Title: child dev1
1Play and Child Development
2Definition of Play
- To engage in activity for amusement
- New Websters Dictionary (Canadian Edition)
- work of childhood
3- Play has a legitimate and important role to play
in Kindergarten and can be used to further
childrens learning in all areas of the
Kindergarten program. - The Kindergarten Program Ministry Document
4Play is
- Intrinsically motivated
- Freely chosen
- Pleasurable
- Non-literal
- Actively engaged
5Through play children can develop
- Creativity
- Convergent thinking
- Divergent thinking
- Problem solving
- Representational skills and concept development
- Language and literacy development
- The Kindergarten Program Ministry Document
6Types of Play
- Sensory play
- Play with motion
- Rough and tumble play
- Language play
- Dramatic play
- Constructive play (play with games and rituals)
7- Play provides opportunities for learning in a
context in which children are at their most
receptive. During play with others and with
materials and equipment in their environment,
children become immersed in activities through
which they learn about themselves and explore
their world. - The Kindergarten Program Ministry Document
8The Teachers Role
- Create a developmentally appropriate environment
to facilitate childrens exploration and
interaction with the environment - Promote active engagement between child and
classroom environment - Provide scaffolding if needed
- Promote independence and a self-extending system
of learning - Ensure students are working at an appropriately
challenging level and adjust the amount of
support based on each childs ability
9- It is important that teachers develop an
understanding of how children learn through play
by observing and analyzing childrens play. Such
an understanding will allow them to plan
productive play activities that have specific
learning goals and to provide appropriate and
stimulating resources. Teachers should monitor
play activities carefully and be available to
assist with or extend the activities as
appropriate. - The Kindergarten Program Ministry Document
10Observe, Observe, Observe!
- Selection, approaches, and completion of task
- Routines
- Interactions in groups, on playground, in gym, on
field trips, etc. - Originality, creativity, curiosity
- Use of manipulatives
11Assess for
- Strengths
- Needs
- Interests
- Growth over time
- Planning
- Evaluating
- Celebrating
12Diagnostic Assessment
- Direct observation
- Interacting/conferencing with the child
- Talking with parents
- Early and ongoing identification information
- Portfolios
- Previous report cards
- Developmental profiles
- Self evaluation
- Anecdotal notes
- Checklists
- Rubrics
13Play and Cognitive Development
14Exploratory/Functional Play
- Children are able to actively explore materials
and environments - Develop sense of accomplishment and independence
- Do something over and over until they have
mastered it, feel good about their newly acquired
skill - Examples
- -pounding playdough
- -running fingers through sand or water
- -mixing paint to find primary/secondary colours
- Children are more likely to learn if they are
able to be involved in hands on learning
15Constructive Play
- Child uses objects or materials to create a
representation of something - Symbolic thinking and elements of pretend
- Hands on experiences once again
- Examples
- -building a fort with blocks
- -building a sand castle
- -building a car for unit on structures
- Good outlet for emotional energy
16Dramatic Play
- Child uses objects, actions, and language to
create imaginary roles and situations - Connection between real and pretend
- Emotional outlet, creativity development
- Examples
- Playing house
- Re-enacting a story/drama activities
- Puppets
17- Cognitive Skills Enhanced During Play
- Measurement
- Equivalency
- Balance
- Spatial concepts
- Conservation
- Decentration
- Reversibility
- Logical classification
18- Play and Social Development
19Solitary Play
- Independent activities
- Examples
- -Puzzles
- -lining up toys
- -dolls
- Early form of play
- Teaches children to be creative, and amuse
themselves - Development of independence
20Parallel Play
- Children use similar toys or engage in similar
activities but do not play together - Child will notice what other child is doing and
may mimic what they see - May work their way into other persons play
- Can help child understand that everyone is
different and everyone has their own ideas and
way of doing things - Example
- -two child sitting side by side lining up
different animals
21Associate Play
- Children engaging in similar, somewhat organized
activity - May talk about what they are doing, share toys
and ask questions - Children do not engage in joint efforts
- Teaches child to share and ask questions
- Example
- -two children playing side by side lining up
toys, one child asks to borrow one of the other
childs toys to continue on with own play
22Cooperative Play
- two or more children interacting with one another
toward a common purpose - different roles and responsibilities,
contributions made by all - child learns to work together, share roles,
compromise, cooperate, etc. - Examples
- two students working together on a puzzle
- a group of students completing a science
experiment - -Children playing house and assigning roles to
each person
23- Not all play activities should be initiated by
the teacher, however. Children need
opportunities to engage with their peers in play
activities of their own devising, through which
they can express themselves and explore things of
special interest to them. - The Kindergarten Program Ministry Document
24FREE PLAY!!!
- Decision making skills
- Learn about themselves, and others in the world
- Concentration skills
- Rationalizing
25 26Blocks
- Measurement
- Unit iteration parts from a whole
- Subdivision whole into parts
- Equivalency
- Balance
27Blocks
- Spatial concept
- Piaget and Inhelders Euclidean Spatial Concept
(space is thought of as an overall network,
independent of the number or the arrangement of
elements within it) - Building up and out
- Grid patterns
- Logical classification
- Sort by features
- Putting things away by shape and size
28Clay
- Piaget (Conservation)
- Regardless of change of appearance, the amount
stays the same if nothing is added or subtracted - Dividing and combining
29Water Play
- Floatation
- Bubbles
- Measurement
- Conservation of liquid (Piaget)
- Decentration
- Reversibility
30C Mr oe va et mi ev ne t
- Schemes (Piaget)
- Consistent action patterns that are the childs
earliest concepts - Enactive Representation (Bruner)
- Information about the world can be encoded
motorically instead of, or as well as, mentally - Any subject can be taught through the medium of
movement
31- Fluid Construction Toys
- Paints and clay to create unspecified product
- Perceptual performance (drawing, block building,
puzzle forming, right to left orientation) - Structured Construction Toys
- Blocks, legos, puzzles
- Verbal, perceptual, quantitative and memory
development - Microsymbolic Toys
- Toy cars and trucks, dolls and toy buildings
- Enhance memory
- Macrosymbolic Toys
- Child size play equipment
- Memory, perceptual performance, quantitative
skills
32Free Play 10 Benefits to Children
- Muscular development and control of large
muscles, fine motor skills and eye-hand
coordination. - Speech development
- Social development
- Language skill development
- Problem solving and creative thinking
- Increased consciousness of the cause and effect
involved in a sequence of events. - Therapeutic value
- Opportunities for self talk
- Development of self-confidence
- Learning cooperation and values
- Sheila G. Flaxman (Play An Endangered Species)
33What do others have to say about play?
