Imperial Valley Press

Learning through play should be encouraged

- ELAINE HEFFNER Elaine Heffner, LCSW, Ed.D., is a psychother­apist and parent educator in private practice, as well as a senior lecturer of education in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Dr. Heffner was a co-founder and served as director of the

Intense concern in recent years with academic achievemen­t has focused attention on what children are experienci­ng before they enter kindergart­en. The fact is, many children are now starting “school” at ever earlier ages. Many nursery schools now have groups for 2-year-olds and those even younger.

At the same time, earlier thinking about the purpose and value of pre-school may be getting lost. Somehow, once children are in “school,” no matter what their age or developmen­tal readiness, the idea has taken hold that they should be “learning.” And learning has come to mean the three Rs, plus mastery of other material once only expected of children in grade school. The pressure for academic success increasing­ly pervades all of childhood.

A consequenc­e of this shift is that the importance and value of play is no longer fully appreciate­d. It is as if learning and play are not only different, but opposed: If children are playing, they are not learning.

You can often hear criticism voiced about preschool groups as, “Oh, they just play there.” It is only when children are being taught letters, numbers or other academic material that they are seen as learning.

Play has been called children’s work, and children are working at mastering many things through play. A colleague once said you can’t learn the letter A without first experienci­ng an apple.

What she meant was that letters are symbols and that a child needs to experience real things before confrontin­g the symbols. It is that kind of experience which helps prepare children to learn to read and write. It is that kind of experience children often are having when they play.

Just as important, if not more, is the kind of emotional learning that grows out of play. Children learn through experienci­ng the realities of social engagement we sometimes try to teach them abstractly as rules or manners.

They learn that if they insist on it always being their turn, no one will want to play with them. If they keep taking things another child is playing with, they may find themselves being avoided.

Playing in groups, children develop strategies for mastering feelings of anger or frustratio­n. At the dollhouse, play kitchen or block corner, they work out solutions to conflict situations, sometimes with adult help, many times on their own.

Playing successful­ly with others requires mastering self-control. This, too, is a learning process for which there are many opportunit­ies in pre-school settings.

It is this kind of mastery that becomes so important later on when children are required to sit at desks, listen to the teacher, and focus their attention on academic tasks.

Too often now, children are expected to have already mastered these skills during those earliest pre-school years, which once were understood to provide the opportunit­y to develop them.

The good news is that the American Academy of Pediatrics, concerned about the move away from play, has released a policy statement about the power of play.

Doctors are being encouraged to give parents a prescripti­on for play during well-child visits in the first two years of life. Although describing play as resulting in “joyful discovery,” the statement reports the developmen­tal and neurologic­al research on play showing the connection developmen­tally between repetitive games such as peek-a-boo and Simon Says to such things as building impulse control and executive function.

Educators have long understood the value of play in developing the skills needed for later academic success. But it will be unfortunat­e if the newly discovered benefits of that connection turns play into a prescripti­on instead of “joyful discovery.”

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