rules can be found on the website of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Belarus: minzdraw.gov.by.

Walking is an important component in the daily routine of a preschool education institution. Goals of the walk:  health promotion;  prevention of fatigue;  physical and mental development of children;  restoration of functional resources of the body reduced during activity. Objectives of the walk:  to provide a hardening effect on the body in natural conditions;  help improve the physical development of preschool children;  optimize children’s motor activity;  promote the cognitive, aesthetic, social, moral and personal development of children.

Types of walks:  on the site of a preschool education institution;  walking walks outside the site (children of senior preschool age at a distance of up to two kilometers). Requirements for the content of a walk on the site of a preschool education institution:  observation;  physical activity: outdoor and sports games, physical exercises;  labor activity;  individual work in various areas of development of students;  independent activities of children. The sequence of structural components of a walk: (may vary depending on the type of previous lesson) • if the children were in an activity that required increased cognitive activity and mental stress, then first the walk there are outdoor games, jogging, then observations; • if before the walk there was a lesson in physical education or musical activity, the walk begins with observation or quiet play; • each of the mandatory components of the walk lasts from 7 to 15 minutes and is carried out against the backdrop of children’s independent activity; • the content of walks is determined by the preschool education curriculum, taking into account the children’s previous activities, pedagogical and health-improving tasks, and is built in accordance with calendar planning in each age group. Organization of observations: The process of observation can be organized for objects and weather phenomena. When planning observations, the teacher considers:  equipment and materials used during the observation, placement of children;  techniques for attracting children’s attention to observation (surprise moments, riddles, setting a cognitive task, problematic situation);  techniques for activating mental activity (search questions, actions, comparison, use of childhood experience). Organization of motor activity: The motor activity of children during a walk should include: Outdoor games and physical exercises during a walk  in the younger group - 6-10 minutes,  in the middle group - 10-15 minutes,  in the older group - 20-25 minutes. Outdoor games can be supplemented or replaced with sports exercises or, in older preschool age, sports games, games with elements of competition. Sports exercises include:  sledding,  skiing,  riding bicycles, scooters. Sports games include:  towns,  basketball,  badminton,  table tennis,  football, hockey. Independent motor activity:  nature and duration depend on the individual needs and interests of children, the developing environment;  individual tasks (in accordance with calendar planning);  depending on weather conditions, children’s physical activity in the air can be of varying intensity so that children do not become hypothermic or overheated;  the teacher thinks through the organization of physical activity before going for a walk, focusing on specific weather conditions;  children are not allowed to spend a long time walking without moving;  children with reduced mobility and low initiative require special attention and should be involved in outdoor games;  games with a high level of movement intensity should not be played at the end of the morning walk before leaving the site, as children in this case become overexcited, which negatively affects the nature of daytime sleep, increases the duration of the period of falling asleep, and may cause a decrease in appetite. Organization of individual work: in accordance with calendar planning, the teacher carries out individual work on:  cognitive  socio-moral and personal  physical  aesthetic development of children. For this purpose, prepares all necessary materials and equipment. Labor assignments: the teacher involves children:  in collecting toys;  providing all possible assistance in putting things in order after a walk;  caring for plants, etc. Depending on the goals and objectives of the walk, the teacher prepares the necessary take-out material and manuals for various types of children's activities that meet sanitary and hygienic requirements. The teacher must guide the children’s independent activities:  ensure their complete safety;  teach them to use aids in accordance with their purpose;  constantly monitor the children’s activities throughout the walk.

Prepared by Galina Vladimirovna Shlyago, Deputy Head for Primary Activities of the State Educational Institution “Nursery-Garden No. 10 of Mozyr”

Literature: Resolution of the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Belarus dated May 3, 2016 No. 67 “On approval of Sanitary norms and rules “Requirements for preschool educational institutions.”
Instructional and methodological letter of the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Belarus “On the organization of summer recreational work in preschool educational institutions”, approved on May 22, 2015 by the Deputy Minister of Education of the Republic of Belarus R.S. Sidorenko. Resolution of the Ministry of Education of the Republic of Belarus dated November 27, 2012 No. 133 “On approval of the preschool education curriculum.” View the embedded image gallery online at: https://mozyrroo.by/obrazovanie/doshkolnoe-obrazovanie/metodicheskaya-set/2181-pamyatka-po-organizatsii-progulki-v-uchrezhdenii-doshkolnogo-obrazovaniya#sigFreeId0018b9cbf9

Organization of walks in kindergarten in accordance with Federal State Educational Standards

