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New Web Help for Getting NY Kids Outdoors

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Wednesday, July 6, 2011   

NEW YORK - Parents looking for ways to keep children active this summer have a new online resource to help them select the best parks for their needs.

The new "Pick-A-Park" website is based on what local parents and educators indicated they would need for planning a trip to a park, says Dana Friedman, president of the Early Years Institute.

"They wanted pathways wide enough for strollers and wheelchairs, they wanted refreshments and playgrounds, and the No. 1 concern of parents with young children was bathrooms."

To create the website, a team of 15 interns went to 700 parks on Long Island to see them firsthand and photograph what each has to offer. The site also provides other useful information, including whether admission is charged and the walking distance from the parking lot to the entrance gate.

A major reason for starting Pick-a-Park, Friedman says, is that too many children spend the summer glued to the television and doing parent-centered activities. They need more time outside, using their imaginations, she says.

"A learning environment where they experiment and socialize with other children; these are the basic foundational skills that we are finding children are lacking. One antidote to that is to get them outside, playing and away from some of the influences of media."

In addition to providing the richest learning experiences, Friedman says, parks also help children learn to care for the land and the environment.

The Early Years Institute worked with the Long Island Nature Collaborative for Kids to set up Pick-a-Park, a project funded in part by the Rauch Foundation, the Horace Hagedorn Foundation and New York Community Bank. More information is online at pickapark.org.


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