An argument is brewing in theΒ preschool scene.Β Β InΒ one corner,Β you have those arguing for more academics to give children that head start that might correct the troubles of high-school drop-outs and low test scores.Β They claim that children rise to the occasion and show that they are capable of more than weβve been asking.Β
In the other corner, youβll find those who say play is disappearing from the cultural landscape of America and that its absence is a contributor to many childhood maladies such as obesity, ADHD, and declining social skills.Β They say that children βrising to the occasionβ are really only performing splinter skills , which are more closely aligned with party tricks than with actual learning.
Certainly, bothΒ camps can make compelling arguments.Β But each time I read an article giving voice to the two sides, I find myself thinking: these arenβt mutually exclusive points of view.Β The notion that a childβs education can either be playful or academic seems to be creating an unfortunate and false dichotomy.Β
It seems to me that setting play and academics at odds with each other is pitting the method against the goal.Β Itβs not an either/or choice, itβs a means and an end.
The term βacademicβ has come to mean βformal, direct instructionβ, and in that sense, the two modes are different.Β But when βacademicβ is viewed as scholarly andΒ giving rise toΒ study and learning, it easily goes hand in hand with a play-based education structure.
To be sure, often the two camps are really at odds over what expectations are developmentally appropriate.Β But if weβre talking about developmentally appropriate learning outcomes, truly,Β academicsΒ can be taught and learned throughΒ aΒ play-based curriculum.Β In fact, in many ways, I believe that the format of play and experience can teach and prepare young children for concepts that are more advanced than could be taught in a formal, conventional way.Β Hereβs an example.
You would (hopefully) never consider plopping a multiplication worksheet down in front of a preschooler, followed by an explanation of the basic principles and procedures of algebra.Β However, I know aΒ phenomenal preschool teacher who recently gave her studentsΒ a similarΒ challenge,Β but in an authentic, playful way.
As this teacher sat down to snackΒ with a group of her students, she noted that there were five people at the table and each person could have 3 crackers.Β She then asked the children at the table how many crackers she should put on the plate to serve.Β One child enthusiastically answered, βThree!βΒ So the teacher placed three crackers on the plate and set it on the table.Β The children looked around at five hungry faces, trying to figure out where they went wrong.Β As the gears turned in their minds, one child suddenly shouted, βFifteen!Β We need fifteen!βΒ Not bad for a βnon-academicβ school.
A quality play-based learning environment is not just a glorified birthday party.Β Each activity, each nook and cranny, and every loose part is arranged and made available with specific developmental objectives in mind.Β Ask a teacher and he or she will be able to tell you, βThat builds fine motor skills for writing.Β That promotes sorting, which is the basis of the set theory of mathematics.Β This will help with phonological awareness, whichΒ leads to literacy.Β Β Here we invite creativity and problem-solving while over there they are using their language and interpersonal skills.βΒ
Itβs those foundational experiences that allow children to learn advanced concepts more easily and more thoroughly.Β I worry that in our effort to get ahead in education, weβre simply skipping these foundational pieces so often learned through play.Β Itβs like being in a rush to construct a tall building, so we decide to forget about the foundation (nobody really sees that anyway) and jump right to the first floor.Β It might look OK at first, but eventually we get to the second or third floor and suddenly we realize that things arenβt solid, and we find ourselves slipping.Β I really think many of the academic problems we see in primary grades are not because the children didnβt start formal instruction early enough, but because they donβt have enough foundational experience for that formal instruction to make any lasting connections.
I guess what bothers me most is that setting play and academics at odds with each other often implies that one is for feel-goodΒ fun and the other is for realΒ learning.Β That one isΒ just daycare and the other is school.Β In reality, a play-based education is not only more responsive and developmentallyΒ appropriate for young children, but it also teaches them not only how to answer, but how to think.Β Not just to recite, but to inquire.Β Not simply to complete worksheets, but to build connections.Β Academic content isnβt just taught, itβs meaningfully constructed.
Tune in next week, when weβll discuss how to spot a quality play-based preschool program. ***Editorial change: Weβll have that discussionΒ this Friday!
Top photo by Anissa Thompson.
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