There is a tremendous hunger in our culture for true play. This is a quote from Stuart L. Brown, M.D. who has spent years studying play in children. He is among a growing number of doctors, psychologists, child development specialists, and other professionals who are speaking out on the apparent lack of true play in children today. Are they right? Are our children starving for play?
To be defined as play, most researchers agree that childrens activities must meet five criteria:
1. Play must be pleasurable and enjoyable.
2. It must be spontaneous and voluntary.
3. A play activity contains an aspect of make believe.
4. The player must be actively engaged in play.
5. Play must have no extrinsic goals. *
While most children probably engage in play activities that meet some of these criteria, an activity has to meet all five to be considered true play. Activities for children today seem to be lacking in two primary areas: numbers four and five.
Many toys on the market today encourage passive rather than active play. In this age of high-tech toys, children frequently push a button and are entertained by watching play happen. The construction of the toy sets up the play activity and determines how it will be played with. The same can be said for many other typical activities for children today – television, movies, computer and video games. The problem with these activities is that the child is not creating anything using his/her own imagination. The child is not an active participant in creation of the play experience.
Criteria number five states that play must happen for the sake of play, with any outside goals. Much of what we play with children today has the covert agenda of teaching them a skill. Many of todays toys are educational and clever marketing has told parents that they need to stimulate their babys brain, use flash cards with their toddler, teach reading to their preschooler. Some of todays most popular toys carry names such as Einstein, Genius, Mozart, and Scholar. While there is nothing wrong with children learning through play, the point is that learning happens naturally in the course of true play. All children are born with a desire to explore, discover, and learn. The most effective means of accomplishing this is through their play.
When playing with water children learn about weight, in selling food in a pretend store they learn about numbers, by using toys symbolically, they are thinking abstractly – a requirement for reading. All of these activities lay the groundwork for learning naturally.
It is interesting to note that although children appear to be lacking in true play experiences, most parents agree that play is important to their childrens development. In fact, research has shown that parents even know the types of play that are most beneficial to children!* If parents acknowledge that play is important and know what types of play are beneficial, then why are children not playing in this type unstructured free play? Developmental psychologists Roberta Michnick Golinkoff, PhD and Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, PhD state that as parents, we know what to do, but we just cant bring ourselves to do it. We are afraid that if we trust our instincts, our children will be missing out on learning some critical skills. Their book, Einstein Never Used Flash Cards, proves otherwise.
It is my hope that we will bring to bring back true play to childhood. Just as many of us take back the process of childbirth, just as we trust our instincts regarding attachment, let us also value our childrens need to play creatively and show respect for the importance of play in their lives.
Ways we can each begin to do this:
Make play a part of your childs daily life. Set a time for free play, play that is undirected and uninterrupted by adults, each day.
Allow your child to play for the sake of play. Have no hidden agenda for teaching or learning during play.
Provide unstructured, multi-purpose toys. Toys that are not detailed encourage active participation on the part of the child. The child has to use his/her imagination to complete the toy. This also encourages creativity and gives the child an opportunity to make believe endless possibilities. In addition, there is some evidence these types of play materials develop out-of-the-box thinking and problem solving skills.*
Eliminate or limit television viewing. Television is a passive activity. It can also invite a host of other challenges to true play: children reenacting television programs instead of playing out of their own imaginations, exposure to violence and commercial marketing, and contributing to the need to be entertained.
Be conscious of the images and sensations your children take in. Young children are just beginning to know the world around them, try to give them a beautiful image of their world. Toys that are made of natural materials such as wood and cotton are particularly nice as they have a warmth and quality that synthetic counterparts cannot match. Images that are reflective of the beauty of nature are preferable to characterizations and cartoon-like reproductions.
Offer your child a life worth imitating. Young children learn through imitation. Watching you engaged in worthwhile daily tasks will give them lots of things to pretend and role play.
Choose a play-based preschool. Children learn best through play. Research shows that children who attend academically oriented preschools do not enter school with better skills or attitudes toward learning.*
Educate yourself. Do some reading on child development and the importance of play and play materials. Question marketing of toys claiming to be based on brain research. For example, would it surprise you to know The Mozart Effect was a study done on college kids and not babies?
Get involved. There are many play advocacy organizations that are free to join and many encourage parents to do so. The Alliance for Childhood (www.allianceforchildhood.org) is a great one. They provide information for parents and you can join their free email newsletter.
Play fosters the growth of healthy children in every aspect of development physically, cognitively, socially, and emotionally. It really is food for childrens bodies, minds, and spirits. Let us nourish them with wonderful true play experiences.
*Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, PhD & Roberta Michnick Golinkoff, PhD with Diane Eyer, PhD. Einstein Never Used Flash Cards. (Rodale, 2003)
Author: Dana Johnson
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
Provided by: Guest Blogger
Popularity: 1% [?]


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{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }
Salam..
Interesting..Yea,buku ni mmg bagus in terms of learning thru play..n kita pun rasa relax sikit..tapi for me, i rasa mcm relax melampau pulak bila baca buku ni..hahah:)
However..haha..i stil dun agree with the title (i,e eintein ke..mozart ke..beethoven ke..leonardo ke..isaac newton ke..)sebab depa tu semua mmg “sakit” ,i mean they are not normal kids..maybe suffer from high funtional autism,asperger or dyslexia..or apa2 la dlm spectrum tu.
Sebab tu depa leh achieve pandai cenggitu..walaupun tak initiate,mmg diorang dah gitu..dan backside is diorang antisocial sikit…and stil takder kena mengena dgn guna flashcards..cos i stil rasa semua pun kena seimbang..jgn la sampai tak guna flashcards lansung..dan jgn la pulak 100% flashcard or video game or apa2..
huhuh..ye ke?sekadar pandangan…
I have an interesting fact to share with all.
Tahu tak, kalau compare budak-budak US umur 6 tahun dengan budak-budak Germany umur 6 tahun, IQ budak-budak US jauh lebih tinggi, knowledge lebih banyak, skills lebih hebat. Sebab budak-budak US dah start pergi sekolah as early as 2, 3 years old. Parents dah start informal education kat rumah since their day one lagi, all those stimulation, educational toys, CDs, etc.
On the other hand, babies kat Germany taklah advance macam babies kat US. Sebab budaya kat sana tak paksa budak-budak to achieve their potentials before they are ready. Diorang belajar membaca pun at age 8 or 9.
Tapi bila compare budak-budak US umur 16 tahun dengan budak-budak Germany umur 16 tahun, budak-budak Germany jauh lebih tinggi IQ, lebih banyak knowledge, lebih matang, lebih fokus, dan tak seteruk macam budak-budak US dalam gejala sosial.
Walaupun kat Germany diorang start a bit late in formal education compared to US, but they start according to children’s development, bukan main paksa aje budak jadi robot suruh absorb semua. Yes, children are like sponge, they can absorb everything easily. Tapi buat apa nak rush suruh absorb segala benda dalam dunia. Setiap perkara akan tiba masanya yang paling sesuai.
Saya tak kisah pun kalau anak-anak saya tak jadi Einstein. Janji diorang tak jadi Sufiah…
Asiah Abd Jalil´s last blog ..Bandar
I always believe that putting play in everything akan buat things lg best & fun. so it attracts more of our kid’s attention.
Mama-Miya´s last blog ..Miya & Kipas