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En español: Jugar: La manera de aprender de los niños pequeños |
This article originally appeared in the May-June 2007 issue of the Children's Advocate, published by Action Alliance for Children. Use the Children's Advocate in your work! Feel free to reprint this article, as a handout or in your own publication -- just credit us (see above) and be sure to send us a copy. Play: It’s the way young children learnA special supplement to the Children’s Advocate, based on a policy brief from the Bay Area Early Childhood Funders(References coming soon at www.4children.org/play.htm)A generation ago, kindergarten was supposed to get kids ready for school. But now everyone is talking about the importance of “school readiness” before kids get to kindergarten. That’s why many parents, anxious for their children to succeed in school, want early care and education programs to have children sit at tables using work sheets, drills, and flash cards to learn letters and numbers and even starting to read, add, and subtract. But preschoolers learn differently from school-age children: play is essential to early learning. Play is the main way children learn and develop ideas about the world. It helps them build the skills necessary for critical thinking and leadership. It’s how they learn to solve problems and to feel good about their ability to learn. Children learn the most from play when they have skilled teachers who are well-trained in understanding how play contributes to learning. Most child development experts agree that play is an essential part of a high-quality early learning program. Play is not a break from learning—it’s the way young children learn. High-quality preschools provide lasting benefitsHigh-quality preschool and child care programs have lasting benefits. Three studies, which followed children for many years, showed that taxpayers saved at least $2.69 for every dollar spent on high-quality early learning programs, by reducing special education, law-enforcement, and other costs. In all these programs, “child-initiated” activities were important—highly trained teachers used children’s interests and activities to guide learning. Kids got to choose from appropriate activities, rather than spending all their time following teachers’ instructions. Several studies have shown that children learn more from educational activities that support their own interests and ideas. Some researchers have found evidence that too much teacher-directed activity undermines young children’s self-confidence and motivation to learn. Play promotes school success in many waysResearchers are finding more and more connections between children’s play and the learning and social development that helps them succeed in school. For example, pretend play helps children learn to think abstractly and to look at things from someone else’s perspective. Pretend play is also connected to early literacy, mathematical thinking, and problem-solving. When children play:
When children play, they learn skills that contribute to school successUsing one thing to represent anotherThrough pretend play, children learn to use their imaginations to represent objects, people, and ideas. What you see:
How it promotes school success: If children can use one thing to represent something else, it’s easier for them to understand that letters represent sounds and numbers represent quantities. And later on they will be able to their imaginations to visualize historical events or scientific ideas. Using language and telling storiesThrough pretend play, children develop their skills in using language and in telling and understanding stories. What you see:
How it promotes school success: Oral language skills and storytelling are the building blocks of reading and writing, as well as subjects like social studies and science. Using experimentation and logicWhen children play with materials such as blocks, clay, sand, and water, they develop skills in logic. They experiment with cause and effect, with counting and sorting things and solving problems. What you see:
How it promotes school success: This practice in experimenting, observing, comparing, and working with shapes, sizes, and quantities forms the basis for understanding math and science and for all higher-order thinking. Developing self control and social skillsAs children share materials and play together, they learn to cooperate, listen to others, stand up for their own ideas, handle frustration, and empathize. What you see:
How it promotes school success: Many studies have shown that kids with good social skills and emotional health do better in school and are more likely to avoid dangerous behavior as teenagers. Through play, children develop their ability to form relationships with other children and with teachers. Learning to enjoy learningWhen children do activities they have chosen, learning is enjoyable. It’s based on their own interests and gives them a sense of competence. What you see:
How it promotes school success: Studies show that children’s attitudes of curiosity, motivation, and competence are key to success in elementary school.
The teacher is key to play-based learningChildren learn more through play when they have well-trained teachers who know how to respond to, guide, and extend their play to increase learning—and how to assess their development by observing their play. Teachers can:Guide and extend play to help children learn more
Assess children’s development by watching them play
Policy recommendationsBecause play is so important to developing the skills, concepts, and approaches children will use throughout their lives, public policy should support early education that emphasizes play. Parents and child care providers can urge policymakers to:
Parents can
For more about play and learning
Thanks to the Bay Area Early Childhood Funders for their support for this special supplement.
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| New, article in Chinese! Download pdf version in Chinese |
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| High-quality preschools provide lasting benefits | ||
| When children play, they learn skills that contribute to school success |
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| The teacher is key to play-based learning |
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| Policy recommendations |
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| For more about play and learning |
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| Extra resources from the Children’s Advocate bulletin |
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