10 tips to recognise and organise child-initiated play anna ephgrave

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10 Tips to Recognise and Organise Child-initiated Play Anna Ephgrave  -------------------------------------------------- The webinar slides can be downloaded and printed from: http://bit.ly/AE-webinar. Child-initiated play Anna Ephgrave. What I will cover. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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10 Tips to Recognise and Organise Child-initiated Play

Anna Ephgrave --------------------------------------------------

The webinar slides can be downloaded and printed from:http://bit.ly/AE-webinar

If you have any questions, please type them in your chat box during the presentation.Use the pull-out box at the top right-hand corner of your screen to access your chat box.

Child-initiated playAnna Ephgrave

What I will cover• Why child-initiated play is so valuable• Ten tips to recognise, organise and support

child-initiated play

All in 15 minutes!

Why is child-initiated play so important?

Babies are born with a natural desire to explore and learn – ie. They are born with a desire to initiate their own play. Adults don’t have to force babies to learn – but adults can certainly stop the learning.

Brain research tells us more

Simplistic but effective image

Minimal learning Maximum learning

Brains of young children are “lit up” to their maximum when they initiate their own play, in an enabling environment, supported by skilful adults.

So child-initiated play is important because …

It is child-initiated play that most often leads to deep level learning – when children operate at the limits of their capabilities, thus maximising progress.

10 tips to help recognise, organise and support the best child-initiated play

1. Recognise deep level learningFerre Laevers describes levels of involvement.Level 5 involvement is characterised by creativity, concentration, energy and persistence with the child operating at the limit of their capability.

Review your provision if you do not see this sort of involvement for most of the time from most of the children.

Scan these brains

2. Organise the timetable

Keep interruptions to a minimum No need to stop for PE, assembly, playtime, snack time, focus tasks

3. Organise the indoor/outdoor flow

If possible, have the doors open to outdoors from the moment the children arrive. Plastic strips in the doorways will help to keep out the cold.

4. Have everything available outdoors

Plastic wont rot in the rain – so don’t hide it away!

Don’t set out resources – let the children select for themselves.

Open-ended resources allow children to demonstrate their own ideas. Blocks are one of the best resources for child-initiated play.

Use levels of involvement to assess resources and areas – review and change your provision if necessary.

Note the tarpaulin to cover the shelving at night – no need to pack away or to set up.

5. Have everything available indoors

Adults should not make the choices. Leave the tables clear – the children select where to go and what to do.

Sometimes “less is more”.

6. Allow the children to take risks

When children take risks, they demonstrate deep levels of involvement.If they are confident to take risks with climbing, woodwork, cycling etc. , then they will be more willing to take risks with other new learning experiences.

7. Adults should go to where the children are playing

8. Adults should observe the play and sometimes get involved

It is in that moment of curiosity, puzzlement, effort or interest, the ‘teachable moment’, that the skilful adult makes a difference.From National Strategies document “Learning, playing and interacting.”

9. Interactions are the teaching and should fit the unique individual child

Children initiate the play, but might get stuck at one point. This is when they need an adult to model a skill, find a resource, provide vocabulary, encourage or make a suggestion. In this way, the adult supports without taking over.The interaction will be different for each child and

each activity – the adults need to know the children very well.

10. Record the play and interactions afterwards

Amber was trying to cut out her drawing, but she was holding the scissors awkwardly. I modelled the correct grip and she then cut the paper easily.

While practitioners are writing, they are not interacting.Child-initiated play, without adult involvement, can deteriorate to chaos as children encounter problems or obstacles and there are no adults to support and help them.So …. “Leave the writing till later and join the play now!”

SummaryInvolvement indicates learning & this happens most often when

children initiate their own play1. Recognise deep level learning2. Organise the timetable3. Organise the indoor/outdoor flow4. Have everything available outdoors5. Have everything available indoors6. Allow the children to take risks7. Adults should go to where the children are playing8. Adults should observe the play and sometimes get involved9. Interactions are the teaching and should fit the unique

individual child10. Record the play and interactions afterwards

Child-initiated, and adult supported

Questions & Answers

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