Serious Business: Childhood Experts Step Up Campaign For More Free-Wheeling Play Time
NEW YORK - In one classroom, a group of preschool teachers squatted on the floor, pretending to be cave-dwelling hunter-gatherers. Next door, another group ended a raucous musical game by placing their tambourines and drums atop their heads.
Silly business, to be
sure, but part of an agenda of utmost seriousness: To spread the word
that America's children need more time for freewheeling play at home
and in their schools.
"We're all sad, and we're a little worried. ... We're sad about something missing in childhood," psychologist and author Michael Thompson told 900 early childhood educators from 22 states packed into an auditorium last week.
"We have to fight back," he declared. "We're going to fight for play."
After his keynote speech at New York's 92nd Street Y, the teachers dispersed into dozens of workshops, some lighthearted, some scholarly - but all supporting the case that creative, spontaneous play is both vital and endangered.
It's not a brand-new cause - two years ago it was endorsed by the American Academy of Pediatrics. But social changes and new demands on kids' spare time confront free-play advocates with an ever-moving target.
Among the speakers at last week's Wonderplay conference Y was Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a Temple University psychologist who contends that lack of play in early childhood education "could be the next global warming."
Without ample opportunity for forms of play that foster innovation and creative thinking, she argues, America's children will be at a disadvantage in the global economy.
"Play equals learning," she said. "For too long we have divorced the two."
Some of the factors behind diminished play time have been evolving for decades, others are more recent. Added together, they have resulted in eight to 12 fewer hours of free play time per week for the average American child since the 1980s, experts say.
Among the key factors, according to Thompson:
- Parents' reluctance to let their kids play outside on their own, for fear of abduction or injury, and the companion trend of scheduling lessons, supervised sports and other structured activities that consume a large chunk of a child's non-school hours.
- More hours per week spent by kids watching TV, playing video games, using the Internet, communicating on cell phones.
- Shortening or eliminating recess at many schools - a trend so pronounced that the National PTA has launched a "Rescuing Recess" campaign.
- More emphasis on formal learning in preschool, more homework for elementary school students and more pressure from parents on young children to quickly acquire academic skills.
"Parents are more self-conscious and competitive than in the past," Thompson said. "They're pushing their kids to excel. ... Free play loses out."
The consequences are potentially dire, according to Thompson. He contends that diminished time to play freely with other children is producing a generation of socially inept young people and is a factor behind high rates of youth obesity, anxiety, attention-deficit disorder and depression.
Many families turn to organized sports as a principal non-school activity, but Thompson noted that this option doesn't necessary breed creativity and can lead to burnout for good young athletes and frustration for the less skilled.
Vivian Paley, a former kindergarten teacher at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools and now an author and consultant, argues that the most vital form of play for young children involves fantasy and role-playing with their peers.
"They're inventing abstract thinking, before the world tells them what to think," Paley said in her speech to the conference. "It gets them thinking, 'I am intended to have my own ideas.'"
She worried that preschools, in the drive to prepare students for the academic challenges ahead, are reducing the opportunity for group fantasy play - and thus reducing children's chances to learn on their own about fairness, kindness and other social interactions.
"The theater of the young receives the least attention from those planning the curriculum of our nation's schools," Paley said. "This very activity is being dismantled in our schools to make room for early phonics. ... Preschoolers are being asked to practice being first graders."
Fretta Reitzes, director of the 92 Street Y's youth and family center, which serves more than 6,000 children, says many of the parents she sees are struggling to find the right balance for their kids' schedules, asking "How much is too much?"
Preschool teachers need to lead by example, Reitzes said.
"Bringing play back into the lives of children, it's not just OK," she said. "It's really good for them."
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14 Comments so far
Show AllIt is true that when children are relaxed and left alone with their peers to play and wonder, creative ideas come out. This is the same concept for adults in the area of meditation and limbic breathing. Meditation and limbic breathing relaxes the mind. When you're calm, relaxed, etc... You really do come up with solutions. Your mind is open and you become more creative.
Like a great deal of other people I believe that when people are happy they are connected with "source".
Now what would be the point of leading people astray from that, eh? People have been led so astray they don't even believe it exists.
All everything is a form of energy vibrating off each other. It has been scientifically proven...see: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfPeprQ7oGc
Ha ha! I love that guy! Did you catch the poster for "What the Bleep Do We Know?!" on the wall behind him? And of course, Fred Alan Wolf (aka Dr. Quantum) was in that movie.
What most people don't understand is that when children have fun and are relaxed that is when they are open to expand their horizons. Most adults are so stressed out that they can't teach their children to be any different.
We needed "experts" to tell us this?
Yeah we do, otherwise children will be completely brainwashed.
