Edition no.3 – The importance of play

OVERWHELMED! That’s how I feel. That’s definitely the word I would use to describe this last month (technically, it would have to be the word I’d use to describe the last four months, as that was when last I had time to put together a newsletter).

And I’m not the only one. A chat to the other ladies at Adventure Boot Camp (last time I had a chance to actually go) reveals that almost everyone feels as if they are drowning in their own lives. “What is it?” I ask and I get a whole range of answers: “It’s the way the planets are lined up”; “It’s because we don’t get enough vitamins from our food”; “It’s because of all the negative energy around us”. All of which makes some sense, but one argument really seems to hit home for me: “It’s because of the expectation we place on our selves. Just think about it” says Kristen “a hundred years ago it would take you months, years even to travel from Johannesburg to Cape Town, now we do it in two hours … and your expected to have your laptop open and switched on, on the plane so that you don’t miss out on even a minute’s work. People expect to be able to reach you at all hours of the day and we even go out and spend a fortune on fancy smartphones, so that we can check our e-mail when we get home from the office!”

This all starts to sound vaguely familiar – I remember my fiancé reading aloud to me passages from a book with the title “Enough” (the name of the author escapes me). A book I was still intending to read, but never quite found the time. Just like the studying I’m still intending to get around to, the spring cleaning that will have to wait for next spring, the launch date of our exciting new product line that keeps being extended because I haven’t quite managed to do this, or organize that …

And then the straw that broke the camel’s back (or in this case perhaps might have just saved the camel from a heart attack) – the doctor phones, on a Sunday morning ironically enough, to give me the results of my blood test: My skin is breaking out and my emotions so volatile, he says, not because my hormones are all in a mess as I had anticipated, but because my adrenal gland is working overtime. In short: I’m just too stressed out. And so I decide that enough really is enough. From now on, I will slow down. I will have breakfast, even if it means that I get to work late. I will not have seven cups of coffee and rely on the caffeine wave to get me through the day and no longer will I reply to e-mails after five pm. I have also decided to change my newsletters from “monthly” newsletters to “regular” newsletters. The newsletters, from now on will have an issue number rather that a date and I’m aiming to provide good quality reading material instead of a hash of hastily-put-together-just-so-that-it’s-one-less-thing-to-do-type articles.

This self-destructive habit of ours (and I say “ours” because this really is a societal problem) is starting to filter through to our kids. Not only do we expect more of each other, but also from our children. We need them to be smarter, neater and sportier at younger and younger ages. Last month I was approached to present a talk to parents at a grade R information evening about the importance of play in early childhood development. Because, the teachers explained, some parents complained that when they dropped their little angels off in the morning all they ever saw them do was play. Imagine! Having to tell parents that it is okay for their 5 year olds to play! I have attached the talk underneath and hope that you will, after reading it, listen to the alarm bells going off in your head as I have now been forced to do. Look very carefully at the things you expect from yourself and from your children and make the necessary adjustments so that you can slow down and, even if only occasionally, smell the roses.

Wishing you a calm, collected month (or two or three) ahead!

Keep warm,
XXXXXXX
Anel
The importance of play in early childhood development:
Heidi Britz-Crecelius (Children at play, preparation for life; Floris Books, Edinburgh, 1979) summed up the importance of play in childhood with the words: “There is nothing that human beings do, know, think, hope and fear that has not been attempted, experienced, practiced or at least anticipated in children’s games”.

To understand why play is so important, we need to understand how children experience the world around them and how they learn and develop. Children advance through three different levels of thinking. At the first level – the Concrete level – children need to interact physically with objects in their environment so as to gain a better understanding of the objects’ qualities and how they work or fit together. Good teachers also know that for a child to consolidate information about a specific object they need to use as many of their sense modalities as possible in exploring the object. For instance, children who have been allowed to look at, hold, taste and smell an orange will find it much easier to recognize this fruit at a later date than children who have only been allowed to look at it. Children have to first experience their world at this concrete level before they will be able to understand representations of these objects in print (two-dimensional level). This lies at the core of my contempt for worksheets in nursery school classrooms. Young children’s minds cannot yet deal with concepts on a two-dimensional level and yet we are increasingly relying on this method of teaching, often at the expense of time spent physically exploring objects and the interaction between objects in the environment! This results in an incomplete understanding of the work and concepts “taught” and often contributes to difficulties in learning identified later in the child’s school career. Only once children have mastered the first two stages will they be able to understand and manipulate abstract concepts and ideas (such as Algebra or the meaning of concepts such as “Justice”, “Honour”, etc).

