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Learning to Play and Playing to Learn
January 29, 2007
Cheers to a new year and another chance for us to get it right.
-Oprah Winfrey

We have all been reading more on the importance of play with the release of the report from the American Academy of Pediatrics last fall. While the input and support from the medical community is welcome, the important role of play in healthy child development has long been understood by the ExchangeEveryDay community.

As a teacher of future Early Childhood Educators, I am often challenged by what is important for teachers of young children to know about play. Most adult students have vague memories of their play experiences, particularly those that occurred prior to their entry into school. Here are some tips on things to include in your session(s) on play with your students:

  • Provide students with the opportunity to play �" Exchange magazine has many resources to spur your imagination about getting adults to play.
  • Identify the subtle difference between an adult’s objective of learning to play versus a child’s objective in playing to learn.
  • Consider the developmental stages of play (i.e., symbolic, parallel, imaginary, and collaborative) and their relationship to child development.
  • Highlight the types of play, including active play, cooperative play, creative play, dramatic play, manipulative play, quiet play, and, of course, free play.
Have fun and play safe!

Contributed by Laurie McNelles �" Mothercraft

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Resources on Play, Training, Supervision and Evaluation on Sale!

This week you can purchase the entire set of nine collections of Exchange Articles on CD at a 1/3 discount! The nine collections in this series (each containing 20 classic Exchange articles) address... 

  • Infant/Toddler Care
  • Discipline
  • Children with Differing Abilities
  • Burnout
  • Supervision
  • Training
  • Marketing
  • Evaluation
  • Play

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Comments (1)

Displaying 1 Comment
Leanne Grace · January 29, 2007
Rainbow Hill
Shickshinny, PA, United States


When educating adults about play, parents and teachers alike, I read them the book Roxaboxen and we list all the things they played with, like open ended "stuff", who they played with where they played and then how long they got to immerse in their play. As adults recall their play memories, I call attention to their facial expressions, body language and delight and remind them that as caregivers we are responsible for giving children these same memories of forts with sheets, mud pies, dress ups, tea parties with real water....I remind them that because of the changes in our world, we are responsible for the childhood of children in our care. They are spending over 12,000 hours in fulltime care before they even reach K. In all the hub-bub of NCLB, high stakes testing and "getting them ready" (for what I don't know!!!!) now more than ever we must have voice for the children to guard this time, allow them to play and to be the advocates that can help those who think young children need to be "learning" =worksheets....see the learning, be able to interpret the play into learning words. If early childhood educators don't use their voice, children can't vote, young children and childhood will fall victim to checklists, worksheets, and standardized tests.



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