Organization of walks in kindergarten.
Description: This article talks about conducting walks in a preschool educational institution.
The theoretical basis for conducting walks in preschool educational institutions, tasks, techniques, types, types, structure, time period and external material used for walks with children are listed. This material (article) will be useful primarily to teachers in preschool educational institutions, since walks in kindergartens are held daily. Educators of different age groups can use this article to highlight something useful for themselves and, of course, for their students! The content of the Educational Program, according to the Federal State Educational Standard, should ensure the formation and development of the personality, motivation and abilities of children in various types of activities and contain
the following educational areas: • social and communicative development • cognitive development • speech development • artistic and aesthetic development • physical development Integration of these areas in educational The process takes place throughout the day in kindergarten. Proper organization of walks in a preschool educational institution allows children to more correctly realize their potential and creative manifestations. Theoretical basis for conducting walks in a preschool educational institution Before children go for a walk, the teacher inspects the territory of the site for compliance with safety requirements in accordance with his job description. Before going out for a walk, Institution workers involved in dressing children must ensure that children do not remain dressed indoors for a long time in order to avoid overheating. Monitor the serviceability and compliance of children’s clothing and footwear with the microclimate and weather conditions. It is prohibited: • Leaving children alone, unattended by Institution employees; • Use sharp, piercing, cutting objects, or broken toys in children's games. • The teacher must immediately notify the supervisor and parents of every accident involving a child, and, if necessary, involve medical personnel to provide first aid. If necessary, arrange for the child to be taken to the emergency department. In accordance with the requirements of SanPiN, pupils must spend 3-4 hours in the fresh air every day (except for those days when weather conditions shorten the walking time or interfere with classes on the playground). Walking should be based on health-saving activities, hardening should occur. After intense physical activity, outdoor activities should begin at a calm pace, and vice versa, after creative activities, active physical exercises are planned. During a walk, motivation for various types of activities should occur. The regulatory documents indicate 10 main types of activities for preschool education: • gaming (including role-playing games, games with rules and other types of games); • communicative (communication, interaction with peers and adults); • labor; • cognitive - research (studying objects of the surrounding world and experimenting with them); • perception of fiction and folklore; • self-service and basic household work (indoors and outdoors); • design from various materials, including construction sets, modules, paper, natural and other materials • visual (drawing, modeling, appliqué) • musical (perception and understanding of the meaning of musical works, singing, musical - rhythmic movements, playing children's musical instruments) • motor (mastery of basic movements) Walking objectives • Development of thinking abilities. Children learn to independently establish cause-and-effect relationships, analyze, and draw conclusions. • Fostering a caring attitude towards nature and love for one’s native land. • Development of observation, cognitive activity, search and research activity, curiosity. • Cognitive, expanding knowledge about the surrounding world: natural phenomena, flora and fauna. • Replenishment of active vocabulary through the study of objects and natural phenomena. • Formation of communication skills in relationships with peers during joint play and work activities. • Promoting artistic, aesthetic and speech development. • Increasing the level of physical fitness of preschool children. • Optimization of motor activity. • Creating a positive emotional background. Techniques (structural components) of walking • Observation.
(Group, subgroup, individual). You can observe natural phenomena and situations in public life with your children. To attract the attention of students to the observation process, the following are used: setting a pedagogical task, game and problem situations, riddles, surprise moments, comparisons, involving the personal experience of children, conducting a conversation with search questions • Outdoor games and physical exercises, including conducting sports games with elements competitions in senior groups (badminton, football, towns, etc.) • Creative tasks and exercises for speech development. They are carried out in good weather conditions, using outdoor material (listening to fairy tales about nature, talking through pictures, making crafts from natural materials, etc.) • Labor tasks: involving the child in collecting toys, providing assistance in putting things in order on the site ( cleaning leaves, • dry branches, clearing paths and equipment from snow, sand, caring for plantings). Work should bring joy from the feeling of the importance of the work done. Types of walks

