Creative Movement, Ballet, Tap, Children's DVD, Burlington, NC

Let Them Play!

Let Them Play! Artwork for Miss Kim

On Friday my son's playschool director shared an article with me. I found it very interesting especially since I have the same quote from Albert Einstein on my website "Imagination is more important than knowledge. For while knowledge defines all we currently know and understand, imagination points to all we might yet discover and create."

So many parents ask me or others "can your child read yet", "how far can your child count", "does your child know all their letters, numbers, colors, and so on and so on and so on". I am a Mommy to four children ages 4-15. I do not have a degree in child psychology but I have 23 years of experience in teaching preschool aged children. What happened to imaginative play? Why are parents so focused on making sure their child can out perform other children?

When I walk in my son's playschool class I am not worried about what he knows but rather can he share, take turns, interact with others, listen and follow directions, and is he getting to just play. When I saw this article I thought to myself.....this is something I want all parents to read and think about. I know from experience that all that "knowledge" that some parents drill into their children is just memorization. They will get it later anyway. I am not saying that you should not work with your preschooler if they show an interest. Great, if they want to read, write, count, then let them go for it.

I wish that parents would stop focusing so hard on academics, and just sit back and watch their children play. Read with them, color with them, play dress up, build with them, and follow their lead. Geometry, Biology, English, and writing tests are just around the corner. They have so many years ahead of them to perform to the best of their academic abilities; this is the only time in their lives that they can be a child. Let them just be 3 and 4 years old for now.

Here's part of the article. The full article can be found at: Alliance for Childhood.

Time for play in most public kindergartens has dwindled to the vanishing point, replaced by lengthy lessons and standardized testing, according to three new studies released today by the Alliance for Childhood. Classic play materials like blocks, sand and water tables, and props for dramatic play have largely disappeared from the 268 full-day kindergarten classrooms studied.

The studies were conducted by researchers from U.C.L.A., Long Island University, and Sarah Lawrence College in New York. Their findings are documented in Crisis in the Kindergarten: Why Children Need to Play in School.

The researchers found that:

  • On a typical day, kindergartners in Los Angeles and New York City spend four to six times as long being instructed and tested in literacy and math (two to three hours per day) as in free play or "choice time" (30 minutes or less).
  • Standardized testing and preparation for tests are now a daily activity in most of the kindergartens studied, despite the fact that the use of most such tests with children under age eight is scientifically invalid and leads to harmful labeling.
  • In many kindergarten classrooms there is no playtime at all. Teachers say the curriculum does not incorporate play, there isn't time for it, and many school administrators do not value it.

Child development experts have been raising alarms about the increasingly didactic, test-driven, and joyless course of early childhood education. "These practices, which are not well grounded in research, violate long-established principles of child development and good teaching," states the Alliance's report. "It is increasingly clear that they are compromising both children's health and their long-term prospects for success in school."

Miss Kim

 

Reddit Add this Article to Onlywire del.icio.us Technorati StumbleUpon Netscape Top Blogs

Comments: 5,   TrackBacks: 1.  Leave or Read Comments.

Posted by MissKim on March 31, 2009 | Printer-Friendly

TrackBack: http://www.misskimdance.com/blog/mt/mt-tb.cgi/10

 

Comments and TrackBacks

 

TrackBacks:

  1. Parenting Advice and Tips: Modern Parent...
    Parents Helping Parents Carnival XI
    photo by extra medium Welcome to the Eleventh edition of the Parents Helping Parents Carnival! For this edition, I have selected 12 of the best submissions I have received over the past two weeks. Check them out below and I hope you enjoy them as much ...
    Posted On: April 4, 2009 12:07 AM.

 

Comments:

  1.  

    This is a great article, Kim, and I hope it is well read and well practiced. You are very special!!

    Posted by Nina Hunt on March 31, 2009 1:30 PM

  2.  

    Dear wonderful Miss Kim ,

    Thank you for this.

    I read that children do not need
    to learn academic skills
    until they are about 7 years old ,
    because they can catch up with children
    who have learned these things
    when they were younger .


    I like artistic things ,
    so I don't like it
    when the first programs
    to be removed
    from school curriculums
    are music , art ,
    and physical education .


    People need to know
    that music uses both sides of the brain ,
    and that a symphony conductor
    is actually using math skills
    when he is conducting .


    Also ,
    dance movements
    can teach people
    to learn sequential steps
    in a process ,
    such as in
    computer programming .


    Thank you .

    John M Hilb

    Kankakee, Illinois

    Posted by John M Hilb on April 1, 2009 11:59 PM

  3.  

    Miss Kim,
    I deal with these issues everyday, as a mother of two kindergartener's (that are not having fun) and a teacher at your child's preschool. We try our best to prepare them for the academic scare that they are about to recieve in public schools! Praise Miss Barbara for "taking on the world" on all of our children's behalf. Thanks for passing on some of her work!!!

    Miss Jen Thompson
    FS Playschool

    Posted by Jennifer Thompson on April 2, 2009 8:56 PM

  4.  

    I love the quote from Albert Einstein. That sums it all up perfectly. I agree that we need to let more kids participate in unstructured play. It is healthy. Thanks for the post!

    Posted by Kakie on April 4, 2009 10:48 AM

  5.  

    Miss Kim, Here is a wonderful presentation by Sir Ken Robinson about creativity and Dance in education:

    http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/ken_robinson_says_schools_kill_creativity.html

    Posted by Music Noodle/Angelique Lee on April 9, 2009 8:23 PM

 

Post a comment


 

 

 

 
 

Copyright 2007-2010, Kim Black, PhaseQuest, All Rights Reserved.   Blog Powered by: Movable Type 4.23-en