Concerned about your child not getting enough play or creative and imagination provoking education then I strongly encourage you to check out your local Waldorf or Waldorf inspired school. This is what they are all about and much more. The approach is to build upon the imagination and fanatasy of the young child, in combination with a nature centered theme, to prepare the child for academic learning once they are emotionally and physically prepared. It is amazing. There is also NO technology, all toys are made of natural materials, and cooking, sewing, gardening, painting, singing, movement, etc are fully integrated into each day with amazing results.
Yes, one of the most wonderful books ever is about such a school, where the kids are allowed to follow their bliss, and the teachers are merely there to help facilitate learning when called upon BY the students. It sends my heart a-flutter every time I read it. I highly recommend it for anyone of like mind who hasn't already read it.
"Free at Last: The Sudbury Valley School" by Daniel Greenberg.
I recently read a great book that connects to this topic: Last Child in the Woods by Richard Louv. The book is concerned with what the author calls Nature Deficit Disorder, a disconnect with the natural world because indoors is where all the plug-ins are. Check it out.
A couple comments on the comments below:
Liberty - Obviously you're not a parent (or, if you are, you don't live in a city). A lot of times there's no place to "Kick the kids out of doors" because everything's owned, developed, or genuinely dangerous (traffic is the worst culprit). The problem of where children can congregate is a tricky one. As for the games you mention, and things like building tree houses, there are so many legal implications with these that a parent would be a fool to allow this kind of thing to happen on their property. Our society says: kids, don't stay home and be lazy! But then it puts up barriers to going out and keeps improving on the indoor plug-in types of play. What's the message? Anxiety!
againgpacifist - I agree that the problem is even more severe than what this article gets at. Any day of the week, I can drive through the Sunset district of San Francisco, which is basically several square miles of residential housing, and of the hundreds of children who live in this area I will not see even one playing outside. No jump roping, no biking, no cowboys or army, no nothing. I am young, but this is a HUGE difference from even the short time ago when I was playing tag with the other kids and our parents didn't even know where we were...
Adults today are too much involved in scheduling the children's every minute. Parents, teachers and day care personnel plan activities for the child and then supervise the activity. In this way the adults limit creativity in the children. They do not allow the kids to have a say in anything at all. The children just learn to follow directions and be obedient.
Supervised sports are the same for older kids. They are taught the rules and how to do each move and then the 'game' has adult coaches, referees and various officials who make all the decisions. Again, the kids need to follow adult directions.
When children play without adult supervision they have to make up the game, make up the rules, make special allowances for the different abilities of the children involved in the activity and then negotiate any disputes.
Playing with other children without being bossed around by adults allowed a culture to develop that was passed down from kids 6 to 12 over the decades -- or even longer. The older kids taught jump rope songs, 10 or more versions of jacks, and lots of different styles of hop scotch. Neighbor hood games of kick the car or one foot off the gutter taught kids to negotiate and interact with each other with mutual respect.
Kids need to be left along sometimes to dream and wonder about things. We are not doing them any favor by being on them so much and not allowing them to develop their selves.
wantrealdemocracy - Go easy on parents, my friend. They know well-enough that their children need to be out. These structured activities you mention are perhaps the best solutions they feel they have. Like I mention in my post above, there are a lot of real barriers to letting kids have their solitude ...such as, where exactly is it safe to let your kid just be completely alone? If you aren't a parent, it's easy to rationalize that the propoganda for child killers and etc. is vastly overstated, but when it comes down to you and that little person who you are responsible for, the propoganda creeps in and you're going to err on the side of caution. Same goes for unsupervised group play outside among all the neighborhood kids. The problem I see in this is that there ARE NO neighborhood kids outside to play with! I have a lot of kids in my neighborhood, but the only time I see them is when they go back and forth from their doorstep to their car ...on their way to some structured date. It's very disturbing, but the answer is nothing so simple as "Parents, don't control every minute of your children's lives!" Being a parent can be a fairly thankless job as it is, and society isn't exactly behind you.
Parents are wimps. Violence against children is at an all time low. Kick the kids out of doors, and tell them not to come back until dinner time. It is that simple.
Oh, and let them play "tag", "Cowboys and Indians", "army", dodgeball, and anything else fun again.
Uh, excuse me, but the teachers in both of those examples in the lead paragraph are **not** allowing "free-wheeling" play, but are **leading** a **structured** play experience. To wit, now let's all pretend to be cave dwellers. The problem is so severe that we don't even seem to understand what free play means when we're supposedly trying to remedy the problem. Leave the kids alone!!!!!!
When I was a kid "play" meant getting the hell away from grownups and doing anything I damned well pleased that wouldn't get me into too much trouble.
Grownups in charge, or even just nearby, were sure killers of imagination.
What I find freaking unbelievable is that these teachers mentioned think mind control of kids is "free-wheeling play" that releases the kids imaginations. Cyborgs creating cyborgs. Frightening!