Saturday, July 21, 2012

My Connections to Play



“Thinking is messy, and deep thinking is really messy.” –Alfie Kohn, 2008
Kohn, A. (2008). Progressive education: Why it’s hard to beat, but also hard to find. Retrieved from http://www.alfiekohn.org/teaching/progres sive.htm


“School isn’t only to prepare for the future.  It is their life and they must have a good day every day.” Salla Korpela, 2011
Korpela, S. (2011). A day in the life of Stromberg School.  Retrieved from http://www.finland.fi/Public/default.aspx?contentid=162937&nodeid=41807&culture=in-US



My parents let me play outside for hours. I could walk to neighbors, ride my tricycle around the block and we often had lots of kids in the yard.  When the street lights came on I had to be in the house.  We knew all the neighbors within three or four blocks of the house and I knew how to get places and get home.  I was reflecting on games then and now, with coworkers.  I think I probably knew nearly twenty ways to play tag, wall ball and Chinese jump rope.  And all of the rules could be altered at the beginning of the game. 
My children have two working parents and we live in a larger city where most parents in the neighborhood work.  They had lots of friends in childcare, but only saw neighbor children on the weekends. They used their at-home time to unwind from group care, and enjoy playing alone with their toys and ideas.  For my middle child, she would spend hours with figure toys, playing out stories in the couch cushions, end tables and small boxes that made up her make-believe world.  The youngest was very sensory in her exploration.  She gave things baths, even the guinea pigs in the toilet.  She applied make-up and loved to cut hair.   They did not play outside like I had when growing up; probably because I didn’t make the time to play in the yard with them. 
The best times with my children when they were young was camping in the woods at the beach.  The unstructured time together camping created play opportunities to explore trails. The play included imagining fantastic adventures while hiking through tall trees with no buildings in sight and rickety foot bridges and having to climb over large rocks were wonderful play times together.  It was great fun to let them lead me through the trees and tell me the story of our adventure.  We continue to enjoy the feeling of abandon and relief when we go to the beach and can spend hours listening to the waves, walking, looking a rocks and shells, and using them to make sand castles or drift wood forts.  David Elkind explains “self-initiated play nourishes the child’s curiosity, imagination, and creativity, and these abilities are like muscles-if you don’t use them, you lose them.”
Reference
Elkind, D. (2008) The power of play: Learning what come naturally. Retrieved from http://www.journalofplay.org/sites/www.journalofplay.org/files/pdf-articles/1-1-article-elkind-the-power-of-play.pdf

1 comment:

  1. I think it is very hard nowadays to just send the kids out to play because in many households both parents are working and usually you are not getting home until close to 6 and you still have to make dinner, the kids have to get their homework done, etc. Also with so many kidnappings going on a lot of parents are afraid just to send their kids out without them being outside with them. I fully understand both sides.

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