So, why then do teachers insist on using worksheets in nursery school classrooms? Sadly, the answer is that it is often the easiest way to provide evidence of their “efficiency” and productivity. In short, whether knowingly or unknowingly, we as parents are responsible for this phenomenon. We expect to see what our children do all day and complain that the teacher is “lazy” or “unorganized” because she just “lets the children play”.

Several years ago I worked as a teacher in a wonderful little nursery school. But the head of the school insisted that each child fill a scrapbook with art and worksheets throughout the year. This scrapbook was then sent home at the end of each term for parents to peruse and praise their children for all the hard “work” they had done. What parents didn’t know was that their children had missed out on many hours of exploration and essential learning opportunities because we were so focused on filling the scrapbook!

I overheard a conversation along similar lines in a Preparatory school staffroom a while ago. The teachers had all noticed that so many of their learners are battling with handwriting & spelling (reversals of letters and numbers were particularly evident). These children are neither dyslexic nor otherwise learning disabled, but have all been pushed to read and write at too young an age and were never allowed to play around with shapes, letter formation or phoneme identification on a concrete level. Because of this they now experienced difficulties with laterality, spatial orientation and tactile defensiveness amongst others.

The gist of the matter is, as Heidi Britz-Crecelius that “information is bound to be a quite inadequate substitute for experience. The senses of these children are deprived of the manifold impressions which are needed to form them”. Heidi talks of the “Parental mistake” in her book: We are constantly told that our children need stimulation, but then often overcompensate for this by constantly drawing the child’s attention to something new and exciting, and in effect all we are really doing is disrupting the child’s perseverance and concentration.

Children learn about time & space through dropping, grasping, catching and throwing and the neurological connections that form as a result of this play later enable them to better understand measurements, weight, calculation and concepts such as size, shape, and colour. Fairy tales and songs not only stimulate children’s imagination but also extend their vocabulary. Marbles & spinning tops are just simple childhood games, but they teach children about rules, compromise and losing graciously. They offer important lessons in business and trade and invaluable experience in learning to judge character.

Play also forms an integral part of the emotional lives of children. Play therapists generally make use of one of two approaches to therapy; these are directive and non-directive play therapy. The therapist takes the lead during a directive play therapy session, having already planned the technique or game to be used and having set specific goals to be achieved. In non-directive play therapy, the therapist allows the child to take the lead. The therapist does not get involved in the child’s play, but reassures the child through gestures and words that the child is safe and has the therapist’s full attention. I prefer to use directive play therapy as it helps me to clarify exactly which goals I am working towards with I child. But it is incredible to note how often, when I have been at my wits end and completely frustrated by the apparent lack of progress with a client I have just packed out my toys and allowed the child to play (because I though: well, the child with me for the next hour any way and I’ve already tried everything else anyway) and then watched how these children will replay their drama, and often and resolve it – without my help! My help is then only required in helping the child gain a deeper insight into the traumatic event and its consequences.

In my research for this article I came across various proposed reasons as to why we don’t allow our children the freedom to just play anymore. These include the fact that parents work longer hours; that children spend more time in organized day care where a rigid routine of eating, sleeping and learning needs to be adhered to, that our streets are no longer as safe as they used to be; that we need to educate our children from a young age to try and give them the tools to survive in an increasingly competitive job market. All of these are true to some extent, but one argument really struck me and has been haunting me ever since I came across it: Could it be that we teach our children to read and write at younger and younger ages because this is less work that having to run around or play with them? That we urge them to read, not because it is in their best interest, but so that they can be quiet, well-poised and less troublesome?

Our constitution states that all children have the right to play, but in my mind playing in childhood is more than just a right – it is an absolute necessity. So pack away your books, your bills and your blackberries … and go play a game with your children.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts