"The secret to helping young children thrive is to keep the spirit of creativity and playful learning alive and active" Joan Almon
"The child's love of learning is intimately linked with a zest for play" JA



As I think back to when I was a child, it was the educational systems, then that supported play. The schools scheduled two separate recesses. There was a general recess that lasted approximately 20-25 minutes daily, a second recess immediately after lunch. Physical education was actually physical. We were required to participate in learning how to play every sport there is and we were encouraged to engage in friendly competitions that measured our abilities and strength in running, jumping, climbing, and other calisthenic exercises. Even the restaurants, such as, McDonald's, Roy Rogers had play areas inside and out that children were lured in to eat and play.
Today, play is viewed very differently from how it was understood when I was younger. It seems to be very insignificant and dismissed now. You do not see children playing in the school yards any more and physical education is anything but physical, its only text books and theory. Play is very important and very necessary in the aspect of a child's development. It is through play that helps the children weave together all the elements of life as they experience. The key statement is that they have to experience it for themselves.
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