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Why not let kids be kids?


  • To: ARN State <ARN-state@yahoogroups.com>, ARN Main List <arn-l@interversity.org>, ndsg Study Group <ndsgroup@yahoogroups.com>
  • Subject: Why not let kids be kids?
  • From: Peter Campbell <campbellp@mail.montclair.edu>
  • Date: Tue, 6 Nov 2007 10:02:35 -0800

I'm worried that kids are not allowed to be kids any more. I'm worried their lives are either too scheduled and overly structured, or they are left on their own to vegetate in front of the TV set or their video game consoles. We have an achievement gap, yes. But what's the best way for schools to participate in bridging that gap?

I keep coming back to the issue of harm, i.e., the evidence that an emphasis on academic instruction in pre-K and K (esp. an emphasis on phonics and decoding at the expense of socio-dramatic play and hands- on, experiential activities like art and music) causes both short- term and long-term harm. The Alliance for Childhood makes a strong case for a correlation between the lack of play and aggressive behavior, as well a possible connection between the absence of play and mental illness in children. (http://www.allianceforchildhood.net/ pdf_files/background_paper.pdf) Of course, play is getting a lot of attention due to an increase in childhood obesity. But it seems that folks like Vivian Paley are being completely ignored. I think this is largely due to NCLB and the recognition that low-income kids need help to close the gap. But the Alliance for Childhood handles this really nicely, arguing, "While low-income, at-risk children need and deserve special attention to close the gap, there is no evidence that current methods will do that."

As the Alliance for Childhood finds, most disturbing are the reports from teachers that if they give five-year-olds time to play, the children literally do not know what to do. “They have no ideas of their own,” reported experienced kindergarten teachers in an Alliance for Childhood pilot study in Atlanta.

Note - the list of people who signed the Alliance for Childhood's call to action include such heavy-hitters as Howard Gardner, Linda Darling-Hammond, Jonathan Kozol, Mel Levine, Deb Meier, Sam Meisels, Vivian Paley, and George Wood. Pretty powerful group!

The National Association for the Education of Young Children has a strong position statement on school readiness. It's really quite good. Very concise.

http://www.naeyc.org/about/positions/PSREDY98.asp

Here's a particularly good/relevant excerpt:

"A prevalent, fundamental misconception is that children's learning occurs in a rigid sequence and that certain basic skills must exist before later learning can occur. In fact, much of children's learning is from whole to part. Children's acquisition of higher order thinking processes and problem- solving abilities occurs in tandem with and may outpace acquisition of "basic" skills. For example, children are able to comprehend far more complex stories than they can produce. While the beginning acquisition of basic literacy and numeracy skills is important, these abilities are unlikely to flourish when presented out of context as isolated skills. To focus only on sounding out letters or forming letters properly on the lines ignores children's complex language capabilities, often squelches their burgeoning interest in reading and writing, and deprives children of the meaningful context that promotes effective learning."

Consider also what's happening to recess in public schools. A survey by the American Association for the Child's Right to Play shows that about 40% of public schools have already cut, or are planning to cut, at least one recess period from the school day. As Time.com put it: "Multiple studies show that, when recess time is delayed, elementary- school kids grow increasingly inattentive. Goodbye recess, hello Ritalin."

New elementary schools in Atlanta have been built without playgrounds, and recess has been curtailed in other Georgia school districts as well. Schools in Pennsylvania, Illinois, Texas, New Jersey, Florida, and California have all jumped on the eliminate- recess bandwagon. "This is an example of good intentions gone awry," Paul Houston, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators, told the Chicago Tribune (9-27-01). "There's huge pressure these days on superintendents and boards to show that they're serious about achievement, so they do something symbolic - they get rid of recess."

So what does this mean? We honestly don't know what the long-term effects and the possible harm that an over-emphasis on developmentally inappropriate activities can cause. Some kids -- my pre-K daughter included -- might even appear to have fun doing worksheets and seem like they are learning something. Maybe. But my daughter, in her free time, has never asked me to create a worksheet for her. She has, however, asked me to bark at her toy dog, pretend I'm Miss Piggy, dance, sing, and look for buried treasure. If she wasn't doing these things with me, and if she's being given fewer and fewer opportunities to do this at school, and since she doesn't live near any of her classmates, what would happen to her imagination, that one thing that childhood is supposed to be synonymous with?

We look at the huge percentage of children that drop out of school each year and we wonder why they drop out. So policy makers decide to make school more about school and less about fun. And they're starting in the year BEFORE Kindergarten. I don't know about you, but I suspect this will create more drop-outs, not fewer. School is clearly not working for these kids. It is clearly irrelevant. It clearly has nothing to do with them. The way to keep kids active and engaged in school is to make school a place where kids want to be and want to stay. School should be fun. Kids should be allowed to be kids.

If you don't buy this argument, then consider this: in the absence of open, unstructured play, when will children learn to share? When will they learn to cooperate? When will they learn how to make friends? When will they learn how to resolve conflicts? When will they be able to develop their own interests in things that stimulate their curiosity? When will they develop their own identities? It's these very things that form the core of childhood. And it's these very things that are slowly disappearing from our classrooms.

Peter Campbell
posted at http://transformeducation.blogspot.com/2007/11/why-not-let- kids-be-kids.html





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