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08/16/2013

Adults Play to Learn

When people are smiling they are most receptive to almost anything you want to teach them.
Allen Funt

In From Practice to Play: Connecting Teachers' Play to Children's Learning, the authors point out why it is so important for teachers to experience play first hand:

"As Piaget notes, active learning involves both the physical and the social contexts.  For adults, the social context refers to opportunities to play cooperatively with other adults, engage in conversation, express emotions, and share, work, and interact with one another.  Opportunities to explore, invent, discover, to engage with peers, and to listen to alternative points of view are critical to achieving an understanding of the play process and how it relates to teacher competencies and subject matter.

"...As we have stressed, teachers of young children greatly benefit from the opportunity to learn through direct hands-on, personal experience that helps them to understand, value and provide meaningful play experiences for children.  The problem-solving act of transforming concrete objects into unique organized designs, physical patterns, and orderly three-dimensional systems is a creative intellectual process engaging the whole individual - hands, heart, and mind."



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