Free Play Studies
Play: Essential for All Children
Joan Packer Isenberg, Nancy Quisenberry
ACEI, Association for Childhood Education International
Updated 2002
Play – a dynamic, active, and constructive behavior – is an essential and integral part of all children’s healthy growth, development, and learning across all ages, domains, and cultures.
Theorists, regardless of their orientation, concur that play occupies a central role in children’s lives. They also suggest that the absence of play is an obstacle to the development of healthy, creative individuals.
Psychoanalysts believe that play is necessary for mastering emotional traumas or disturbances; psychosocialists believe it is necessary for ego mastery and learning to live with everyday experiences; constructivists believe it is necessary for cognitive growth; maturationists believe it is necessary for competence building and for socializing functions in all cultures of the world; and neuroscientists believe it is necessary for emotional and physical health, motivation, and love of learning.
Play: Essential for All Children
Joan Packer Isenberg, Nancy Quisenberry
ACEI, Association for Childhood Education International
1988
Updated 2002
Play – a dynamic, active, and constructive behavior – is an essential and integral part of all children’s healthy growth, development, and learning across all ages, domains, and cultures.
Theorists, regardless of their orientation, concur that play occupies a central role in children’s lives. They also suggest that the absence of play is an obstacle to the development of healthy, creative individuals.
Psychoanalysts believe that play is necessary for mastering emotional traumas or disturbances; psychosocialists believe it is necessary for ego mastery and learning to live with everyday experiences; constructivists believe it is necessary for cognitive growth; maturationists believe it is necessary for competence building and for socializing functions in all cultures of the world; and neuroscientists believe it is necessary for emotional and physical health, motivation, and love of learning.
Developmentally Appropriate Practice & Play
C. Copple, S. Bredekamp
National Association for the Education of Young Children
2009
For children 3 years and onward play is one of the most important vehicles for developing self-regulation as well as promoting language development, cognition or understanding situations, and social competence.
Additionally, play enables children to develop fine and gross motor skills, practice math and science, and experience a sense of achievement. Longer periods of child interaction, higher levels of child to child involvement, more cooperation, ability to vision or picture situations, and control and self-regulation greatly aid the physical and mental development of children.
Higher level learning during play does not occur on its own – teacher or supervisor led situations help guide learning.
School Recess & Group Classroom Behavior
Romina Barros, MD, Ellen Silver PhD, Ruth Stein, MD
Pediatrics, The Official Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics
2009
Children need free play at home and at school. During free play, children increase their imagination and creativity, organize their own games, develop their own rules, learn problem solving skills, and practice leadership.
In school recess represents an opportunity for free play. Recess provides discretionary time and opportunity for children to engage in physical activity. Post recess – after an opportunity for free play – young students (ages 8-9) were able to better focus attention on teachers and assigned tasks and were less fidgety in the classroom. A break of at least 15 minutes daily increased proper classroom behavior and boosted academic scores.
Promoting Creativity For Life Using Open-Ended Materials
Walter Drew, EdD, Baji Rankin, EdD
Young Children Magazine
July, 2004
Play and the creative arts in early childhood programs are essential ways children communicate, think, feel, and express themselves. Children will succeed developmentally when they have access to a variety of creative, free form play objects and are surrounded by adults who believe in the competence of children and are committed to their success in expressing themselves.
In this era of school performance standards and skill-based, outcome based education, it is more important than ever for educators and families to articulate the values and support the creativity of play and exploration as ways to meet and exceed these standards.
The State Of Play : Principals On School Recess
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
2010
Principals overwhelmingly believe play and school recess has a positive impact not only on the development of children social skills, but also on achievement and learning at school.
Study recommendations include – education policy makers need to take play seriously – schools should enhance recess to improve the school learning climate – best way to improve recess is to improve the children’s play equipment as well as staff availability and training.
Play and Literacy Learning
Stuart Reifel, Kyunghee Moon
University of Texas, Austin, Contemporary Issues in Childhood Learning
2008
It is well documented that play is an important vehicle for children’s social, emotional, and cognitive development – as well as a visible, measurable reflection of this development.
Children engage more during play – thus they have the opportunity to learn more from others. Play is a comfortable way for children to learn – it focuses children natural peer learning in social situations.
In play children create, explore, experience – play encourages free choices, self-discovery, theme creation – there are no right or wrong answers.
Children’s ability to learn and develop during play can be based largely on the play materials and equipment provided – as well as the role models. Props and unstructured toys help stretch the overall play experience.
Adult interaction during play – to prompt learning situations – can be helpful.
Crisis In The Kindergarten : Why Children Need To Play In School
Edward Miller, Joan Almon
Alliance For Children
2009
The importance of play to young children’s healthy development and learning has been documented beyond question by research. Yet play is rapidly disappearing from kindergarten and early education. Stifling play has dire consequences – not only for children but for our nation’s future – the damage must be reversed now.
Too many schools are placing a double burden on children. First, they heighten stress by demanding they master academic material beyond their developmental level. Then, they deprive children of their chief means of dealing with that stress – creative play.
The Importance Of Free Play To Children’s Development
Pei-San Brown, John Sutterby, James Therrell, Candra Thornton
GameTime
2011 (republished)
Each one of these four categories—cognitive, social, physical, and emotional—plays an important part in the development of the whole child. Everyone needs to insure that children’s free play activities include opportunities for all these elements that are essential to their growth and success. Providing ample, healthy play opportunities fosters the unique potential of each child to learn and develop skills, concepts, and character in a way that only play can provide.
An investigation Of The Status Of Outdoor Play
Rhonda Clements
Hofstra University, Contemporary Issues In Early Childhood, Volume 5
2004
Parents and educators agree that outdoor lay is a natural and critical part of a child’s healthy development. This study clearly indicates that when compared to a mothers play experiences today’s children spend considerably less time in outdoor and indoor play.
This study specifically indicates 5 findings :
- Today’s children play outdoors less than previous generations
- Children engage in different outdoor activities (less imaginative, made up games)
- More indoor than outdoor activities (more controlled environment)
- Increased use of video/television reduces outdoor play
- Mothers recognize the need for outdoor play (development of physical and motor skills, social skills, artistic and creative skills, stimulates cognitive skills).
All parents, early childhood professionals, and classroom teachers should seek to develop qualities reflecting eagerness, energy, curiosity, and playfulness. They regard the issue of increased outdoor play as one of major importance.
Preschool Peer Interactions and Readiness To Learn
Kathleen Coolahan, John Fantuzzo, Julia Mendez, Paul McDermott
Journal of Educational Psychology, American Psychological Association Journal
2000
Promoting young children’s readiness to learn is a national priority. Our countries National Education Goals (1992) states that all American children will start school ready to learn by the year 2000.
Play has become identified as a critical part of child development. This study found that children with keen interaction skills developed during play (indoor and outdoor) had keen attention and engagement skills during lessons in the classroom.
Fostering peer interaction between children with varied levels of interactive play is a successful tool to aid in building longer-term engagement and competence in children.
The Vital Role Of Play In Childhood
Joan Almon Waldorf Early Childhood Association, WECA of North America 2003
Creative play is a central activity in the lives of healthy children – and by play I mean developmental, open ended and creative free play. The importance of free play, and its importance in children’s physical, social, emotional, and mental development is well documented.
Despite play’s importance it is being pushed out of children’s lives by electronic media, academic programs shifting younger in schools, and organized play activities.
Restoring play for children requires understanding and validating the root causes, creating advocacy groups among parents, educators, health professionals, and working within the community to create safe play spaces (grass, sand, water, hills, etc) and related adult supervision.