by , Yes! magazine: http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/kindergartners-get-little-time-to-play-heres-why-thats-a-problem-20170911
Being a kindergartner today is very different from being a kindergartner 20 years ago. In fact, it is more like first grade.
Researchers have demonstrated that 5-year-olds are spending more time engaged in teacher-led academic learning activities than play-based learning opportunities that facilitate child-initiated investigations and foster social development among peers.
As a former kindergarten teacher, a father of three girls who’ve
recently gone through kindergarten, and as researcher and
teacher-educator in early childhood education, I have had kindergarten
as a part of my adult life for almost 20 years.
As a parent, I have seen how student-led projects, sensory tables (that include sand or water) and dramatic play areas
have been replaced with teacher-led instructional time, writing centers
and sight words lists that children need to memorize. And as a
researcher, I found, along with my colleague Yi Chin Lan, that early childhood teachers expect children to have academic knowledge, social skills and the ability to control themselves when they enter kindergarten.
So, why does this matter?
All work, and almost no play
First, let’s see what kindergarten looks like today.
As part of my research, I have been conducting interviews with a
range of kindergarten stakeholders - children, teachers, parents - about
what they think kindergarten is and what it should be. During the
interviews, I share a 23-minute film that I made last spring about a
typical day in a public school kindergarten classroom.
The classroom I filmed had 22 kindergartners and one teacher. They
were together for almost the entire school day. During that time, they
engaged in about 15 different academic activities, which included
decoding word drills, practicing sight words, reading to themselves and
then to a buddy, counting up to 100 by ones, fives and 10s, practicing
simple addition, counting money, completing science activities about
living things and writing in journals on multiple occasions. Recess did
not occur until last hour of the day, and that lasted about 15 minutes.
For children between 5 and 6, this is a tremendous amount of work. Teachers too are under pressure to cover the material.
When I interviewed the teacher for the short film, I asked why she covered so much material in a few hours, she said, “There’s pressure on me and the kids to perform at a higher level academically.”
So even though the teacher admitted that the workload on
kindergartners was an awful lot, she also said she was unable to do
anything to change it.
She was required to assess her students continually, not only for her
own instruction, but also for multiple assessments such as quarterly
report cards, school-based reading assessments, district-based literacy
and math assessments, as well as state-mandated literacy assessments.
In turn, when I asked the kindergartners what they were
learning, their replies reflected two things: one, they were learning to
follow rules; two, learning was for the sake of getting to the next
grade and eventually to find a job. Almost all of them said to me that
they wanted more time to play.
One boy said, “I wish we had more recess.”
These findings mirror the findings of researchers Daphna Bassok, Scott Latham and Anna Rorem that kindergarten now focuses on literacy and math instruction. They also echo the statements of other kindergarten teachers that kids are being prepared for high-stakes tests as early as kindergarten.
Here’s how play helps children
Research has consistently shown classrooms that offer children the
opportunities to engage in play-based and child-centered learning
activities help children grow academically, socially and emotionally. Furthermore, recess in particular helps children restore their attention for learning in the classroom.
Focus on rules can diminish children’s willingness to take academic risks and curiosity as well as impede their self-confidence and motivation as learners - all of which can negatively affect their performance in school and in later life.
Giving children a chance to play and engage in hands-on learning
activities helps them internalize new information as well as compare and
contrast what they’re learning with what they already know. It also
provides them with the chance to interact with their peers in a more
natural setting and to solve problems on their own. Lastly, it allows
kindergartners to make sense of their emotional experiences in and out of school.
So children asking for more time to play are not trying to get out of
work. They know they have to work in school. Rather, they’re asking for a chance to recharge as well as be themselves.
As another kindergarten boy in my study told me, “We learn about
stuff we need to learn, because if we don’t learn stuff, then we don’t
know anything.”
Learning by exploring
So what can we do to help kindergartners?
I am not advocating for the elimination of academics in kindergarten.
All of the stakeholders I’ve talked with up to this point, even the
children, know and recognize that kindergartners need to learn academic
skills so that they can succeed in school.
However, free exploration is missing. As a kindergarten teacher I
filmed noted, “Free and exploratory learning has been replaced with sit,
focus, learn, get it done and maybe you can have time to play later.”
Policymakers, schools systems and schools need to recognize that the standards and tests they mandate have altered the kindergarten classroom significantly. Families need to be more proactive as well. They can help their children’s teachers by being their advocates for a more balanced approach to instruction.
Kindergartners deserve learning experiences in school that nurtures
their development as well as their desire to learn and interact with
others. Doing so will assist them see school as a place that will help
them and their friends be better people.
This article was originally published by The Conversation. It has been edited for YES! Magazine.
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