There are 2 types of walks with preschoolers, according to the place where they are held: • In the kindergarten area.
Walks are held here every day, and all key pedagogical tasks are implemented without exception. It is possible to diversify activities at the group site with various tasks, new games, and the use of unusual outdoor materials. • Walking outside the boundaries of the preschool educational institution. Pupils must be briefed on the route plan and compliance with safety measures during its passage. Goal: observing representatives of the flora and fauna (birds, squirrels, various trees, flowers) and people’s lives (work, activities, sports, shopping, etc.). If children have to cross the roadway in order to get to the place of the walk, it is necessary to repeat the rules of pedestrian behavior with the pupils the day before (where it is allowed to cross the road and how to do it). • Types of walks by topic: • Hiking trips. With children 5–7 years old, it is possible to conduct walking walks in the territory of the kindergarten or outside its borders, taking into account a well-thought-out route and the final goal. This type of walk trains the endurance of preschoolers, awakens the ability to observe the world around them, highlight what is set by the task of the hike (search for natural material, recognition of bird species, repetition of traffic rules). Walking trips should be carried out several times a school year (one at each time of the year), so that students do not lose interest in this type of activity. • Walk with a character. This type of walk includes an entertaining element and is aimed at creating a great mood for the students. As a rule, a fairy-tale character is the leader of the walk (his role is played by a teacher or another preschool educational institution employee according to an agreement), he assigns exciting tasks to the children, creating a problem situation and involving them in participation in outdoor games. • Walk-event. Tasks must correspond to the subject focus of the event, form the importance and involvement of the child. A walk-event can be dedicated to either a festive or an individual occasion in the life of a group. • Labor actions are aimed at maintaining order on the territory of the kindergarten, improving the grounds and areas. It is good that similar walks with a predominance of social work activities are fixed in the memory of children. You can create wall newspapers with information about the work carried out, make photo collages for the informative stand of the preschool educational institution. • Sports walks are aimed at promoting a healthy lifestyle. Similar walks are conducted at different times of the year, emphasizing the children’s interest in the importance of hardening. External material for walks To conduct classes on the street, the teacher, based on the plan for the walk, determines the necessary items and materials. The correct seasonal and age-specific selection of additional equipment and tools contributes to the development of children’s positive desire for cognitive activity, physical activity, and work assignments. Options for portable materials: • For the sandbox: scoops, buckets, molds, strainers, cars (trucks, excavators). To decorate sand buildings, flags, cubes, plastic windows, etc. are useful. • For outdoor games and sports exercises: sets for laptas, little towns, masks, skittles, balls, jump ropes, hoops, and in winter - sleds and ice cubes. • For observations: nets, windmills, safety colored plastic glasses, sunglasses, magnifying glasses. • For work assignments: shovels, brooms, wheelbarrows, watering cans, rakes. • For games: dolls, toy strollers or sleds, cars, cubes, a set of doll dishes, a set for playing shop, sets for playing with water. • For creative activities: sheets of paper or cardboard, coloring books, paints and brushes for drawing, plasticine. • For speech development: books for reading and discussion, albums and postcards with illustrations for viewing. Temporary organization of walks in kindergarten There are five structural elements for a walk, each of which lasts 7–15 minutes: • observation • labor • physical activity • individual work in various areas of development of preschool children, • independent play activities These types of activities are built in accordance with children’s previous activities, their emotional state, learning tasks and calendar-thematic planning.
The sequence of activities and their educational content should be displayed in the walking notes. Taking notes on a walk

In the outline of the walk, the teacher indicates educational tasks, equipment and take-out material, the location of the lesson, and describes in detail the conduct of the walk.
Next, you should carry out a self-analysis of the lesson, noting the completed tasks, discover the prerequisites for failures and identify methods for improving pedagogical work during the walk. Time plan for a walk The length of time preschoolers spend on a walk is 3–4 hours daily and is formed from a morning and evening walk. Each of the five components of the walk requires 7–15 minutes, the rest of the time is spent on independent activity of the children. During a walk in the first half of the day, physical activity lasts 6–10 minutes. in the younger group (increased by 5 minutes for the following age groups), in the evening walk - 10–15 minutes. for any age of pupils. In winter, the duration of walks decreases. In bad weather conditions, the walk is canceled, but is replaced by indoor physical activity. Organization of observations during a walk in kindergarten In accordance with the Federal State Educational Standard, the main direction of the formation of a pre-school child is considered to be cognitive development. It is carried out in different configurations: experimental, research, project activities, experiments, games (plot, role-playing, didactic), examination, resolution of problem situations. The best way to develop cognitively while walking is through observation. Observation is the process of studying objects and natural phenomena through sensory perception, identifying qualities and properties, comparison, generalization, and establishing connections. Observation can be carried out both with all pupils and individually. Depending on the tasks set by the teacher for the children’s research activities, observations are divided into episodic, long-term and frontal. Several conditions are imposed on observations during a walk in kindergarten in order to ensure the effective development of each child: • Cyclicity. Repeatedly returning to the observation of previously studied natural objects and phenomena contributes to better assimilation of knowledge by preschoolers. • Short duration. During the period of observation, the teacher must monitor the emotional state of the child and beware of overwork in students. Children should begin and complete the study with positive feelings. • Availability. Any child is given the opportunity to analyze and study a subject. • Structurality. Observation is formed from three elements: beginning (concentrating the attention of students, creating a favorable atmosphere), the main part (obtaining information about an object or phenomenon), completion (summarizing, generalizing the knowledge gained). Preparation for observation consists of the following points: • Determining the place of observation in the system of students’ knowledge about nature: what skills and abilities will be improved, what knowledge will be acquired for the first time, and what will be expanded.
• Selecting an object or phenomenon for observation: an object of living nature (plant, animal, bird, insect), an object of inanimate nature (stream, icicles, stones), a natural phenomenon (thunderstorm, blizzard, falling leaves, drops), an object or subject of social life ( monitoring people of certain professions, public transport, traffic on the road). • Preparation of tools and additional equipment: bowls and food for animals, feeders and grain for birds, special tools (thermometer, magnifying glass, pinwheel). Time plan for observations during a walk

Observation is carried out on walks with children of all ages and is organized daily for 7–15 minutes.
of the total duration of the walk. During walks in younger groups, short-term observations are carried out; it is recommended to study natural objects in several short stages, alternating with active and intellectual games, sports tasks, and conversations. In older groups, observations become lengthy, which makes it possible to develop analytical abilities in children and helps to intensify ideas about nature and the social and everyday structure of life. Walking is one of the components of education in kindergarten. With proper organization and use of various teaching methods by the teacher, classes form in children inquisitive scientists, attentive observers, specialists in the natural beauty and richness of the surrounding world, and adherents of a healthy lifestyle.

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