3 Top Takeaways from a Hunt Institute Webinar About Ideal Learning Environments
Top Takeaways is a series of recaps from important conversations, town halls, webinars and virtual events about early learning.
On Tuesday, Aug. 3, 聽Dan Wuori and 聽Ellen Roche cohosted a webinar spotlighting the role of play in ideal learning environments. 鈥淧lay is a vehicle for learning rather than a distraction from it,鈥 Wuori stated.
Three experts explored ways of letting play and make-believe take the lead.
- , a professor at Temple University and senior fellow at Brookings Institution
- Dr. Denisha Jones, executive director at
- Dr. Deborah Leong, cofounder and president of
The panelists shared practical insights for teachers, parents and caregivers to actively participate in and curate playful learning environments for kids. Here are some takeaways:
1. Play rules. Play in all its forms is beneficial as long as it is done safely, whether the activity is free-for-all or free and guided. 鈥淐hildren learn to play, and they play to learn,鈥 Leong explained, 鈥淧lay has embedded in it the practice children need for self-regulation, persistence and grit.鈥
Playful learning encompasses the free and guided activities that children regularly participate in, and it is not just for fun. It requires intentionality and adds breadth to what a learning goal can be. In Hirsh-Pasek鈥檚 words, 鈥淧lay is a liberal arts education for children. It embodies all the ways in which we learn that we鈥檝e been studying for over 50 years. It helps make a whole human being.鈥
Jones urged everyone to think critically about our current educational system, citing, for example, the pressure teachers are under to get children to perform well on standardized assessments. 鈥淲hat is the benefit of all the pressure to read?鈥 Everybody wants what鈥檚 best for their children. They want them to be happy and successful. But we think there鈥檚 only one way to do it and it鈥檚 cramming academics. If we have a generation of kids who can read but don鈥檛 like to read鈥 think that鈥檚 the worst kind of thing. If they don鈥檛 like to read, then what have we done, what is the purpose of all that?鈥
2. Play sets children free. Leong emphasized that stories and themes that arise in make-believe play become the context for teaching literacy and math. 鈥淭o get to a high level of play,鈥 she said, 鈥測ou need guided interactions and a teacher who can help children develop the agency and autonomy and social skills they need.鈥
Partnering with schools, teachers and administrators makes it possible to create classroom cultures that put play at the center of learning. Jones currently favors a less-structured educational philosophy out of China called . This approach replaces the traditional play environment by bringing in open-ended, loose parts materials. 鈥淚f we think about freeing children in these different environments,鈥 she said, 鈥渢hen their play will change, it will adapt to the materials that they have.鈥
Changing the surroundings and materials associated with play can invite new ways of for children鈥檚 learning and creativity to soar. According to Hirsch-Pasek, come about through 鈥渂uilding your environment kind of like a playground or a school, or what you see at a children鈥檚 museum.鈥
鈥淲hatever it is that you love, curate your environment with those things and let the kids learn about the world by discovering it.鈥
3. Play is instinctive. How do you guide playful learning experiences? Start thinking like a kid again! 鈥淲e all have to tap into our inner play,鈥 said Jones, urging teachers to 鈥渞emember the complexity and the joy of it.鈥
When adults wonder, What kind of learning is happening here? whether at the grocery store or a traffic light, they begin to notice the space and kids with a new perspective and responsive attitude.
Leong underscored the power of presence, saying, 鈥淭he great thing about play is that it makes the current moment joyful and wonderful and full of good things for children, and we need to recognize that children live now and they are just not in preparation for tomorrow.鈥
The magic is in the moment of now, and 鈥淭he magic isn鈥檛 just for the kids,鈥 as Hirsh-Pasek said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 for you too. You will be a better teacher, a better principal, a better parent and a better policymaker.鈥
This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 麻豆精品. Learn more here.