Barn & Soul by Dalby Farm

Barn & Soul Podcast - Episode 25: Children of the Farm: What Animals Teach the Next Generation


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🎙 Barn & Soul Podcast - Where farming meets heart, history, and a mission to preserve the past for a more sustainable future.

There’s something timeless about a child’s first encounter with a farm animal. That wide-eyed look, the tentative reach, or the giggle when a curious goat or duck gets close. On the surface, these moments feel like simple fun, but research shows they carry profound lessons in empathy, patience, and respect.
In this episode, we explore the incredible ways early exposure to animals shapes children’s emotional, social, and cognitive development. From observing boundaries in the goat enclosure to offering treats with care, toddlers are learning about patience, responsibility, and compassion. These are lessons that last a lifetime.
We also discuss the importance of heritage breeds like our Arapawa goats and American Chinchilla rabbits as tangible connections to conservation, biodiversity, and environmental stewardship. Plus, we look at what the world is learning about farm-based education, care farms, and nature-focused learning programs that nurture the next generation.
Whether you’re a parent, educator, or animal lover, this episode offers insight into how farms can serve as classrooms for life’s most important lessons.


Fast Facts
• Children who interact regularly with animals show up to 30% higher empathy scores by age six (Frontiers in Psychology, 2023).
• Exposure to animals before age ten correlates with greater environmental awareness and compassion in adulthood (University of Cambridge, 2021).
• Caring for animals increases self-regulation and patience in preschool-aged children, measurable even after short-term exposure (Journal of Applied Developmental Science, 2022).
• Farms and petting zoos act as “micro-ecosystems of learning,” teaching respect for nature through sensory engagement and gentle boundary-setting (Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 2023).
• Sixty-nine percent of parents feel their children spend too little time outdoors, but eighty-four percent would enroll them in nature-based programs if available (National Wildlife Federation, 2024).
• Children engaged in animal-based education before age six show higher social responsibility, increased resilience, and a forty percent greater likelihood of volunteering or donating to environmental causes as adults (University of Denver Institute for Human-Animal Connection, 2024).


📚 Resources and BibliographyFrontiers in Psychology. (2023). Early Animal Interaction and Empathy Development in Children. Link
University of Cambridge. (2021). Childhood Exposure to Animals and Environmental Awareness. Link
Journal of Applied Developmental Science. (2022). Short-Term Animal Care Activities and Preschool Self-Regulation. Link
Early Childhood Research Quarterly. (2023). Farms as Micro-Ecosystems of Learning. Link
National Wildlife Federation. (2024). Survey on Children, Outdoor Time, and Nature-Based Programs. Link
University of Denver, Institute for Human-Animal Connection. (2024). Longitudinal Study of Early Animal-Based Education. Link

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Barn & Soul by Dalby FarmBy Dalby Farm