Play is the highest expression of human development in
childhood, for it alone is the free expression of what is in a
child’s soul. Friedrich Froebel
True education can never be forced—a child has to want to learn. This longing is
often locked deep inside, and it is the teacher’s task to discover and
encourage it. But teaching has probably never been as difficult as it is now.
Many children spend more hours each day with their caregivers than with their
parents. Too frequently, they come from broken homes into understaffed and
underfunded classrooms. These children often enter the room rebellious and
guarded, blocking teachers out for fear of being betrayed by yet another figure
of authority.
But the role of the teacher is now more important than ever, and
the most vital part of the work is not academic. We need to allow children to
be children for as long as possible. They need time to breathe in and breathe
out. They need to play. Children are not computers or robots that can be
programmed according to our wishes; they have a heart and soul, not only a
brain.
Friedrich Froebel, who created the concept of the kindergarten, was a
nineteenth-century German educator whose greatest gift was his ability to view
life through a child’s eyes. That is why, almost two hundred years later, his
educational philosophy makes sense to anyone who loves children. When he coined
the name “kindergarten,” he meant it literally—“a garden of children”—where
each child is nurtured with the same love and care given to a seedling. He knew
that humans are essentially creative and compassionate beings, and that
education must involve the development of these traits.
Froebel often spoke of the importance of children’s play: “A
child who plays thoroughly and perseveringly, until physical fatigue forbids,
will be a determined adult, capable of self-sacrifice both for his own welfare
and that of others.”
In Froebel’s Educational Laws for All
Teachers, educator James Hughes distills much of the wisdom of Keilhau into
thoughts that are easily understood today:
Froebel objected to every system that magnified knowledge at the
expense of the child, and his whole life was a protest against the “stamping
and molding” processes of teachers who failed to recognize the sacredness of
the child’s individuality. What he valued was not power, but creative power. He
aimed to make something better of his pupils than mere “machines,” and, as he
so well said, to make them “free, thinking, independent people.”
Some
of the greatest educational visionaries in America studied and built on
Froebel’s philosophy. Elizabeth Peabody was instrumental in the establishment
of kindergartens across America. Caroline Pratt invented the concept of the
unit block in 1913 and started City and Country School the next year. Lucy
Sprague Mitchell founded the Bank Street College of Education with its focus on
the early years. These women blazed the trail for learning through play, and
their schools still stand as beacons for the education of the “whole child,”
emphasizing physical activity and creative expression.
Today advocates of play and exploration can be found everywhere. In fact, all
good teachers know that play for its own sake is irreplaceable in a child’s
life. Not only is it the best method of early education, but it’s also
essential for the growth of a child’s spirit. In a way, play ought to require
no further defense; it defines childhood.
Yet in their document Crisis in the Kindergarten,
Alliance for Childhood’s Edward Miller and Joan Almon report that play
continues to vanish from young children’s lives. They back up their claim with
studies and compelling evidence, and sum up their findings:
Kindergarten has changed radically in the last two decades in
ways that few Americans are aware of. Children now spend far more time being
taught and tested on literacy and math skills than they do learning through
play and exploration, exercising their bodies, and using their imaginations.
Many kindergartens use highly prescriptive curricula geared to new state
standards and linked to standardized tests. In an increasing number of
kindergartens, teachers must follow scripts from which they may not deviate.
These practices, which are not well grounded in research, violate
long-established principles of child development and good teaching. It is
increasingly clear that they are compromising both children’s health and their
long-term prospects for success in school.
Some of the worst
changes have originated from government-mandated academic
programs that rob children of their chance to learn through play and burden
teachers with ever more pressure and paperwork. As I watch this trend grow
every year, I agree with Albert Einstein’s observation: “It is a miracle that
curiosity survives formal education.”
The motives behind standardization often sound right.
Politicians say they want to “fix” our broken educational system so our
children can compete on the global stage. They talk about going back to basics,
mastering the three Rs, and documenting measurable results. And many of these
mandates are a direct result of parents and voters calling for change.
But we should look more closely at the kind of change that children
need. Programs handed down from distant political establishments come with
strings attached. Additional paperwork removes teachers from the children who
need their care. Children are bewildered by tests and diagnostics at an age
when they should be playing. Decision-makers, it seems, ignore the wisdom of
the teachers who could—and do—tell them how children learn.
An example of this is a recent resignation letter from teacher
Susan Sluyter, published in The Washington Post:
I am writing today to let you know that I am resigning my position
as Pre-K and Kindergarten teacher in the Cambridge Public Schools. It is with
deep sadness that I have reached this decision, as I have loved my job, my
school community, and the families and amazing and dedicated faculty I have
been connected with throughout the district for the past eighteen years.
In this disturbing era of testing and data collection in the
public schools, I have seen my career transformed into a job that no longer
fits my understanding of how children learn and what a teacher ought to do in
the classroom to build a healthy, safe, developmentally appropriate environment
for learning for each of our children.
I have experienced, over the past few years, the same mandates
that all teachers in the district have experienced. I have watched as my job
requirements swung away from a focus on the children, their individual learning
styles, emotional needs, and their individual families, interests, and
strengths to a focus on testing, assessing, and scoring young children, thereby
ramping up the academic demands and pressures on them. Each year, I have been
required to spend more time attending classes and workshops to learn about new
academic demands that smack of first and second grade, instead of Kindergarten
and Pre-K.
I have needed to schedule and attend more and more meetings
about increasingly extreme behaviors and emotional needs of children in my
classroom; I recognize many of these behaviors as children shouting out to the
adults in their world, “I can’t do this! Look at me! Know me! Help me! See me!”
I have changed my practice over the years to allow the necessary time and focus
for all the demands coming down from above. Each year there are more. Each year
I have had less and less time to teach the children I love in the way I know best—and
in the way child development experts recommend. I reached the place last year
where I began to feel I was part of a broken system that was causing damage to
those very children I was there to serve.
I was trying to survive in a community of colleagues who were
struggling to do the same: to adapt and survive, to continue to hold onto what
we could, and to affirm what we believe to be quality teaching for an early
childhood classroom. I began to feel a deep sense of loss of integrity. I felt
my spirit, my passion as a teacher, slip away. I felt anger rise inside me. I
felt I needed to survive by looking elsewhere and leaving the community I love
so dearly. I did not feel I was leaving my job. I felt then and feel now that
my job left me.
Many other teachers
feel the same. But
public policy is against them, and they feel forced out of their field.
Teaching requires great love, wisdom, and patience. It takes time to discover
the best in each child, and then to draw it out. What happens when teachers are
robbed of this precious time? When will they get the chance to build a
relationship with each child through simple interaction and play, which is when
the best teaching moments actually occur.
In Australia, educator Maggie Dent speaks out boldly in defense
of play:
Unstructured, child-centered play has enormous benefits for
young children, and those benefits cannot be tested by benchmark testing. Our
capacity to be creative thinkers and innovative problem-solvers comes from
using our own mental processing to explore the world. How much do we need to
value creative thinking, given the speed of change sweeping our modern world?
There are no answers in textbooks about how to manage unexpected change, and
this is why we are disabling our children by stealing their capacity to use
play to learn, to explore, to question, and to solve problems without an
adult’s assistance. They are biologically wired to learn from their
experiences, provided those experiences are engaging and interesting.
Every child is different. Each has a unique set of abilities, created for a special
purpose. So why force a common educational standard on them? We know children
learn best through playing, but play also brings joy, contentment, and
detachment from the troubles of the day. In our frantically over-scheduled
culture, every child should have a right to play.
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