The trail at William Wilt Soccer Complex is designed to have children exercise and pick up several vital learning skills with their parents.
By KRYSTAL NURSE
The Sun
A ribbon was cut on Oct. 16 to signify the official opening of the Born Learning Trail at the William Wilt Soccer Complex in Mullica Hill, and Stephanie Lerch, chair of Women United, is excited for the trail to come to her hometown.
The Born Learning Trail, according to Lerch, consists of a series of signs and activities targeted toward preschool or early education-aged children to stimulate their brains while doing physical activities with their parents or caretakers.
“You typically see signs like this in parks with exercises to do, but that’s exercise of the body and we wanted to exercise the mind and promote that early education learning,” said Lerch.
Some of the signs will have the kids look around their immediate surroundings to find objects of a certain shape and say what shape it is to the adult, or to play hopscotch and count out the numbers as they move through the different steps.
This is the organization’s third trail installation in Gloucester County and it’s looking toward placing more in.
“A couple of years ago, we had the privilege of installing the first Born Learning Trail in Gloucester County at Autumn Pasquale Memorial Park in Clayton,” said Lerch. “At that time, we wanted to get the name out there in the community, and then the council spoke, and we said that we wanted to bring this to further areas of the county.”
The second trail exists in Woodbury at Wing-Dickerson Park.
During the Clayton ribbon-cutting, Lerch said she saw parents and children in the background interacting with the signs and the actions listed for children to do.
“The children ages 2 to 7 is probably the sweet spot where it will affect them the most,” said Lerch. “Cause that’s the ages where they’ll begin to learn numbers, shapes and their colors and associating what’s on the ground in front of them with what may be up in nature.”
Women United, United Way of Gloucester County and Harrison Township committee and recreation members all noted the trail couldn’t have been installed without a collaborative effort.
“We couldn’t have done this without Women United, without the local Rotary Club (of Mullica Hill) making these signs happen, the parks and the township making sure the installation happens,” said Mike Gower, executive director of United Way of Gloucester County.
Harrison Township Recreation Commission Chairman Rob Johnson added the commission has always been seeking out ways to improve the parks in town, and the trail can help do that.
Lerch added the trail was deliberately chosen for the park and not a school to help better promote parent-to-child, or caregiver-to-child, learning in a casual setting.
“The signs are designed to engage both the caretaker, or parent, and the child and not just one teacher with a number of students who can’t really dedicate the time to each student,” said Lerch. “You see the signs in the park to exercise the body all the time, and now this is exercising the minds of children during that critical phase of learning and adapting, and they’re soaking that all in.”
Families can visit the trail while a separate child is at a soccer game and do activities that will help the child learn shapes, colors or numbers better.