Llanelli Star

Help your kids learn through play

Play is a vital part of child developmen­t – and it’s fun for parents too. LISA SALMON explains how to be a playtime pro

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PARENTING isn’t just about looking after your kids – it’s about having fun and playing too. And through that play, babies, tots and youngsters can learn crucial life lessons.

Through smiling, singing, modelling, imitation and games, for example, young children can learn about social interactio­n. Even simply playing with common household items – like cups, empty containers and pans – they’ll be learning about objects’ feel and quality, and what can be done with them.

Learning a range of socioemoti­onal and cognitive skills, including self-regulation and language, is also an important part of child developmen­t – and this can be practiced through early interactio­ns with others, including parent-child play.

Evidence also shows that secure attachment and bonding with a parent, which often occurs during parent-child play, is important for a child’s emotional wellbeing, including stress and anxiety reduction.

“Research has firmly establishe­d that the early years are a critical stage of child developmen­t, during which there’s a huge opportunit­y to shape a child’s growth and learning potential,” says Sarah Bouchie, head of the Learning Through Play in Early Childhood programme at The LEGO Foundation. “As children’s first playmates and teachers, parents have the chance to give them a head-start on learning through play that will last beyond their earliest years.”

And parents overwhelmi­ngly want to get stuck in and play. Recent data collected from almost 13,000 mums and dads for the

LEGO Play Well report found 89% say they enjoy playtime as much as their child does, 94% think play helps them get to know their child better, and 91% also believe play time is good for their own wellbeing.

WHAT IS PLAYFUL PARENTING?

GOOD news – being a playful parent really doesn’t need a lot of time or toys. Quality play moments can happen during everyday routines, such as cooking, feeding, bath-time and bedtime, using readily available materials such as tissue paper and cardboard, which can be used as toys.

After some ideas? After studying research and parentchil­d experience­s, the LEGO Foundation teamed up with play experts – they suggest playful parenting (particular­ly for children from birth to three years of age) should involve one or more of these five characteri­stics...

1. Joyful play

IT couldn’t be simpler.

Parents can make eye-contact with their baby during play to communicat­e the joy of interactio­n, by smiling extrawide and laughing, as well as using gestures such as clapping and highfiving when a young child completes a tricky task.

Young infants especially are greatly entertaine­d by unexpected events during play, so a parent can provide joyful play by building excitement during peek-a-boo or a simple jack-inthe-box game.

2. Active engagement

PARENTS can encourage their child’s absorption in an activity by elaboratin­g on it and playing along.

For example, if a child is pretending to fly a spaceship to the moon, the parent could contribute to the story by making “Whoosh!” sound effects, or further building the story by suggesting objects that could represent the moon (e.g. a pan lying against a wall). Maintainin­g eye-contact during play, lifting the child during the spaceship’s ‘lift-off’ etc, will all contribute to engagement.

3. Social interactio­n

WHILE parents can play alongside their child, it’s likely that deeper learning comes from socially-interactiv­e parent-child play. This means that during pretend play, for example, parents can take on a character that must negotiate, plan, and work together with their child’s character to accomplish something.

This kind of teamwork during play feels socially-interactiv­e and is an ideal time to discuss feelings and practice reasoning.

4. Meaningful play

EARLY parent-child play allows children to make sense of their world, by pointing to things in the environmen­t and expressing what they are. During p pretend play, for example, example a parent can model mode how to use a toy telephone. telep Young children chi and infants are ar likely to imitate this th behaviour within their own play, serving as practice for real-life.

5. Repetition

TOTS love to explore and try things over and over again in play. For example, they’ll fill a container with small objects and a empty them all again in a repeating pattern. To parents, this may look like pointless repetition, but by repeating the process toddlers are experiment­ing with the physical properties of the objects. In this way, parents can think of repetitive, or iterative, play as mini-scientific experiment­s. They can support this by playfully encouragin­g the tweaking and repeating process. “Examples of parent-child play are all around us – in the supermarke­t, playground and home,” adds Sarah. “What’s more, both children and parents benefit from playful interactio­ns making play a great way to strengthen the bonds between parents and their children and help them develop.”

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 ??  ?? Every moment of a child’s day is the perfect time to turn an ordinary activity into a bit of fun and a chance to learn something
Every moment of a child’s day is the perfect time to turn an ordinary activity into a bit of fun and a chance to learn something
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 ??  ?? Children love to doo the same thing over and nd over – think of it as s a simple scientific experiment suggests Sarah Bouchie, inset, from The LEGO Foundation
Children love to doo the same thing over and nd over – think of it as s a simple scientific experiment suggests Sarah Bouchie, inset, from The LEGO Foundation
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