Outdoor Play, Risk and Challenge: an Interview with Kathryn Solly

Kathryn Solly, author of ‘Risk, Challenge and Adventure in the Early Years’ has taken a break from training childcare professionals to share her experience in the childcare sector as an advocate of outdoor learning, including her time as head of the Chelsea Open Air Nursery School and Children’s Centre.

Thank you for agreeing to chat with First Discoverers. First off, can you explain what initially drew you to the early years sector

I’ve had what I describe as an ‘accidental career’ as I was originally trained as a secondary teacher of Rural and Environmental Science. I went on Voluntary Service Overseas to teach agriculture, English and social science in Papua New Guinea for two years. This influenced and changed me dramatically. Thus, when I was offered a job teaching infants in an unorthodox but highly successful primary school I grabbed the opportunity. When I tell you that my class of 6/7 year olds were responsible for caring for two crocodiles you might wonder what might be the attractions of the post! Luckily my Papua New Guinea experiences and the fact that when I trained as a teacher everyone learnt about child development and learning plus the basics of the 3R’s were really helpful. The crocodiles, Shetland Pony, goats, 80 odd rabbits and an orchard full of wildfowl became my responsibility too. Thankfully I had excellent colleagues who nurtured the start of my fascination with young children. However, learning outdoors was central to the school’s ethos alongside real reasons for cross-curricular learning. These have remained mainstays for my practice and passions to this day.

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Becoming a mother to three children, (the first two a year apart ) also taught me much about the practicalities and challenges of early childhood and of being a parent. Our first son was born with a weakened immune system providing great insight into the needs of the unique child. Having three children has been enriching to my career, as have our two grandchildren.

Later I was offered a post in a maintained nursery school having run a pack-away setting at a tertiary college for parents to leave their children whilst attending courses. I would teach in the morning and retrain to become an early childhood teacher in the afternoons.

I have never looked back and fully understand that the foundations of lives are established in these earliest years. Early childhood is where it happens.

What skills would you say are absolutely vital for a childcare professional?

What would you say makes a successful childcare setting?

In your view, what should children ‘learn’, or ‘gain’ from their time in early years care?

Children need the following in order to learn:

What they learn should provide the firmest foundations for life-based upon experiences indoors and out (not just formal schooling). It will be unique to each child and therefore provision for learning should be embedded in their natural curiosity and desire to investigate using their senses and whole bodies. They are fully capable of concentrating for long periods of time when things interest them. Children need numerous opportunities to explore new ideas and concepts over time and in different ways using a range of creative and open-ended resources. Start from the child and follow their lead.

How has the childcare industry changed during the time you have been involved in the sector?

“our children go into formal school earlier than most of the rest of the world is … far from desirable in my opinion.”

It has expanded and contracted several times. The market forces unleashed by several governments have encouraged parents into work earlier and earlier but sadly not always considering the child at the centre. Once the voucher scheme started in 1996 children had funding attached to them and became commodities whom settings and schools were competing for.

I believe babies, in particular, need home-based care such as that provided by their families and childminders. Older children benefit from a wider group with more peers and a range of different adults in nursery-type provision.  The most vulnerable children need the very best our society can provide. Sadly, the decline in the numbers of the very best childminders, children’s centres, day-care and maintained nursery schools are indicative of childcare being only seen as a business rather than an essential part of a well-developed society as is evident in other parts of the world. The fact that our children go into formal school earlier than most of the rest of the world is also far from desirable in my opinion.

What would you say are currently the biggest problems that childcare settings face?

You were previously the head of Chelsea Open Air Nursery School and Children’s Centre, can you tell us about your time there and what makes it so unique?

Chelsea Open Air (COANS) is unique and quite a jewel in early childhood because of several reasons. It was a genuine privilege to be headteacher there for 17 years despite commuting at 5:30a.m. each day. We accrued a great deal of popularity and many accolades over those years due to having a highly committed and hard-working team and families who valued COANS and worked with us. To me it still remains a very special place, which I fell in love with.

“The children free-flow indoors and out at all times of the year and in all weathers”

It is based in a building which dates from 1587 and provides on entrance a child-sized scale like a family house. This opens out into larger internal and external spaces. The latter being particularly central to the ethos of openness. It was founded in 1927 with funding from Natalie Davies, an American benefactress who wanted a nursery for her two children. She persuaded Dr Susan Isaacs to oversee its establishment and running. Susan Isaacs and her husband Nathan were both involved in many ways. Isaacs brought in students from the then Institute of Child Development (now the Institute of Education) to train there too. In the 1970’s it became a state-maintained nursery school within the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. It sadly is no longer a children’s centre but for me it was the establishment of the children’s centre and year-round provision that really brought COANS into its greatest community role.

The ethos today however of openness, inclusion, diversity and respect for children’s learning choices remains a very strong feature. The children free-flow indoors and out at all times of the year and in all weathers. The adults follow their lead and support their needs and interests,  extending and enhancing their learning, their dispositions, motivations and fascinations.

At what point in your career did you recognise the importance of outdoor learning?

It has always been there. I was an outdoor child and loved building dens, gardening, making fires, climbing trees and roaming in nature. Although my childhood was economically poor my outdoor experiences and access to interactions and books was rich.

“From the age of eleven, I really disliked school and teachers. I was often naughty and lazy.”

One day my biology teacher suggested I undertake a degree in Rural and Environmental Studies. All my teaching roles have involved being outdoors in nature with animals and plants since…. I never looked back. Now as a Froebel Trust Travelling Trainer and Early Education Associate and in my freelance work and writing I have numerous opportunities to engage and encourage others to experience the pleasures and benefits of being outdoors in nature.



A Complete Guide to Outdoor Learning and Play – Get it Now


How important is having access to adequate outdoor facilities and equipment to a setting, and what advice would you give to childcare professionals that perhaps find it difficult to access a natural environment?

You have released a number of childcare books, your first being ‘Risk, Challenge and Adventure in the Early Years’ – could you give us a summary of the adult role when attempting to include risk and challenge in early years learning?

This is rather a challenge but here are a few tips:

You are currently a specialist Early Years trainer and consultant, what motivated you to make the switch from providing childcare to childcare education?

My mother was seriously ill and I wanted to spend time with her. Sometimes in life family must come first. After she died I was asked to speak at conferences and provide training so one thing led to another after completing my first book.

What would be your advice to anyone considering a career in childcare?

What makes you most passionate about the work you do?

Children and nature.

And finally, If you could choose just one, what would you say has been your best ‘I love my job’ moment?

Whilst teaching: Seeing children with complex special educational needs move, walk, and communicate with their peers. Seeing the joy in their families too.

Now: watching practitioners gain the confidence to excel outdoors working with young children.


We hope you have enjoyed this interview and are interested in more of our range of Childcare Conversation features.

Kathryn Solly, author of ‘Risk, Challenge and Adventure in the Early Years’, employs her 35 years teaching experience in nursery, primary secondary and tertiary education sectors to advise, train and motivate as a keynote speaker and trainer, specialising in outdoor play in the Early Years.

To find out more about Kathryn and her work you can visit her website Solly.Biz, follow her on Twitter at @SollyKathrynor check out her book ‘Risk, Challange and Adventure in the Early Years’.


Our Childcare Conversations series aims to showcase a cross-section of leading voices from the world of childcare talking about their roles, offering advice, comment and views on topical issues.  This time around we’ve decided to shine the spotlight on outdoor learning and have chatted to several early years experts to gain their insight on the inclusion of the outdoors in child development.

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