Luokat: Kaikki - educational - culture - negotiation - construction

jonka Eleni P 11 vuotta sitten

288

Chapter 11: Play

The chapter delves into the various materials used in children's play, categorizing them based on their type and developmental support. It highlights the importance of a balanced mix of play materials, distinguishing between open-ended items like Lego blocks that foster creativity, and closed-ended items like puzzles that have one specific use.

Chapter 11: Play

Chapter 11: Play

Materials for Play

Controversial Classroom Materials
war play

some consider it a part of children's emotional development and growing awareness of the world

technology
noneducaitonal television shows
toys that promote racial or gender stereotyping
toys that promote violence
Categories of Play Materials
general consensus: children benefit from a balance of play materials
can be categorized by the different domain of development supported
realistic vs. nonrealistic
can be categorized by the type of plas

Lego blocks for construction play

costumes fo dramatic play

closed ended, such as puzzles, which are generally only used one way
open ended: can be used in many different creative ways
Educational Play Materials
play materials for educational purposes have been used for centuries

literacy materials

puzzles

small manipulative materials

classrooms usually have dramatic play materials

Caroline Pratt developed unit blocks

however, research shows that some materials labeled good for the brain are not helping children get "smarter" and may be harmful
increased knowledge about brain development influenced how materials are selected for classrooms

Cognitive Lenses on Play

Vygotsky on Play
unlike Piaget's view of play, for Vygotsky play=learning

play is not just a stage, it is how children expand their thinking, supported in their ZPD, to think on higher levels

children are predisposed to play, and socially constructed to play

saw pretend play as zone of proximal development

Piaget on Play
inspired research on the effects of play interventions
play is important in Piaget's understanding of thinking

argued for including pretend play as a necessary part of the curriculum for disadvantaged children

play is how children assimilate their experience, and how they practice their thinking

Contemporary Directions for Early Childhood Play

Play in Contemporary Education
play is challenged by the accountability movement and NCLB

play in classroom is challenged: direct instruction to teach literacy is official policy

early childhood classrooms resemble older grades in that children spend more time with pencil-and-paper tasks

the amount of time for recess is declining dramatically

shown to improve on-task behavior, recess is still cut as "noninstructional" time

pressure to show results on concrete or standardized assessments

Postmodern Play Analyses
strives to understand children's play from the perspective of social justice and equality

research suggests many biases entrenched in educational play

play can become a tool for establishing and reinforcing society's inequities and biases

asks how play becomes a context for children confronting larger social issues

Multiple Meanings of Play
some argue that play can be read as a text for layers of meaning
however, it also relates to our larger societies
play represents thinking and interacting according to children's stages of development

Social and Communications Lenses for Play

Culture and Social Play Communications
when children play together they form their own peer cultures

peer culture is a concern for adults and educators because it often challenges authority

children's play culture usually separates from the values and desires of adults in the culture

shared communication bonds playmates and develops children's group identity
Play as a Social Setting
with adult guidance children can develop and refine their strategies for negotiating more successfully
play required negotiation and develops social skills
Signaling to Create Play
players use signals to communicate with each other

language used in play may be the foundation of literacy

children play with their voices and expressions in pretend play

children learn to respond to social cues through play

Play's History

Science and Developmental Play
Montessori method essentially involves play, though the children's work activities are not called play, and are carefully planned, not free play
John Dewey argued that play was children's learning experience
G. Stanley Hall included play as a key element in his recapitulation theory of child development

believed children's play goes through seven developmental stages

argued that children repeat the evolutionary history of humans as they play

Froebel and Play Curriculum
differences about the meaning of play were debated:

developmentalists wanted more free play and choice, and for teacher to use play as a way of studying children's needs and growth

traditionalists wanted to maintain prescribed use of objects with teacher guiding children towards patterns through play

ideas on play based on natural learning between mother and child

argued that women make the best teachers

in Froebel's kindergarten curriculum, children were to play naturally with objects and each other to gain understanding