03/27/2009
Play is Disappearing
I have just three things to teach: simplicity, patience, compassion. These three are your greatest treasures.
Lao Tzu
Time for play in most public kindergartens has dwindled to the vanishing point, replaced by lengthy lessons and standardized testing, according to three new studies released today by the Alliance for Childhood. Classic play materials like blocks, sand and water tables, and props for dramatic play have largely disappeared from the 268 full-day kindergarten classrooms studied. The studies were conducted by researchers from U.C.L.A., Long Island University, and Sarah Lawrence College in New York. Their findings are documented in Crisis in the Kindergarten: Why Children Need to Play in School. The researchers found that:
- On a typical day, kindergartners in Los Angeles and New York City spend four to six times as long being instructed and tested in literacy and math (two to three hours per day) as in free play or “choice time” (30 minutes or less).
- Standardized testing and preparation for tests are now a daily activity in most of the kindergartens studied, despite the fact that the use of most such tests with children under age eight is scientifically invalid and leads to harmful labeling.
- In many kindergarten classrooms there is no playtime at all. Teachers say the curriculum does not incorporate play, there isn’t time for it, and many school administrators do not value it.
Child development experts have been raising alarms about the increasingly didactic, test-driven, and joyless course of early childhood education. “These practices, which are not well grounded in research, violate long-established principles of child development and good teaching,” states the Alliance’s report. “It is increasingly clear that they are compromising both children’s health and their long-term prospects for success in school.”
For great resources on the importance of play, check out the new
Exchange CD book,
The Value of Play. This CD book, which
Exchange developed in partnership with the HighScope Educational Research Foundation, includes over 90
Exchange and HighScope articles by play authorities including David Elkind, Jim Greenman, Elizabeth Jones, Margie Carter, Amelia Gambetti, Ed Klugman, Beth Marshall, Karen Stephens, and Rusty Keeler on the following topics:
- The Purpose of Play
- Advocating for the Value of Play
- Play in Practice
- Taking Play Outdoors
- Play Materials
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For more information about Exchange's magazine, books, and other products pertaining to ECE, go to www.ccie.com.
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