Self-Isolation Is Turning Children Into Budding Birders

During the coronavirus crisis, families are discovering their avian neighbors and nurturing the next generation of nature lovers.

Before a tidal wave of COVID-19 cases crashed on Chicago, before schools closed and the Illinois governor issued a stay-at-home order, a pair of Cooper鈥檚 Hawks took up residence on my family鈥檚 block. Their laugh-like cak-cak-cak calls ricocheted around the alleys and sent pigeons flying. My husband, kids, and I saw them swoop from one leafless tree to another, sure, but we didn鈥檛 spend much time really noticing them.

That changed a few weeks ago when we began spending most of our time in our home to help flatten the curve. Life is slower at the moment. We don鈥檛 rush around to basketball or soccer or violin. There鈥檚 more time to watch what鈥檚 happening through the window or up in the trees. Now, when we do leave the house, it鈥檚 for a quick walk, scoot, or bike around the neighborhood.  

On our excursions, we listen to newly arrived robins and look for their red breasts. We practice our fee-bee calls. My husband and I take our 7-year-old daughter Hazel and 4-year-old son Cole to the tree where we most often see the Cooper鈥檚 Hawks and look for their white poop on the sidewalk. When we spot them, my daughter awkwardly walks her pink plastic Big Wheel down the sidewalk so we don鈥檛 scare the birds with the rumbling. My kids practice using binoculars as the birds add sticks to their nest. When a hawk calls, my kids respond.

Our story is just one of many I've recently heard from friends. One parent who began watching birds with her kids sent a link to common calls on a school moms鈥 Facebook chat. Another friend鈥檚 daughter asked to study birds. On social distancing walks through the woods, little ones carry a backpack full of magnifying glasses, compasses, and binoculars. As our world responds to the coronavirus pandemic, birding, it turns out, is the perfect kid-friendly quarantine activity.

鈥淭his is an opportunity for kids to break into birding,鈥 says Adam Kessel, a program coordinator for the Forest Preserves of Cook County, a network of 70,000 acres of protected land in the Chicago region. He鈥檚 noticed people are becoming more interested in natural spaces, but since government officials are still advising people stay at home, he suggests looking for birds in a backyard, parkway, or courtyard. 

Seeking out birds helps my kids sharpen their observational powers, gets them away from screens, and lets them bathe in nature when most of the day is spent indoors. Our bird walks not only give us something to search for when we鈥檙e outside, they may be helping my kids learn.

鈥淥ftentimes you鈥檒l hear a bird before you see it and that gives you something to focus on,鈥 says Patti Bailie, a professor of early childhood education at the University of Maine at Farmington. 鈥淲ith birds you鈥檙e not only developing observation skills, you鈥檙e also developing auditory skills.鈥 And honing those can help with reading, she says.

also shows that playing outside fosters children鈥檚 creativity and ability to concentrate. One suggested that time in nature promoted preschoolers鈥 creativity and problem-solving skills. found that time outside can 鈥渟harpen child senses, enrich vocabulary, increase spatial understandings, and permit more practice for large muscle skills.鈥 

And those are just a couple of many studies that support a growing movement to teach kids outside. The Natural Start Alliance, a group that promotes outdoor experiences in early education, says that nature preschools in the U.S. numbered more than 250 in 2017, up from less than 20 a decade earlier. More elementary schools are also incorporating programs where kids spend one day a week outside.   

For Kia Ferrer, mom to 7-year-old Diego and 4-year-old Marco, watching birds helps teach empathy. From their window on the second floor of a Chicago apartment building, they all watch the Chimney Swifts nearby. A friend, who happened to be an ornithologist, pointed them out during a visit. Wanting to know more about them, she and her sons looked up the birds鈥 behavior and found that the swifts use their own spit to make nests and glue them to walls, so they named a couple of the birds Nesty and Sticky. 鈥淲e鈥檙e obsessed,鈥 says Ferrer, a child and family psychotherapist.

She and her boys saw how the birds live together and care for each other. The birds, she says, are a good example of community. 鈥淚鈥檓 teaching them how they care for each other and how nests are made and how that鈥檚 protective, using that as a metaphor for life now. It鈥檚 pretty parallel,鈥 she says.

Identifying birds has also offered Amanda O鈥橞rien, a medical research consultant who is now also homeschooling her two children, the chance to teach how to observe and compare. When O鈥橞rien asked her 7-year-old daughter what she wanted to research one day, Caitlyn said birds, so they came up with a lesson plan. Caitlyn got out a young birders' guide given to her by her granddad and listed attributes of a Pigeon Guillemot and a Band-tailed Pigeon. 

When they go outside they look for birds seen in their field guide and search for nests when they climb trees. (Unfortunately they can鈥檛 tell which species made which nests yet, Caitlyn and her brother Tait lament.)

These days, when my family goes out, my son reminds me not to forget our binoculars, something he didn鈥檛 used to do. My daughter even brings a notebook so she can make her own observations. We're also using our 爆料公社 bird guide app more than ever. 

We鈥檒l continue to watch migrants come through our patch of backyard as the weather warms. Building a birdfeeder is on the agenda for next week. We鈥檒l also keep watching the Cooper鈥檚 Hawk pair nest. Observing that process (with a little more practice using binoculars) will show both the kids and us that even during a pandemic, new life will hatch. And we may even have time to see it.