- Rousseau
- Locke
- Freud
- Erikson
- Bruner
- Sutton-Smith
- Vygotsky
- Piaget
34Classic Theories
- (Hebert Spencer, G.T.W. Patrick, G. Stanley Hall,
Karl Goos) - Play as instinctive mechanism that either
promoted optimal physical development or
reflected the evolutionary history of human
species - Discharge pent up energy
- Renewal of energy
- Natural way of preparing body for the tasks of
adult life
35Jean Jacques Rousseau(1712 1784)
- Transformation position
- Children are good but become corrupted through
their contact with society - Philosophy of naturalism
- Education should let the childs inner nature
unfold - Little harm would come from allowing children to
play without excessive adult supervision - First twelve years of life should be a time of
leisure - Childhood glorified and innocence celebrated
36John Locke(1632 1704)
- Transmission position
- The mind as a tabula rasa (blank slate)
- Education is a process of habit formation
- Repetition and drill important
- Each child is unique and valuable, developmental
needs need to be realized by adults - Knowledge comes through the senses
- Gentle and respectful approaches to help children
develop their own internal controls - Moral education
- Did not condemn play, play helped child develop
rationality and discipline
37Sigmund and Anna Freud
- Play is primarily emotional, reduction of stress
- Objective anxiety
- -fear of the external world (helplessness,
abandonment, etc.) - -play gives the child the illusion of power and
control - Instinctual anxiety
- -unwelcome feelings
- -ego related
- -play allows for the exploration of various
feelings without adult repercussions
38Erik Erikson
- Play has an ego-building function
- Development of physical and social skills which
enhance self-esteem - Three main goals of play
- Exploration of childs body (autocosmic play)
- Mastery over objects (enhances the ego)
(microsphere play) - Social interactions (understand culture and
social roles) (macrosphere play)
39Jerome Bruner and Brian Sutton-Smith
- Play facilitates intellectual growth
- Provides a comfortable and relaxed atmosphere
- Learn to solve problems
40Lev Vygotsky
- Play is essential in the formation of the childs
symbolic abilities - Role playing, stereotypes, rules of behaviour
- Acceptance in social situations
41Jean Piaget
- Adapt to environment
- Assimilation and accommodation
- Play as a consolidation of newly learned
behaviours - Play facilitates learning
- Games of construction (area of transition between
symbolic play and nonplayful activities) - Play facilitates learning in that it exposes a
child to new experiences and new possibilities
for dealing with the world.
42School Age Children(Intellectual, Social, and
Personality Development)
43- Intellectual
- Childs thinking is becoming more orderly, more
structures and more logical - Play becomes more realistic and more rule
oriented - Reflect a developing need for order
- Social
- Peer group provides support
- Acceptance is important
- Play reflects a need for order
- Personality
- Self-concept development
- Talents, skills, and abilities to be proud of
- Play reflects need for industry
44The Emergence of Logical Thinking Need for Order
- Piaget children (age 5 or 6) enter concrete
operational stage of development - Thinking is more logical and orderly
- Ie. Sorting shapes according to size, colour, or
number of lines - Cause and effect
- Play becomes more realistic and characterized by
need for order
45The Childhood Peer Group A Need to Belong
- School age children increasingly peer oriented
and decreasingly family oriented - Belonging
- Being different
- Spend more time with peers than family
46The Developing Self-Concept A Need for Industry
- Applying themselves for the adult world
- Eager to be productive, feeling of
accomplishments - Play as a component of healthy ego development
47- Adolescents
- (Intellectual, Social, and Personality
Development)
48Characteristics
- Transition from thinking in concrete to thinking
in formal operations - Uses logic
- Problem solving skills
- Hypothetical-deductive reasoning (use of
if-then statements) - Sometimes forget about realistic limitations on
their dreams - Adolescent egocentrism
- Personal fable that no one else could possibly
share or understand their thoughts or feelings,
good things only happen to other people
49- The Redefinition of Friendship A Need for
Communication - The Growth of Self-Awareness A Need for Identity
50Adolescent Play
- Attend movies
- Watch television
- Read
- Got to a dance
- Listen to music
- Watch music videos
- Hang around with friends
- Unstructured activities
51- Children are not empty vessels to be filled with
knowledge but active builders of knowledge
little scientists who are constantly creating and
testing their own theories of the world. - Learning the multiplication tables and alphabet
are very important. But those skills need to
reside inside a mind that has been expanded by
the imaginative and joyous exploration of our
environment and the possibility that it offers
for fun. (Jane Healy, Psychologist) - One thing we can bet on is that we will still
need people who can solve problems, which is one
benefit of play. The people who brought us the
technology of today were obviously wonderful
players. (Rhonda Clements, American Association
for the Childs Right to Play)
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