To an adult play may
seem like a lot of nonsense and children making a mess; to a child play is
everything. Play is the basis on which
children begin to build their knowledge and understand how the world around
them works. So why are schools taking
away playtime in favor of more academic activities like math and writing
worksheets? Worksheets are not going to
teach children how to function in the world.
There have been so many studies about whether having playtime benefits
children or not. Almost every study has
had the same results, that children learn best through play and by doing.
In May there was an article printed
in the New York Times called "Let The Kids Learn Through Play," which focused on how children are effected by
both learning through teacher directed practices and through play. In most cases children who are just sitting
at a table writing their letters over and over again are not getting as much
out of their education as the students who are playing. Sure after a while the children who are
copying their letters will have them memorized but the way they learned was not
an authentic way of learning to a child.
However if children use different materials, like playdough, to make
letters they have an easier time learning the alphabet. Children will incorporate whatever they are
learning into their games, reinforcing the knowledge that they have recently
learned.
Children become accustomed to the
world by bringing current events into their games. While playing children are getting the
opportunity to experiment with behaviors and social norms that are used in the
world around them. Children will often
incorporate anything they hear on the news or what their parents are talking
about into their games as well. The
little ones do this to comprehend how the world works and the consequences of
different actions. It is so important to
allow children time to play in the classroom because it allows children to
build upon their knowledge in a way that makes sense to the individual child.
Not everyone learns the same way. Of course a tactile learner is going to learn the alphabet better if they construct letters out of play-doh.
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