Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Play In the Early Years


Key to
School
Success
A Policy Brief
Play
Early Years:
in the
© Bay Area Early Childhood Funders
May 2007
Based on the work of the late Dr. Patricia Monighan Nourot and
dedicated to her memory
Edited by Jean Tepperman,
Executive Director, Action Alliance for Children
NANU CLARK/MILLS COLLEGE CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
STEVE FISCH PHOTOGRAPHY
NANU CLARK/MILLS COLLEGE CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
The education of young children has been the center of unprecedented attention in recent
years. In California and elsewhere, this attention has generated significant efforts to offer
high-quality preschool to every child. Much of this interest has been based on new research on
brain development, which shows that the very structure of the brain is powerfully shaped by
early experiences.
At the same time, this and other research has demonstrated that young children learn
differently from older children and adults. It is essential that early childhood programs do not
simply attempt to teach preschoolers the same material with the same
methods that are now used in grades K-12.
There is a well-established consensus among early childhood
professionals that play is an essential element of developmentally
appropriate, high-quality early education programs (Alliance for
Childhood, 2006; NAEYC & NAECSSDE, 2003). Play provides benefits for cognitive,
social, emotional, physical, and moral development (American Academy of
Pediatrics, 2006; Elkind, 2007) for children from all socio-economic, cultural, and
linguistic backgrounds (Zigler, E. & Bishop-Josef, S., 2006). To provide these
benefits, play must be consciously facilitated by skilled teachers, who are
well-trained in observing children and in understanding how play
contributes to the children’s mastery of concepts and skills.
Most Americans from all cultural backgrounds are more familiar with
“direct instruction” teaching methods based on teaching discrete skills
isolated from children's interests and activities. But research shows that
the exploratory and creative activity that young children initiate themselves (play) is the
primary way they develop concepts and understanding about the world. Play helps children
develop the skills necessary for critical thinking and leadership. Play is how children learn to
solve problems and to feel good about their ability to learn.
A play-centered preschool curriculum is not a laissez-faire approach. It's not the
same as giving children "free play" separate from "teaching." Rather, teachers use the
power of children's developing ideas, interests, and competencies to promote learning—
through play, circle-time, and small-group activities. This power is most evident in children's
play, as play is the central force in the development of young children.
Play is not a break from the curriculum; play is the best way to implement the
curriculum.
This policy brief focuses on play as an essential foundation for developing children’s ability to
succeed in school and in life.
Play in the Early Years:
Key to School Success
Pouring water
into different
size containers,
these children
learn about
volume and
measurement
while developing
their eye-hand
coordination.
NANU CLARK/MILLS COLLEGE CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
High-quality preschools provide lasting benefits
In high-quality preschools, well-trained early childhood teachers use children's ideas, interests,
and activities to guide their learning. In such programs, children make choices among
developmentally appropriate activities.
Such child-initiated activities were key components of the high quality preschool programs
that showed strong evidence of success in three major longitudinal studies. These studies
found that the programs saved taxpayers between $2.69 and $7.14 for every dollar invested
(Galinsky, 2006), by reducing special education, law-enforcement, and other costs.
Other studies provide evidence that highly structured, scripted, primarily teacher-directed
instruction is not as effective in promoting young children’s academic success as is teaching
that supports and extends children’s self-initiated activities and interests. In fact, research
suggests that over-use of didactic teaching can suppress child-initiated learning and
undermine young children’s self-confidence and motivation to learn (Chang, Stipek & Garza, 2006;
Shonkoff & Phillips, 2000; Singer, Golinkoff & Hirsh-Pasek, 2006).
Play contributes to school success in many ways
A growing body of research shows that every competency important to school success is
enhanced by play (Isenberg & Quisenberry, 2002; Singer, 2006). For example, high-quality pretend play is
related to children’s abilities to begin to think abstractly and to take the perspectives of others
(Bergen, 2002; Berk, Mann & Ogan, 2006; Singer, Singer, Plason & Schweden, 2003). Connections between the
complexity of children’s pretend play and early literacy, mathematical thinking, and problemsolving
are documented in this research literature (Singer et al., 2006; Smilansky, 1990; Van Hoorn, Nourot,
Scales & Alward, 2007).
WHEN CHILDREN PLAY:
▼ They have many opportunities to apply mental representations of the world to new objects,
people, and situations—the key ability for future academic learning.
▼ They integrate all types of learning—physical, social, emotional, intellectual, and language
development.
▼ They are engaged in things they’re interested in—so they have a natural motivation to
learn (Shonkoff & Phillips, 2000).
▼ Children develop concepts and skills together as they are integrated in the context of
meaningful and playful experiences. For example, as four-year-old Cecily learns to write the
letters in her name, she is also learning the concept that each letter
represents a sound—and she is highly motivated by the meaning:
her own name. Skills have limited value without concepts. For
example, it doesn’t do a child any good to be able to count to
five by rote unless she understands the quantity represented
(5 = five blocks).
◆ Children are more likely to retain skills and concepts they
have learned in meaningful contexts.
◆ Concepts are developed through activities that occur
naturally during play, such as counting, sorting,
sequencing, predicting, hypothesizing, and evaluating.
As they design
and build a
sloping
structure, these
girls are
experimenting
with basic
principles of
physics
and logic.
BETTY RAPPAPORT/KUMARA SCHOOL
The development of representational competence
Through pretend play, children develop the ability to use their imaginations to represent
objects, people, and ideas.
WHAT YOU SEE:
▼ A toddler flaps her arms, pretending to be a butterfly.
▼ Another picks up a banana, holds it to his ear, and says, “Hello.”
▼ A preschooler builds a firehouse with blocks.
HOW IT PROMOTES SCHOOL SUCCESS:
This ability to use one object to symbolize another is the essential
foundation for literacy and numeracy—the ability to understand
that numerals represent quantities and letters represent sounds and
words (Jones & Cooper, 2006; Singer et al., 2003; Zigler, Singer & Bishop-Josef, 2004).
The development of oral language
and narrative understanding
Through dramatic play with objects, people, and
imagined situations, children develop their oral language
skills and capacity for narrative, or “thinking in stories.”
WHAT YOU SEE:
▼ Children act out scenes in the “housekeeping corner.”
▼ A child makes her stuffed animal “talk,” telling a story.
HOW IT PROMOTES SCHOOL SUCCESS:
Oral language skills and narrative capacity form the
foundation for reading comprehension, the ability to produce coherent writing,
and the ability to understand subjects such as history, social studies, and science
(Fein, Ardeila-Ray & Groth, 2000; Jones & Cooper, 2006; Kim, 1999; Nicolopoulou, McDowell &
Brockmeyer, 2006; Schickedanz & Casbergue, 2004).
The development of positive approaches to learning
When children are engaged in activities they have chosen, learning is enjoyable because it is
based on their own curiosity and connected to a sense of mastery.
WHAT YOU SEE:
▼ Classrooms organized with various activity centers (blocks,
dramatic play, painting and drawing, writing, reading, science, etc.),
with children encouraged to work in areas and in ways they choose.
HOW IT PROMOTES SCHOOL SUCCESS:
Research indicates that children’s attitudes of curiosity, motivation
and sense of mastery are key to success in the elementary grades
(Chang, et al., 2006; Shonkoff & Phillips, 2000; Singer et al., 2006).
NANU CLARK/MILLS COLLEGE CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
JANET BROWN McCRACKEN
JANET BROWN McCRACKEN
These
children are
exploring and
experimenting
with materials
in different
ways, guided
by their own
curiosity.
These boys are
using blocks to
symbolize the
buildings
of a city.
Creating a
conversation for the
stuffed animals
gives these girls
experience in using
oral language and
telling stories.
Children learn specific competencies related
The development of logic
Through play with blocks, clay, sand, water, and other materials, children
develop skills in logic. They begin to learn scientific concepts such as cause
and effect and mathematical concepts such as quantity, classification, and
ordering. They practice inventing strategies for solving problems.
WHAT YOU SEE:
▼ Children experiment with blocks to figure out how to build
a stable structure.
▼ Children compare blocks, discovering that two squares are
the same size as one rectangle.
▼ Children pour sand into different size containers.
HOW IT PROMOTES SCHOOL SUCCESS:
This practice in experimentation, observation, comparison, and work with
shapes, sizes, and quantities forms the basis for understanding math and science and
higher-order thinking in all subjects (Ginsberg, Inoue & Seo, 1999; Ginsberg, 2006; Wyver & Spence, 1999).
The development of
self-regulation and social negotiation
As children interact with each other, negotiating the sharing of materials or planning
imaginative play, they learn concepts and skills in cooperating, advocating one’s own ideas and
listening to others, handling frustration, and empathizing with others.
WHAT YOU SEE:
▼ Children plan dramatic play together, negotiating over roles and situations. “We can both
be pilots if we have two seats.”
▼ One child cries and another says, “Don’t worry, your mom is coming soon.”
HOW IT PROMOTES SCHOOL SUCCESS:
Numerous studies have shown that children with better social skills and emotional
health succeed academically—and are more likely to avoid high-risk activities as adolescents
(Berk, Mann & Ogan, 2006; Fromberg, 2002; Shonkoff & Phillips, 2000).
These children
are working
together to
figure out which
blocks to use
and how to
place them so
their tower
won’t fall over.
These children have cooperated to decide
what to put in the boat and are working
together to carry it to the location
they’ve chosen.
NANU CLARK/MILLS COLLEGE CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
NANU CLARK/MILLS COLLEGE CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
to academic and social success through play
To facilitate learning through play, the teacher must be well educated and trained in order to
have the necessary skills and knowledge about early childhood development, curricula,
standards, and assessment. The teacher is intentional in guiding and extending children’s
play to make sure children are developing in all areas and key learning goals are achieved.
Through careful, trained observations of children’s play, the teacher can assess their learning
needs and their mastery of curriculum.
Teachers use keen observation to assess and support
children’s learning and development through play.
▼ A series of photos of a child’s block structures over time
shows the development of her understanding of spatial
relations.
▼ Observation of a child writing letters and talking about
what they “say” shows his understanding that letters
represent words.
▼ Hearing a child say “Put all the red food in that basket
and the yellow food in this basket” shows his ability to
sort objects based on specific characteristics.
▼ Observation of a child lining up toy dinosaurs by size
shows her understanding of ordering objects and size
comparisons.
Teachers facilitate play through responsive interactions
with children, based on an understanding of how play
contributes to academic and social learning.
▼ A teacher observes two children making silly rhymes while pouring juice. “You’re juicygoosey!”
“You’re juicely-goosley-foosley!” She extends this play by teaching songs that play
with sounds of language, such as “Apples and Bananas,” or rhyming, such as “Down by the
Bay.” She knows this practice with oral language helps children develop their understanding
of “phonemes,” or the phonetic components of words (Van Hoorn et al., 2007).
This teacher can
assess the
child’s skills by
watching and
asking questions
as he plays
with playdough.
The teacher is the key
to the play-centered curriculum
STEVE FISCH PHOTOGRAPHY
These children are learning the joy
of working hard on a project they
chose and designed.
NANU CLARK/MILLS COLLEGE CHILDREN’S SCHOOL
▼ One week a teacher turns the dramatic play area into a shoe
store. Play in the “store” encourages dialogue and introduces
new vocabulary (sneakers, hiking boots, canvas). Children
practice cooperation and oral language by acting out
interactions between “customers” and “sales people.”
Children may also make signs for the store: younger
preschoolers may draw or make up “writing;” older
preschoolers may want to practice writing real letters and
words. Some children may want to practice writing numbers
to price the shoes. Some older preschoolers may even learn
simple addition and subtraction by making change for
purchases (Van Hoorn, et al., 2007).
▼ A teacher observes a child's play and provides language for the concepts involved, building
the child’s vocabulary: "Isn’t that interesting? You’ve lined up these animals from small to
big, tiny to gigantic."
▼ A teacher observes a child pretending that a chair is a car and “driving.” She asks, “Where
are you going in the car? What are you seeing along the way?”—encouraging the child to
develop her imagination and oral language skills.
Because young children’s play is so important to the development of the skills, concepts, and
approaches they will need in order to be effective learners throughout their lives, it is essential
that public policy promote and support early education methods that make full use of play
and child-initiated activities. State and local policymakers should:
▼ Adopt preschool learning standards/foundations that identify play as the primary method
for early learning
▼ Require the adoption of preschool curricula that emphasize play and child-initiated
activities
▼ Fund in-depth training and ongoing education for early
childhood educators and elementary school teachers about
methods for using play to promote learning
▼ Establish parent education programs that explain the
importance of play to cognitive development
▼ Require assessment based on teacher-documented
observations of children during play. Rule out high-stakes
testing of preschool children.
Policy Recommendations
This teacher is
encouraging the
children to experiment
with the physical
properties of sand
and water—and she’s
there to help them put
their new concepts
into words.
CHASE HARDY/KUMARA SCHOOL
Early Childhood Funders
P.O. Box 2306
El Cerrito, California 94530-2306
For more information, contact the Early Childhood Funders at 415.733.8576
For an online copy of this report, go to www.4children.org/ecf.htm
Produced by lockwood design, Oakland, CA; Printed by Chimes Printing, Concord, CA
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